Peace is not everything, but everything is nothing without peace. No to war, militarism, and violence

The Doomsday Clock has moved for the first time in history to just 100 seconds to midnight. The
Nobel prize winners “The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists" justify this move by citing the
dangers of atomic war and the consequences of climate change. The dangers of a great
cataclysmic war have increased in view of the rivalries of the great powers, as have the quantity
and quality of regional conflicts and wars over resources and as consequences of climate
change. Wars are inseparable components of the "new normal."

Peace is not only the absence of war; it covers all dimensions of human existence and the
existence of nature. Peace means global justice and always includes climate justice. This is the
struggle for peace that the World Social Forum has waged since its conception, particularly
related to US interventionism. It is also a struggle against military confrontations wherever they
exist.

For these reasons we are planning on the one hand several public online discussions on the
ongoing military conflicts in West Asia (Yemen, Syria and Palestine) as well as on the
involvement of NATO in Eastern European countries like Ukraine, Armenia and Azerbaijan. On
the other hand, we are going to deal with the militarization of internal political conflicts,
especially in countries where the pandemic has led to an extreme polarization between
authoritarian regimes and its peoples. Some further notes:

  1. Anti-militarism today is a rejection of and pressure against the biggest military alliance in
    the world: NATO and its ∼1000 military bases.
  2. Special attention should be given to the economic and ecological reasons as well as the
    humanitarian consequences of the ongoing militarization processes in regards to
    repression, human rights violations, and the forced migration of millions of people.
  3. Central to militarism is the gross excess of spending on military arms. 2 trillion US dollars
    per year cause deaths on a daily basis are partly responsible for poverty and hunger
    around the world. Disarmament is a central challenge for peace engagement and just
    shaping of the future.
  4. Militaristic structures in individual countries and internationally also destroy democracy
    and participation; anti-militarism is therefore always also a struggle for democracy.
  5. Small arms are the "weapons of mass destruction" of the 21st century. The daily killing
    and murdering with such weapons demand peace-based political and social responses
    and an international ban.

In all these panel discussions, the audience should be given the opportunity to deliberate the
strategies and mobilizations which not only engage the traditional peace movement, but also
activists, experts, and opinion leaders from other thematic areas like global justice, cultural
diversity, and climate change.

The 24th of January should reflect the diversity of these issues and the central challenge for
peace and global justice.

Reiner Braun, International Peace Bureau; Leo Gabriel, Prague Spring 2, network against far-
right extremism and populism; Kristine Karch, International network ‘No to war - No-to-NATO’.

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