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Lawrence Korb Council on Foreign
Relations, New York, NY From BMJ USA 2003;Feb:108
A call for US leadership
Since the end of the Cold War, it has become clear that the
main threat to global peace and security is instability in the international system. As the world's only superpower, the United States
must take the lead in preserving stability. But the United States
exerts its leadership not only with its hard power The sources of instability in the contemporary international system
range from terrorists and tyrants who seek to obtain weapons of mass
destruction to failing states that can become a haven for these
terrorists and tyrants. For example, when the world abandoned
Afghanistan after the Soviet Union withdrew, chaos ensued as the
warlords struggled for control. The Taliban eventually stepped in and
imposed a fundamentalist totalitarian regime and provided a haven for
Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda group. These terrorists used
Afghanistan as a training ground for those who not only attacked the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon on September 11, 2001, but also
attacked the American embassies in East Africa in 1998 and the USS Cole
in 2000. To remedy this situation, the United States had to lead a
coalition to remove the Taliban and install an interim government. But
the cost was high. Not only were thousands of lives lost on 9/11 but
the United States alone has spent over $30 billion to date on its
military operations.
Even if a failed state does not become a haven for terrorists, it can
create problems for the world community in a number of other ways, for
example, in the health area. If a government cannot control disease
among its population in this era of globalization, the diseases are
likely to spread. In addition, a disease-ravaged population retards
economic development substantially, making it very difficult for the
government to preserve domestic tranquility.
This is why the article by David P Southall and Bernadette A M O'Hare
is so timely. They argue that health problems in poor countries in Asia
and Africa are exacerbated by arms sales. The authors note correctly
that even if the arms trade were curbed, the health problems in these
countries would persist because many of these nations are also burdened
with massive debt and corrupt bureaucracies and have suffered natural
disasters. But there is no doubt that exporting arms, particularly
small arms, into these poor countries has fueled the conflicts and that
these countries have massive health problems.
The question of why developed countries do not curb this arms
trafficking naturally arises. After all, it is in their self-interest to prevent these conflicts and to stop them from getting out of hand.
The answer is that the developed nations place their short-term interests before the long-term interest of the international community. In particular, why does the United States not take the lead in curbing
this arms trade? After all, it was the United States that had to spend
its blood and treasure in Afghanistan and Somalia.
The first reason is greed. Exporting arms is big business. The United
States exports more military hardware than the rest of the world
combined The second reason is the traditional US reluctance to accept
limitations on its sovereignty. This is especially true of the Bush
administration, which has practiced an extreme form of unilateralism. It has unsigned the United Nations Rome Statute, which established the
International Criminal Court, and has refused to sign the protocol to
enforce the treaty banning biological weapons. It refused to join a
pact to curtail the international flow of illegal small arms because in
its view Southall and O'Hare have pinpointed a real problem. The question is,
will the United States take the lead in dealing with it? The answer at
present is no. But history has shown that the cost of not dealing with
it will, in the long run, be substantially higher.
LKorb{at}cfr.org
that is, its
economic and military might
but also with its soft power
that is, the
values it preaches and practices.
about $20 billion a year. It not only generates profits for
the defense industry but also helps the US balance of trade and reduces
the cost of weapons to the Pentagon. Recently the United States sold
Poland $3.6 billion worth of fighter planes. While Poland is not as
poor a country as those described by Southall and O'Hare, it certainly
has more pressing needs. In fact the US government was so anxious to
sell the arms that it lent the money to Poland.
and that of the National Rifle Association
it infringed upon
the American right to own guns.
Footnotes
Competing interests: None declared.