This 10-point plan would significantly reduce terrorist threats,
save taxpayers billions of dollars and make Americans more loved and
admired in the world. After a decade of wielding the military stick,
it’s time for some carrots.
- Declare a moratorium on drone strikes: The head of
Al-Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, is calling on jihadists to retaliate for US
drone strikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Yemen. The Yemeni group Al
Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), where the US says the threats are
emanating from, is also calling for retaliation for drones strikes
(there have been four strikes in Yemen since July 28). Drone strikes
have become the number one recruiting tool for extremists. By grounding
the drones, we will stop creating new enemies faster than we can kill
them.
- Close the US drone base in Saudi Arabia. One of the
reasons Obama bin Laden said he hated the United States was that the US
had military bases in the Holy Lands in Saudi Arabia. President Bush
quietly closed those bases in 2003 but in 2010 President Obama secretly
reopened a base there for launching drones into Yemen. It’s a national
security threat ripe for blowback. So are many of the over 800 US bases
peppered all over the world. We can save billions of taxpayer dollars,
and make ourselves safer, by closing them.
- Free the 86 Guantanamo prisoners cleared for release.
The US treatment of Guantanamo prisoners, holding people indefinitely
without charges or trials and brutally force-feeding the hunger
strikers, is an affront to people throughout the Muslim world and a
blatant hypocrisy of our American values. Of the 166 prisoners left in
Guantanamo, 86 have been cleared for release, meaning the US government
has determined they represent no threat to our nation. President Obama
can use the waiver system, certifying to Congress that it is in the US
national interest to release them. He just did this, for the first time,
for two Algerian prisoners. He should do this for all 86 cleared
prisoners, then bring the remaining prisoners to the US for trials.
- Apologize and compensate innocent victims. There is
a perception in the Muslim world that the US government does not value
their lives. Airstrikes have killed many innocent people and only in the
cases of Afghanistan and Iraq has there been a way, albeit woefully
inadequate, for aggrieved families to seek redress. The US should agree
to apologize and compensate the families of innocent people who have
been killed or maimed by the US armed forces or CIA.
- Go for the “zero option” in Afghanistan: withdraw all US troops.
The 11-year US occupation of Afghanistan has provided fodder for the
Taliban in both Afghanistan and Pakistan, while propping up an unpopular
and corrupt regime in Kabul. And if the US troops were not in
Afghanistan, the Taliban would not be trying to cross the Pakistani
border to kill US soldiers. President Obama promised to end the US
occupation by the end of 2014, but is now weighing options for keeping
thousands of troops and military contractors behind. Bad idea.
- Sit down and talk. The Taliban opened an office in
Qatar in June to finally start long-delayed talks with the US. But due
to President Karzai’s objections, the talks were nixed. It’s long past
the time to talk to the Taliban, and then move on to talk to those
elements in Al Qaeda who are more rational and open to negotiations. If
you look at the Rand Corporation’s study of the demise of 268 terrorist
groups, 43% dissolved by joining the political process, 40% from better
policing, and only 7% through military action. We’ve been using military
action for over a decade; it’s time for another approach.
- Stop supporting dictatorships and repressive militaries. The
US recently signed the largest arms deal in history with the monarchy
of Saudi Arabia, the same government that rolled its tanks into
neighboring Bahrain to crush the democratic uprising there. In Egypt, US
weapons and tear gas were used for decades against peaceful
demonstrators, and continue to be used against peaceful protesters
supporting ousted Muslim Brotherhood. While weapons sales to
undemocratic and/or unstable regimes might be good for US weapons
manufacturers, they are bad for the reputation and security of the
American people.
- Support non-violent democracy movements. Terrorists
thrive best where there is chaos and instability. Nurturing democratic
institutions and non-violent civil society are key to thwarting the
growth of extremist movements. The US needs to do more than support
these efforts; it also needs to listen to them. In Yemen, the US is
helping to fund the 6-month experiment in democracy called the National
Dialogue Conference, where 565 extremely diverse members of society are
meeting daily to map out the nation’s future. The Conference recently
passed, by overwhelming vote, a resolution declaring drones strikes and
all extrajudicial killing illegal. Unfortunately, the US has refused to
abide by the popular will thus far.
- Adhere to the international rule of law. In its war
on terror, the US has been killing terror suspects with blatant
disregard for international law and national sovereignty. A July 18 Pew
poll of 39 nations found fierce global opposition to US drone strikes,
particularly in the Muslim world. If the US wants help and sympathy in
rooting out would-be attackers, it has to show the world it will stop
using extrajudicial assassinations and start adhering to international
law.
- Spend foreign aid money on education, healthcare and lifting people out of poverty. For
a fraction of the money we keep wasting each month on the failed war in
Afghanistan or supporting the already wealthy Israeli military, we
could be building schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan, helping Yemenis
find a solution to their water shortages, and providing humanitarian aid
to Syrian refugees. We’ll make a lot more friends building clinics,
wells, electrical grids and schools than vaporizing people with Hellfire
missiles.
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