A New Marshall
Plan for 2002:
Advancing Human Security and Controlling Terrorism
By Dick Bell & Michael Renner
January 7, 2002
  
0201marshall.pdf
As
the endgame nears in the fighting in Afghanistan, with Taliban power collapsed
and Al-Qaeda members dead or on the run, it is tempting to believe that
military success has decided the outcome of the war on terrorism. The
Bush administration has already made it clear that it has limited interest
in the long and arduous task of rebuilding Afghanistan. But Washington
decisionmakers may want to heed this advice from a senior U.S. military
officer and statesman from an earlier era, General George C. Marshall.
In outlining the so-called Marshall Plan to rebuild a war-ravaged Europe
on June 5, 1947, he warned that there could be "no political stability
and no assured peace" without economic security. Europe, much like
Afghanistan today, was torn by war, poverty, disease, and hunger, and
risked "disturbances arising as a result of the desperation of the
people," and thus deserved American attention and funds to recover
and rejoin the world community.
President Bush and his advisers should consider the relevance of Marshall's
strategy to the challenge of tackling the underlying conditions that give
rise to political and religious extremism. We don't really need to spend
another dime on "intelligence" to recognize the social and economic
conditions that leave whole countries in a state of despair and misery.
Some 1.2 billion people worldwide struggle to survive on $1 day or less.
It is estimated that 1.2 billion people lack access to safe drinking water
and 2.9 billion have inadequate access to proper sanitation. About 150
million children are malnourished, and more than 10 million children under
the age of five will die in 2002 alone. At least 150 million people are
unemployed and 900 million are "underemployed," contending with
inadequate incomes despite long hours of backbreaking work.
Globalization has raised expectations, even as modern communications
make the rising inequality between a rich, powerful, and imposing West
and the rest of the world visible to all. Poverty and deprivation do not
automatically translate into hatred. But people whose hopes have worn
thin, whose aspirations have been thwarted, and whose discontent is rising
are far more likely to succumb to the siren song of extremism. This is
particularly true for the swelling ranks of young people whose prospects
for the future are bleak. Some 34% of the developing world's population
is under 15 years of age.
The United States and the other industrial nations should launch a global
"Marshall Plan" with the goal of providing everyone on earth
with a decent standard of living. What could we achieve if we matched
the tens of billions of dollars now spent on the military campaign in
Afghanistan on programs to alleviate human suffering?
This is an obtainable goal, and one far cheaper than current military
expenditures to ensure global security. A 1998 report by the United Nations
Development Program estimated the annual cost to achieve universal access
to a number of basic social services in all developing countries: $9 billion
would provide water and sanitation for every family; $12 billion would
cover reproductive health for all women; $13 billion would give every
person in the world basic health and nutrition; and $6 billion would provide
basic education for all children. These social and health expenditures
pale in comparison to what is being spent on the military by all nations--some
$780 billion each year.
The cost of failing to advance human security and to eliminate the fertile
ground upon which terrorism thrives is already escalating. Since September
11, we know that sophisticated weapons offer little protection and cannot
buy us a lasting peace in a world of extreme inequality, injustice, and
deprivation for billions of our fellow human beings. By choosing to mobilize
adequate resources to address human suffering around the world, President
Bush has a unique opportunity to seize the terrible moment of September
11 and in the new year earn a truly exalted place in human history.
(Dick Bell and Michael Renner are analysts for Foreign Policy in Focus
(www.fpif.org) and are
Vice President for Communications and Senior Researcher, respectively,
at the Worldwatch Institute in Washington DC.)
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