Category Archives: News

Newsday Letters: Call to war in Syria Not Examined

Executive Director Margaret Melkonian was published in Newsday this weekend calling for no war in Syria:

Responses from our elected officials on Long Island were very disheartening and ignored, once again, the perilous consequences of U.S. military intervention. Entering into another war in the Middle East disregards the lessons of Iraq and Afghanistan — that there is no military solution to end these civil wars, and that airstrikes will only fuel Arab anger and increase terrorist recruitment as their civilians are killed.

Rather than airstrikes, the United States should use our leverage and power for negotiations. A long-term political solution is required that includes the United Nations and all parties of the countries involved.

We cannot afford another decade of war; it will destroy our country and our democracy. This president was elected to end wars, not to start a new one in Syria.

Margaret Melkonian, Uniondale

Editor’s note: The writer is director of the Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives.

http://www.newsday.com/opinion/letters/letters-call-to-war-in-syria-not-examined-1.9298544

Existential Threats of Nuclear War and Climate Change

Rev. Mark Lukens of Bethany Congregational Church, East Rockaway, and board member of LI Alliance, made the best case for uncompromising, total opposition to war, and for a moment, even made the abolition of war seem attainable:

“These kinds of gatherings represent our willingness and courage to look fearlessly and critically at ourselves, cherished sacred cows,” he told the gathering. “It is only that kind of willingness, courage that allows us to have hope that maybe we can change the future – break the cycle of violence that is too much our history.”

World War II is probably the last war that is widely considered “the good war,” but, as he noted, “In its final days in order to bring an end to that bloodiest of all wars and defeat enemy that threatened the very foundation of human civilization, the United States, on this day in 1945, dropped an atomic bomb on city of Hiroshima, and a few days later on Nagasaki – and in a blink of an eye, in the effort to defeat a terrible foe, we committed an instant genocide of our own, taking the lives of hundreds of thousands of human beings- civilians and soldiers – unleashed on history a Pandora’s box of utter annihilation, the madness of mutually assured destruction and forever altered the ecology of our planet, even as US legitimate use of mass destruction on civilian population, and hung sword of Damocles on entire human race, a threat to entire existence on planet, we deal with to this day.

“You can argue the morality of that decision, and good men and women stand on both sides, but there can be no doubt about its legacy – like fallout, a nuclear event remains with us, polluting the air we breathe, the water we drink, poisoning the atmosphere – It is accepted, if not a legitimate means of waging war, and creating a blueprint for a pattern of atrocities we see repeated over and over again, from Bosnia, to Afghanistan to Syria to Gaza.”

“Worst of all, is the erosion of bonds of our shared humanity as the possibility of annihilating those who stand in way of national, religious aspirations, political desire – has gone from unthinkable to realizable, even the very same nations who went to war precisely to end that madness.

“That’s why events like this one tonight are so important, why it matters so much we have gathered.

“We won’t put the genie back in bottle through sanctions, threats of military force, or any of those strategies that, like bombing, make us the image of those we hate – we won’t alter the arc of human history by self-justifying..

Because change, if it is to be, can only come by altering the paradigm, by standing up as we are this evening to mourn, remember together those whose lives were taken, not as inevitable casualties of justified war but for who they really were, women, and men and children just like ours, people with hopes and aspirations, shared with those they loved, as human beings created in image of god, their lives uniquely valuable, uniquely precious and worthy of our concern –

“By bringing that message to the world, to assure that no matter how necessary, how worthy the cause, there is no such thing as a good war, because every war is about death of the innocent, the devastation of that which can never be replaced, every war destroys our planet, every war steals a bit of our future and takes from us a piece of our collective soul.

“As our planet becomes smaller, hotter and so many of our people, more desperate, we have no more pieces left to give. We can’t hide behind our arsenals any longer – as the suffering, destitute pound at our gates.

“We have to demand for ourselves as well as them, an end – not just Iran, North Korea but right here at home as well.

“For those who are yet to be, we have to make peace – and not just for some of us, all of us, because no less than the very survival of all of us is at stake.”

 

These quotes were taken as part of Examiner, here: http://www.examiner.com/article/hiroshima-local-activists-seek-end-existential-threats-of-war-climate-change 

Memorial Day, A Time to Remember and Mourn

Statement of LI Alliance for Memorial Day 2014

Margaret Melkonian, Executive Director, LI Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, 516-741-4360

Memorial Day, A Time to Remember and to Mourn the Victims of War

Since the end of the Civil War, the American people have dedicated Memorial Day as a time to mourn the victims of war. It has become a nationwide day of remembrance and reconciliation.

On May 24th, on the tenth Pax Christi LI’s Memorial Day Vigil, Long Islanders will gather at Jones Beach for a solemn march remembering and grieving for all those lost and wounded in wars. 

This is a stark alternative to the Bethpage Federal Credit Union’s Air Show.  It is regrettable that Bethpage Federal Credit Union and other sponsors have transformed this sacred day of mourning into a demonstration of military machinery and a vehicle for recruitment.  The solemn peace march, in contrast, seeks to draw in persons no matter what their politics, by calling on our common humanity in an act of remembrance and mourning. 

Memorial Day is a time to reflect on the consequences of war, to commit ourselves to end the cycle of violence, and to the return all those in harm’s way to their loved ones. Memorial Day is a sacred day of loss and remembrance and hope for a world without war. It is not the beginning of summer, a day for sales and for military demonstrations. Memorial Day is a sacred day.

