May 4, 1999
Congressman Bernie Sanders
2202 Rayburn Building
Washington, DC, 20515
Dear Bernie,
This letter explains the matters of conscience that
have led me to resign from your staff.
I believe that every individual must have some limit
to what acts of military violence they are willing to
participate in or support, regardless of either personal
welfare or claims that it will lead to a greater good.
Any individual who does not possess such a limit is
vulnerable to committing or condoning abhorrent acts
without even stopping to think about it.
Those who accept the necessity for such a limit do not
necessarily agree regarding where it should be drawn.
For absolute pacifists, war can never be justified.
But even for non-pacifists, the criteria for supporting
the use of military violence must be extremely stringent
because the consequences are so great. Common sense
dictates at least the following as minimal criteria:
The evil to be remedied must be serious.
The genuine purpose of the action must be to avert the
evil, not to achieve some other purpose for which the
evil serves as a pretext.
Less violent alternatives must be unavailable.
The violence used must have a high probability of in
fact halting the evil.
The violence used must be minimized.
Let us evaluate current U.S. military action in Yugoslavia
against each of these tests. Evil to be remedied:
We can agree that the evil to be remedied in this case
-- specifically, the uprooting and massacre of the Kosovo
Albanians -- is serious enough to justify military violence
if such violence can ever be justified. However, the
U.S. air war against Yugoslavia fails an ethical test
on each of the other four criteria.
Purpose vs. pretext: The facts are incompatible with
the hypothesis that U.S. policy is motivated by humanitarian
concern for the people of Kosovo:
In the Dayton agreement, the U.S. gave Milosevic a free
hand in Kosovo in exchange for a settlement in Bosnia.
The U.S. has consistently opposed sending ground forces
into Kosovo, even as the destruction of the Kosovar
people escalated. (While I do not personally support
such an action, it would, in sharp contrast to current
U.S. policy, provide at least some likelihood of halting
the attacks on the Kosovo Albanians.)
According to The New York Times (4/18/99), the U.S.
began bombing Yugoslavia with no consideration for the
possible impact on the Albanian people of Kosovo. This
was not for want of warning. On March 5, 1999, Italian
Prime Minister Massimo D'Alema met with President Clinton
in the Oval Office and warned him that an air attack
which failed to subdue Milosevic would result in 300,000
to 400,000 refugees passing into Albania and then to
Italy. Nonetheless, "No one planned for the tactic of
population expulsion that has been the currency of Balkan
wars for more than a century." (The New York Times,
4/18/99). If the goal of U.S. policy was humanitarian,
surely planning for the welfare of these refugees would
have been at least a modest concern.
Even now the attention paid to humanitarian aid to the
Kosovo refugees is totally inadequate, and is trivial
compared to the billions being spent to bomb Yugoslavia.
According to the Washington Post (4/30/99), the spokeswoman
for the U.N. refugee agency in Macedonia says, "We are
on the brink of catastrophe." Surely a genuine humanitarian
concern for the Kosovars would be evidenced in massive
emergency airlifts and a few billion dollars right now
devoted to aiding the refugees.
While it has refused to send ground forces into Kosovo,
the U.S. has also opposed and continues to oppose all
alternatives that would provide immediate protection
for the people of Kosovo by putting non- or partially-NATO
forces into Kosovo. Such proposals have been made by
Russia, by Milosevic himself, and by the delegations
of the U.S. Congress and the Russian Duma who met recently
with yourself as a participant. The refusal of the U.S.
to endorse such proposals strongly supports the hypothesis
that the goal of U.S. policy is not to save the Kosovars
from ongoing destruction.
Less violent alternatives: On 4/27/99 I presented you
with a memo laying out an alternative approach to current
Administration policy. It stated, "The overriding objective
of U.S. policy in Kosovo -- and of people of good will
-- must be to halt the destruction of the Albanian people
of Kosovo. . . The immediate goal of U.S. policy should
be a ceasefire which halts Serb attacks on Kosovo Albanians
in exchange for a halt in NATO bombing." It stated that
to achieve this objective, the United States should
"propose an immediate ceasefire, to continue as long
as Serb attacks on Kosovo Albanians cease. . . Initiate
an immediate bombing pause. . . Convene the U.N. Security
Council to propose action under U.N. auspices to extend
and maintain the ceasefire. . . Assemble a peacekeeping
force under U.N. authority to protect safe havens for
those threatened with ethnic cleansing." On 5/3/99 you
endorsed a very similar peace plan proposed by delegations
from the US Congress and the Russian Duma. You stated
that "The goal now is to move as quickly as possible
toward a ceasefire and toward negotiations." In short,
there is a less violent alternative to the present U.S.
air war against Yugoslavia.
High probability of halting the evil: Current U.S. policy
has virtually no probability of halting the displacement
and killing of the Kosovo Albanians. As William Safire
put it, "The war to make Kosovo safe for Kosovars is
a war without an entrance strategy. By its unwillingness
to enter Serbian territory to stop the killing at the
start, NATO conceded defeat. The bombing is simply intended
to coerce the Serbian leader to give up at the negotiating
table all he has won on the killing field. He won't."
(The New York Times, 5/3/99) The massive bombing of
Yugoslavia is not a means of protecting the Kosovars
but an alternative to doing so.
Minimizing the consequences of violence. "Collateral
damage" is inevitable in bombing attacks on military
targets. It must be weighed in any moral evaluation
of bombing. But in this case we are seeing not just
collateral damage but the deliberate selection of civilian
targets, including residential neighborhoods, auto factories,
broadcasting stations, and hydro-electric power plants.
The New York Times characterized the latter as "The
attack on what clearly appeared to be a civilian target."
(5/3/99) If these are acceptable targets, are there
any targets that are unacceptable?
The House Resolution (S Con Res 21) of 4/29/99 which
"authorizes the president of the United States to conduct
military air operations and missile strikes in cooperation
with the United States' NATO allies against the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia" supports not only the current
air war but also its unlimited escalation. It thereby
authorizes the commission of war crimes, even of genocide.
Indeed, the very day after that vote, the Pentagon announced
that it would begin "area bombing," which the Washington
Post (4/30/99) characterized as "dropping unguided weapons
from B-52 bombers in an imprecise technique that resulted
in large-scale civilian casualties in World War II and
the Vietnam War."
It was your vote in support of this resolution that
precipitated my decision that my conscience required
me to resign from your staff. I have tried to ask myself
questions that I believe each of us must ask ourselves:
Is there a moral limit to the military violence you
are willing to participate in or support? Where does
that limit lie? And when that limit has been reached,
what action will you take?
My answers led to my resignation.
Sincerely yours,
Jeremy Brecher