Jan. 26, 2010
COMMENTARY: Replacing International Oppression with International Aid
By Lawrence S. Wittner
The outpouring of humanitarian aid from numerous nations for the
suffering people of Haiti is truly extraordinary -- particularly when
set against the shabby record of the past.
After all, in previous centuries the French government invaded Haiti,
enslaved its people and, when the Haitians arose and drove out the
French, subsequently crippled its economy by foisting a huge
reparations burden upon the nation.
The American government was not much more generous, for it refused to establish diplomatic relations
with Haiti for nearly six decades, imposed a trade embargo upon it,
occupied it militarily from 1915 to 1934, backed ruthless dictators,
and helped oust democratically-elected governments. Other nations
have unclean hands, as well.
Even so, there is something about vast human suffering that sparks
generosity in people, that appeals to their better instincts -- even,
at times, the humane instincts of normally callous, power-wielding
government officials.
So why should humanitarian aid be extraordinary? Why not make it
routine? Long before the earthquake, Haitians were the poorest people
in the hemisphere, suffering from widespread hunger, disease, and
illiteracy.
Could not the United States -- the richest nation in the
world with a public whose major anxieties (to judge from the vast
attention given to weight loss) seem to result from over-eating --
manage to share a bit of its affluence by regularly providing food aid
to starving Haitians? And what about building hospitals to provide
health care and schools to promote literacy? Such programs would
surely be good for Haiti and for numerous other poverty-stricken
nations.
Critics of this idea point to overseas aid programs of past decades
and ask: Hasn't this project already been tried? To some degree, it
has. But these aid programs usually were tied to America's Cold War
competition with the Soviet Union, and were turned on or off when the
competitors found it useful.
In this fashion, aid programs were shaped to win support from governments or to secure other objectives
on the chessboard of world politics. Such was the fate of the
Alliance for Progress. Furthermore, the aid was predominantly
military aid, which did little more than encourage Third World
military coups or keep tyrants in power. Comparatively little aid
went to nutrition, health care, and education.
There were exceptions, of course. The Peace Corps dispatched tens of
thousands of American volunteers to economically underdeveloped
nations, where they worked ably at a variety of ameliorative projects,
usually in education. George McGovern's Food for Peace program,
initiated in the early 1960s, rescued millions of people from
starvation. At one point, 20 percent of Indian schoolchildren were
fed by it.
In the post-Cold War years, however, major humanitarian aid programs
were replaced by loans from the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund. But these loans, ostensibly designed to foster
economic development, were often directed toward integrating recipient
nations into trade relationships with multinational corporations, and
all too often left such countries impoverished and debt-ridden.
For the most part, U.N. agencies and many private aid organizations
(like the American Friends Service Committee, Doctors Without Borders,
and the International Red Cross) have taken up the slack in providing
food, health care, and education to people in poverty-stricken
nations. And despite their very limited resources, they have done a
remarkable job of it.
But suppose that the wealthy nations pumped billions of dollars a year
into programs for the world's hungry, sick, and illiterate. And
suppose that they did this not on an ad hoc, crisis basis, but as a
long-term, routine matter through the United Nations. Isn't this the
ethical thing, the moral thing to do? And wouldn't they also be
creating a reservoir of goodwill that would soften the grievances of
the downtrodden, the bitter, and the desperate -- indeed, might be
more effective in undermining terrorism than the endless, trillion
dollar wars that are now being waged?
Perhaps, as Eleanor Roosevelt once urged, it's time to begin
substituting food, health care, and education for warfare and other
oppressive programs.
* * *
Wittner is Professor of History at the State University of New
York/Albany. His latest book is Confronting the Bomb: A Short History
of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement (Stanford University Press).
This commentary was distributed by PeaceVoice, a program of the Oregon
Peace Institute, Portland, OR.