 |
Global Action to Prevent War is a coalition-building
campaign in 53 countries which aims to strengthen diverse
efforts for peace and disarmament by bringing them together.
Our program statement grounds the goal of conflict prevention
in specific integrated phases over a three to four-decade
period and demonstrates in a practical and concrete way that
we can move from an international system based on conflict
and power relations to one based on law and multilateral institutions.
Global Action underscores the complementary, mutually-reinforcing
nature of the four main types of work for peace that are under
way in the world today:
Groups working for nonviolent conflict resolution through
mediation and other means
Groups working for disarmament, particularly in the
areas of nuclear, chemical, biological, small arms, and land
mines
Groups working to develop to a participatory, cooperative,
demilitarized global security system, functioning under the
auspices of a reformed UN, to replace the current hegemonic,
militarized global system dominated by the United States
Those working to end domestic and community violence
and build "cultures of peace" within nations
In addition to uniting these disparate components of work
for peace, Global Action to Prevent War gives special attention
to some aspects of war prevention and disarmament that are
not currently the subject of any major on-going peace efforts:
The standing conventional military forces maintained
by the USA, Russia, China, the largest industrial countries,
and the key players in longstanding regional conflicts, India,
Pakistan, North and South Korea, Taiwan, and most countries
in the Middle East
The need to make deep cuts in these forces and to reduce
or end the production and trade of major conventional weapons
in the process of transforming worldwide security policies
from a hegemonic, militarized system to a cooperative, demilitarized
system
Standing conventional armed forces, and the arms production
and trade that support these forces, account for more than
90 percent of world military spending. They also pose threats
of large-scale warfare, and they are the foundation for the
spread of weapons of mass destruction. But because it is harder
to develop a consensus on alternative security options, conventional
forces, military spending, and major weapons production and
trade get much less attention than weapons of mass destruction,
land mines, or small arms.
To address the core issues of the prevention of major war,
disarmament, and demilitarization, Global Action to Prevent
War proposes a phased, interactive process that involved cumulative,
mutually reinforcing steps in three areas:
1. Strengthening means of nonviolent conflict resolution and
prevention
2. Undertaking confidence-building measures, limits, and step-by-step
reductions in conventional arms holdings, production, and
trade, and nuclear weapons
3. Building confidence in the ability of the UN and comparable
regional organizations to deter and, if needed, intervene
to defend against and end cross-border military aggression
and internal mass killing
The goal of Global Action to Prevent War is to build a vast
coalition of individuals, organizations, and governments,
committed to moving the world as far as possible toward ending
war. We are trying to do with war what the international community
has done with slavery: to make it illegal and immoral, rare,
small in scale, and, when discovered, quickly ended through
decisive intervention by the international community. Supporters
of Global Action to Prevent War believe that with a concerted
international effort, this goal can be reached in a matter
of decades.
For the program and International Steering Committee, see
http://www.globalactionpw.org
To download the Program Statement, click here.
|