The LI Alliance and LI peace partners call on Bethpage Federal Credit Union and other sponsors and also the NYS Parks Commission to forego military demonstrations at Jones Beach in the future. Instead, we ask them to remember why we grieve as a LI community on Memorial Day for all those lives lost in wars and why we hold close all those who we could not bear to lose.

 

Remembering Jonathan Schell

REMEMBERING JONATHAN SCHELL

http://www.thenation.com/article/179014/remembering-jonathan-schell-1943-2014

The power and persuasiveness of so much of Jonathan’s work came not only from his elegant style, clarity of analysis and powerful logic but also in the enduring belief that there is no idea so powerful as a moral one. In a special 1998 Nation issue making the case for nuclear abolition, he compelled us to confront the nuclear peril in which we all find ourselves, and he brilliantly laid out the argument that there exists a viable and desirable alternative to continued reliance on war and nuclear weapons. On the nuclear crisis, no voice was as clear, no writing as perceptive as Jonathan’s, going back to his acclaimed 1982 book The Fate of the Earth and his articles in The Nation and in other publications.

 

Links include many Letters from Ground Zero, 

The Will of the World, February 20, 2003
February 15, 2003, the day 10 million or so people in hundreds of cities on every continent demonstrated against war in Iraq, will go down in history as the first time that the people of the world expressed their clear and concerted will in regard to a pressing global issue. Never before—not during the Vietnam War, not during the antinuclear demonstrations of the early 1980s—had they made known their will so forcefully by all the means at their disposal. On that day, history may one day record, global democracy was born.

American Tragedy, March 20, 2003
The decision to go to war to overthrow the government of Iraq will bring unreckonable death and suffering to that country, the surrounding region and, possibly, the United States. It also marks a culmination in the rise within the United States of an immense concentration of unaccountable power that poses the greatest threat to the American constitutional system since the Watergate crisis. This transformation, in turn, threatens to push the world into a new era of rivalry, confrontation and war….

 and The Other Superpower:

http://www.thenation.com/article/other-superpower

Letter: Find peaceful alternatives in Syria

Letter: Find peaceful alternatives in Syria
Published: September 4, 2013 6:30 PM by Newsday

Newsday’s editorial “Syria: red lines, bad choices” [Aug. 28], arguing for a limited military retaliation against the Syrian government, raises many profound questions. Why are we rushing to war without waiting for the UN inspectors’ report?

Why intervene now in a civil war that has claimed over 100,000 lives and forced 2 million refugees to flee the country?

Why is a military strike the only option? Should we not consider the consequences of the United States’ unilateral action? Have we learned nothing from the Iraq War?

Why not use the considerable power of the United States to lead international efforts for a cease-fire, a weapons embargo on all sides and concerted negotiations? Negotiations should include the Syrian government, the rebels, Russia, Iran, Turkey and others, for a diplomatic and political solution to end Syria’s civil war.

Why can’t we pursue peace, instead of war and more violence? Why not consider how many more Syrians will die if we decide to use military force yet again?

The American people must let our leaders know that we do not want another U.S. war and must say no to war against Syria.

Margaret Melkonian, Uniondale

Margaret Melkonian is the executive director of the Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, a nonprofit activist and educational organization.
Photo credit: AP | Secretary of State John Kerry testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2013, before the House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing to advance President Barack Obama’s request for congressional authorization for military intervention in Syria, a response to last month’s alleged sarin gas attack in the Syrian civil war. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Demand a Ceasefire in Syria – Not More Weapons

 TELL OBAMA TO STAY OUT OF SYRIA AND NEGOTIATE A CEASEFIRE AND  PEACE TALKS TO END THE CONFLICT
Statement of  Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, Margaret Melkonian, Executive Director,
The Long Island Alliance calls on President Obama to support a ceasefire in Syria and to work with Russia and other countries to push both the government and the rebels toward negotiations to resolve the civil war, now in its third year. According to the most recent UN report, more than 93,000 Syrians have been killed and millions more are refugees with 1.5 million in neighboring countries.
Despite only 11 percent public support for US military intervention in Syria, President Obama has decided to intervene in the civil war . . . by sending small arms and ammunition to the rebels. One can argue that the US has already intervened by sending weapons, organized by the CIA, through Qatar.
According to an article by Tom Hayden: “The given reason is that the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad used chemical weapons  ‘on a small scale multiple times in the past year,’ according to the White House.  Intelligence officials say 100-150 people died from the attacks. Even if the chemical testing proves accurate, that can only be a pretext in a conflict, which has claimed at least 93,000 lives and seen barbarism on both sides.”
“Fearing the collapse of rebel forces, the US is stepping onto the treadmill of escalation. Whatever steps are taken now by the US and NATO, of course, if they choose, can be countered by Russia, Iran, and Hezbollah,” says Hayden.
Many warn that US intervention makes the situation worse for the Syrian people with tens of thousands more killed as more weapons fuel the violence. Furthermore, it increases the likelihood of a wider regional war in the Middle East.
By taking the side of the rebels, the US ignores the long-term consequences of such an intervention. Once again we ignore the failures of the US war in Iraq – a war that was based on false “intelligence” – a war that continues to have horrific consequences for the people of Iraq. The US must step back from the brink of another tragic war and use its power to bring about a diplomatic solution.
When the G8 meets this week, the LI Alliance urges President Obama and President Putin to:
·       Support an immediate ceasefire in Syria;
·       Initiate urgent peace talks;
·       Commit to not providing weapons to either side; and
·       Ensure that the more than 8.3 million Syrians who need aid can access it.
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