THU 28 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Feb 23, 2015
Source: The Daily Star
The international order challenges the disorder of our times
John F. Kerry

A few years after World War II, when the North Atlantic Treaty was ratified in the United States and our relationship with Europe was cemented, President Harry Truman said simply, “The more closely the nations of the Atlantic community can work together for peace, the better for all people, everywhere.”

The decades since have proven him right. And as our trans-Atlantic relationship has grown stronger and more expansive, so has democracy, prosperity and stability in Europe, the United States and around the globe.

But, though the trans-Atlantic relationship today is as strong and as critical as ever, there is no question that our partnership is the midst of a defining moment. We are facing multiple tests, two especially worthy of attention, because they test international law, multilateral mechanisms, and the global order we have spent 70 years working to build and maintain.

The first test is Ukraine, where Russia has endangered the security landscape of Eastern and Central Europe, first through its illegal occupation of Crimea and now through its overt and brazen effort to destabilize eastern Ukraine.

This challenge recently took me to Kiev to meet with President Petro Poroshenko, Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk and Foreign Minister Pavlo Klimkin, while German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President François Hollande visited Kiev and Moscow in pursuit of a plan to de-escalate the situation. We agree that military force will not end this challenge – diplomacy will.

But the longer it takes, the more the world will have no choice but to raise the costs to Russia and its proxies. The U.S., France, Germany and our allies and partners will support Ukraine and defend the fundamental principle that international borders must not be changed by force, in Europe or anywhere else. There is no division among us on this fundamental conviction.

The second major test is the rise of violent extremism. ISIS video showing the immolation of a captured Jordanian pilot represented a new low in depravity. And last week, the United Nations reported that this evil group crucifies children, buries them alive, and uses mentally disabled young people as suicide bombers.

ISIS is not alone among extremists. Last month, Pakistani officials showed me time-stamped photos of the Army Public School in Peshawar before and after the Taliban killed 145 people (including 132 children) in December. The school’s assembly hall, filled with students sitting attentively in their chairs, was transformed into a death chamber – blood, broken eyeglasses, scattered textbooks, torn jackets and lifeless young bodies. The school’s principal tried to save her students. When challenged by the murderers, she pointed to the children and said, “I am their mother.” Those were her last words.

The world cannot and will not wilt in the face of such extremism, wherever it exists, whether in the Sahel, Nigeria, Iraq or Syria. Today, the international coalition fighting ISIS has grown to more than 60 active members. Since September, we have retaken 700 square kilometers of territory. We have deprived the group of the use – and revenues – of 200 oil and gas facilities. We have disrupted its command structure, undermined its propaganda, taken out half of its senior leadership, squeezed its financing, damaged its supply networks, and dispersed its personnel.

Consider the case of Kobani (Ain al-Arab), on Syria’s border with Turkey, threatened with annihilation after ISIS captured more than 300 Kurdish villages. The militants already controlled large swaths of the city itself, and both they and the world’s media expected an easy victory. But thanks to diplomatic cooperation among coalition partners, targeted airstrikes, and on-the-ground support from Iraqi Kurdish forces, the militants were driven out, after losing roughly 1,000 fighters.

But defeating ISIS is only the beginning. The fight against violent extremists will not be decided on the battlefield alone. It will be decided in classrooms, workplaces, houses of worship, community centers, urban street corners and halls of government. And it will be decided by the success of our efforts to stop terrorist recruitment; address the intolerance, economic hopelessness and exclusion that help create vacuums which extremism fills; and create credible, visible and empowering alternatives to violent extremism where it is prevalent.

In recent years, it has been fashionable to look at challenges like these and pontificate that the international system is unraveling. I strongly disagree. In fact, I see the opposite. I see countries working together to negotiate new and far-reaching trade pacts, covering some 70 percent of global GDP. I see the world working together to end the Ebola pandemic. I see work to achieve a peaceful resolution to the threat posed by Iran’s nuclear program. I see cooperation to reach an ambitious global agreement on climate change, and to curb strife in places like the Central African Republic, Colombia and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Yes, these are challenging times. But I see countries around the world reducing extreme poverty, improving maternal health care, aiding child nutrition, expanding access to primary education and increasing life expectancy. More people have attained – or are reaching for – prosperity than at any time in history, and despite the threat posed by violent extremism, the percentage of people who die violently has reached a low for the modern era. All of this has happened because of the strength of the international order. We need to help bring that reality to the places where today it feels a million miles away.

We are fortunate to be the descendants of innovators, of doers, of people who overcame slavery, plagues, depressions, global wars and totalitarianism – people utterly unafraid of great challenges who were most effective when put to the test.

Now it is our turn. The tests we face compel us to prepare and to plan, to unite and to defend our future from the atavistic paranoia of terrorists and thugs. The future still belongs to the universal values of civility, reason and the rule of law.

John F. Kerry is the U.S. secretary of state. This commentary was adapted from a speech at this year’s Munich Security Conference. THE DAILY STAR publishes this commentary in collaboration with Project Syndicate © (www.project-syndicate.org).

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on February 21, 2015, on page 7.


The views and opinions of authors expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Arab Network for the Study of Democracy
 
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