Towards a Culture of World Peace
Michel Chossudovsky
Director, Centre for Reseach on Globalization, Canada
The World is at a dangerous crossroads. A culture of war and military conquest is upheld. War is presented to public opinion as a peace-making endeavor which will ultimately result in the spread of Western democracy.
Military intervention not to mention “economic warfare” (including trade sanctions) are routinely upheld as part of a humanitarian campaign. War has been granted a humanitarian mandate under NATO’s “Responsibility to Protect” (R2P).
The culture which is the theme of the Conference on Dialogue of Asian Civilizations (Beijing, May 15-16, 2019) is of utmost importance in building social and economic relations between nations. Culture defines perceptions and understanding, as well as dialogue and diplomacy.
In this regard, “Towards a Culture of World Peace” constitutes a commitment to Human Livelihood. It is an initiative that consists of confronting the “culture of war” and military intervention emanating from NATO and the Pentagon. It requires reviving a Worldwide anti-war movement, nationally and internationally as well as establishing a commitment by the governments of sovereign nation-states to reject this Worldwide process of militarization.
The contemporary US-NATO “culture of war” (which has its roots in European colonial history) constitutes an obvious obstacle and impediment to the Dialogue of Civilizations and China’s Belt ad Road Initiative (BRI) launched by President Xi Jinping in 2013.
The culture of peace is universal. It is shared by people and nations Worldwide. Today’s “culture of war” is a US hegemonic project predicated on the creation of conflict and divisions within and between countries. This (unilateral) project of global warfare has to be forcefully rejected by the community of nations.
“The culture of peace” potentially constitutes an important instrument that has a bearing on broad geopolitical, economic and strategic relations. The procedure consists of ultimately confronting and dismantling “the culture of war,” which has a pervasive impact on the human mindset.
This endeavor will not succeed through political rhetoric or a “war of words.”
It requires:
• Translating the “culture of peace” into concrete actions at the geopolitical and diplomatic levels
• Confronting media disinformation and war propaganda
• A cohesive anti-war movement at the grassroots of society (nationally and internationally)
• An endorsement by the governments of sovereign countries, member states of the United Nations, namely a decisive inter-governmental rejection of the US-NATO “culture of war,” which is in blatant violation of the UN Charter
• The disbandment of military alliances, including NATO, which is supportive of global warfare
• The withdrawal of NATO member states and NATO partner member states from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
• The adoption of a coherent and Worldwide disarmament program coupled with major reductions in military spending
• The closing down of all military bases, i.e., approximately 800 US military bases in about 80 countries
• A massive curtailment in the international trade of weapons
• The restructuring of national economies with a view to downgrading and eventually closing down the war economy
• The reallocation of financial resources and tax revenues towards the civilian economy and the welfare state
1 So-called “humanitarian warfare”
The victims of U.S. led wars are routinely presented by the Western media as the perpetrators of war.
Realities are turned upside down. “War is Peace,” said George Orwell. The Western media in chorus upholds war as a humanitarian endeavor. “Wars make us safer and richer,” says the Washington Post.
When war becomes peace, the world is turned upside down. Conceptualization is no longer possible. The consensus is to wage war.
The building of this diabolical consensus consists of the militarization of the “cultural industries.” The latter is supported by the US Department of Defense, which allocates a large share of its budget to upholding the “culture of war.”
The ideology of militarism pervades society, glorifying the US state’s use of violence not diplomacy to achieve security in a world divided between a righteous American “us” and an evil and threatening “them,” representing war as the first and most appropriate solution to every problem that vexes America, and reducing patriotism to unquestioning support for each and every incursion.[1]
In turn Hollywood in liaison with the Pentagon has endorsed the culture of war and violence:
The Hollywood-Pentagon connection represents a key dimension of the military–entertainment–industrial complex, where a film is simultaneously being used as a tool for recruitment, military public relations, and commercial profit. According to Tom Secker and Matthew Alford, A similar influence is exerted over military-supported TV.
Meanwhile, the balance sheet of death and destruction in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria is casually ignored. Civilians in war-torn countries are “responsible for their own deaths.” This narrative pervades the Western media: 233,000 estimated deaths in Yemen since 2015, according to a recent United Nations report. 140,000 children killed. The media is silent: who are the war criminals?
2 Global warfare
In September 2000, a few months before the accession of George W. Bush to the White House, the Project for a New American Century (PNAC) published its blueprint for global domination under the title: “Rebuilding America’s Defenses.” This document which has a direct bearing on US foreign policy refers to America’s “Long War.”
The PNAC’s declared objectives are:
• defend the American homeland
• fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theater wars
• perform the “constabulary” duties associated with shaping the security environment in critical regions
• transform U.S. forces to exploit the “revolution in military affairs”
“The revolution in military affairs” consists in developing advanced weapons systems as well as a new generation of nuclear weapons.
3 War culture and nuclear weapons
The culture of war is marked by a radical shift in US nuclear doctrine. Tactical nuclear weapons, starting in 2001, are heralded as “harmless to the surrounding civilian population.” A new generation of “more usable,” “low yield” tactical nuclear weapons (mini-nukes) was put forth. They are heralded as peace-making bombs.
The doctrine of “mutually assured destruction” (MAD) which prevailed during the Cold War era has been scrapped. Under Bush’s 2001 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) (endorsed by the US Senate in 2002), nuclear weapons are to be used on a “first strike” “pre-emptive basis,” as a means of “self-defense” against both nuclear and non-nuclear states.
This is an absurd and diabolical proposition that can only be sustained by misleading public opinion, i.e., by obfuscating the deadly impacts of nuclear weapons. Moreover, while the US has waged countless wars in the course of what is euphemistically described as “the post-war era” (1945- present), the issue of “self-defense” is erroneous: For more than 200 years, the national security of the United States of America has never been threatened.
While the US and its NATO allies have launched a military adventure which is sustained by the “culture of war”, the public is largely unaware that the use of these “more usable” nuclear weapons (with a variable explosive capacity between one third to twelve times a Hiroshima bomb) threatens the future of humanity.
There are powerful economic interests behind the culture of war: the oil industry, the military-industrial complex, Wall Street. In turn, there are powerful lobby groups that influence US foreign policy. Dialogue and debate are required: It is important that these economic actors, including the weapons producers, be made aware of the inherent dangers of global warfare.
4 Financing the culture of war
Trump’s 1.2 trillion dollar nuclear weapons program constitutes a financial bonanza for the defense contractors. US media reports suggest that the nuclear weapons program “makes the World safer”.
The “culture of war” sustains a unilateral build-up of the weapons industry funded by US taxpayers.
The culture of war has triggered mounting military expenditures to the detriment of the civilian economy. Total military spending worldwide was of the order of 1.8 trillion dollars in 2018. US defense expenditure was of the order of 649 billion, which represents 36% of Worldwide military expenditure (all countries) (SIPRI).
The Trump administration has supported a significant hike in defense, war and related “National Security” expenditures. The defense budget presented by the presidency to the US Congress for 2020 is of the order of 750 billion dollars, of which 718 billion are earmarked for the Pentagon.
But this figure of 740 billion is in some regards misleading: Accounting for a massive US intelligence budget, Homeland Security, and related war expenses, the requested annual US National Security (War) Budget for 2020 is estimated to be of the order of 1.2 trillion dollars.
“There are at least 10 separate pots of money dedicated to fighting wars, preparing for yet more wars, and dealing with the consequences of wars already fought”[2]
Federal Tax Revenue FY2020 Estimate In USD Billions
Compare the figures: The total individual tax revenues for 2020 are of the order of $1.82 billion.
Total defense, national security, intelligence, “to make the world safer,” etc. is of the order of $1.25 trillion.
While the weapons industry is booming, the civilian economy is in crisis. Civilian infrastructure and social services, including medicare, are collapsing.
Eventually, what is required are policy mechanisms for the phasing out of the war economy and the national security apparatus, while channeling resources into rebuilding the civilian economy — no easy task.
The cultural dimension is crucial. US policy-makers believe in their own propaganda. The “culture of war” often combined with twisted ideological and/or religious undertones, influences government officials involved in acts of war.
In 1945, President Truman intimated in the immediate wake of the bombing of Hiroshima, that God stands on the side of “Us Americans” with regards to the use of nuclear weapons. “We pray that He [God] may guide us to use it [nuclear weapons] in His ways and for His purposes” (August 9th, 1945).
Hiroshima was designated as a “military base” in Truman’s historic speech on August 9th, 1945. The stated objective of Harry Truman was to “save the lives of innocent civilians.”
In the contemporary context, diplomatic relations and dialogue are at an all-time low. At no time since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis has the World been closer to the unthinkable: a global military conflict involving the use of nuclear weapons.
In this regard, what should be acknowledged is that US government officials in high office who decide upon the deployment and use of nuclear weapons do not have a full understanding of the consequences of their actions.
5 The legacy of history
The contemporary US-NATO “culture of war” has its roots in European colonial history. European colonization, starting in the late 15th Century, was invariably supported by military conquest, violence, and political subordination. A colonial economy was established. The civilization and national identity of conquered countries were in many cases, destroyed. “Western cultural values” as well as the symbols, customs, and language of the colonizers were imposed.
The colonial system ultimately led to the establishment of hegemonic relations, leading up to the consolidation of the British empire in the 18th and 19th centuries, followed by US neo-colonial expansionism in the late 19th century and in the wake of World War I.
What is significant is that this culture of colonial violence inherited from the British empire has a bearing on the nature of contemporary US foreign policy, which in large part is predicated on militarization at a global level.
The US has more than 800 military bases in 80 foreign countries currently.
In South and Southeast Asia, European colonialism was marked by conquest coupled with the displacement of the pre-existing silk road trade relations.
Historically, China’s trading relations under the land and maritime silk roads were marked by dialogue and the extensive exchange of culture. China’s trade relations during the Antiquity and Middle Age extended into South and South East Asia, the Middle East, Central Asia, East Africa, and Western Europe. Starting during the Han Dynasty (206 BC- 220 AD), the land and maritime silk road played a key role not only in the economic exchange between civilizations but also in the spread of cultural values.
In contrast to European colonialism, these relations largely respected the sovereignty and cultural values of the countries with which China was trading. The silk road trade did not seek to impose or develop a dependent colonial relationship. The language of diplomacy was marked by the benefits of bilateral exchange.
6 Asian culture and China’s Belt and Road
The mindset in Asian societies, which historically have been the victims of colonialism and US-led wars is in marked contrast to the dominant “culture of war.”
The legacy of history prevails. While the “culture of war” characterizes America’s hegemonic ambitions modeled on the legacy of the British Empire, China’s contemporary Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) which consists in developing trade relations with a large number of partner Nations states, is largely committed to a “Culture of Peace.”
Most of South and South East Asia including India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar have been the victims of Western colonialism starting in the 15th Century, the impacts of which have led to the destruction of the pre-existing maritime and land trade routes as well as the demise of cultural exchange.
Today these countries are partners of the Belt and Road Initiative launched by President Xi Jinping in 2013.
[1]Tanner Mirrlees, The DoD’s Cultural Policy: Militarizing the Cultural Industries, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, October 2017.
[2]See, William D. Hartung, Mandy Smithberger, Boondoggle, Inc.: Making Sense of the $1.25 Trillion National Security State Budget May 10, 2019.