Disarmament Diplomacy
Issue No. 78, July/August 2004
Books in View
The Sovereignty Revolution by Alan Cranston
Introduced by Kim Cranston
As we witnessed the "transfer of sovereignty in Iraq" in June, I
wondered what my father, the late Senator Alan Cranston, would have
thought about the situation there. A few days before he passed away
in December 2000, my father completed a book called The
Sovereignty Revolution. The book explored ways humanity can
effectively address global challenges, from climate change to
terrorism and genocide.
He concluded that our current concept of sovereignty, which is
"widely and unwisely thought... to mean only national
sovereignty", helped make the twentieth century the bloodiest
in history, and humanity will not survive the next century unless
we revise our concept of sovereignty to acknowledge the primacy of
the individual and emphasise the importance of strengthening
transnational organisations and international law.
My father didn't live to witness the horrors of September 11th
or the ensuing "war on terror". But his book warned of a terrorist
attack on the United States, and specifically named Osama Bin Laden
as a possible perpetrator. If only our current leaders had had such
foresight.
There is another warning my father issued throughout most of his
life and emphasised in his book that our leaders must heed, and
that was of the immense dangers posed by nuclear weapons.
"The creation of nuclear weapons and their proliferation into
many hands is the most ominous fact that emerged from the
unflowered carnage and unforgotten sorrow entombed with the remains
of the twentieth century," he wrote. "It separates today and all
the tomorrows from all the yesterdays. Wars once had their limits.
Despite whatever horrors humans experienced through the centuries,
they have always been able to say, 'Life goes on.' That may no
longer be an accurate assessment of the human condition."
In his book and in many of his speeches, my father was one of
the early people to identify the deadly nexus between nuclear
weapons and terrorist organisations and rogue regimes, long before
it became the vogue following America's awakening on September 11,
2001.
"A deliberate terrorist attack is a ... likely
eventuality," he wrote. He quoted former US Secretary of
Defense William Cohen, a Republican, who warned in 2000 that a
terrorist attack somewhere on American soil with chemical,
biological or nuclear weapons is "probable" within the next ten
years. And he often quoted former US Ambassador Robert Gallucci who
engaged in nuclear weapon negotiations with both Iraq and North
Korea. Gallucci warned how a terrorist or rogue nuclear attack on
the US could happen: One of these days one of these [rogue]
governments fabricates a couple of nuclear weapons, and gives them
to a terrorist group. The group brings one of these bombs into
Baltimore by boat, and drives another one up to Pittsburgh. And
then the message comes in to the White House. 'Adjust your policy
in the Middle East, or on Tuesday you lose Baltimore, and on
Wednesday you lose Pittsburgh.' Tuesday comes, and we lose
Baltimore. What does the US do?
"What does any nation do?" my father asked.
"The tragic consequences of any such deed, wherever it might
occur, will not necessarily be any more confined by national
boundaries than is the global flow today of information, money and
drugs," he wrote. "After these ghastly weapons have destroyed their
targets and snuffed out the lives of nearby men, women and
children, fatal radioactive fallout can seep across the borders of
nations with invisible and silent stealth, like a gas stove giving
off its lethal hissing as we sleep, its deadly destination
determined more by the whims of the winds than by malevolent human
intention."
No one is immune. There is no safe haven on earth.
"Unrestrained passions and impulsive quests for new identities,
powers, and independence explode in country after country and on
continent after continent, driving the shattering and splintering
of the world like a historical force of nature impossible to
tame," he continued. "Potential clashes and conflicts loom
on a scale surpassing those that are already causing so much havoc
and so many deaths of innocents."
However, he believed horrors of terrorist attacks and mushroom
clouds are preventable. "The answer," he wrote, "will
likely be found to lie in adding one more layer of
citizenship-world citizenship-to the national and lesser layers
among which sovereignty is presently dispersed. This would at long
last enable individuals to act upon and embrace not only their
traditional national citizenship, patriotism, and allegiance, but
also their global citizenship, their planetary patriotism, their
allegiance to humanity."
To be sure, my father was not calling for a world government,
but for something far more nuanced. He was calling for "the
deliberate pooling, through democratic processes of consent, of
strictly limited and carefully defined portions of the sovereignty
of individuals so as to obtain what cannot otherwise be
had."
Examples of this kind of "pooling" of portions of individual
sovereignty date back hundreds of years. Switzerland is a striking
early example of an enduring federation, dating back to 1291, when
three distinct cantons signed an "eternal alliance" that has
survived the subsequent centuries. Four separate ethnic entities,
four cultures, and four languages - French, German, Italian and
Romanch - and two religions, Catholic and Protestant, all make
Switzerland their harmonious home. Its diverse people share their
sovereign power with each other through a system of direct
democracy. Switzerland's historical tradition of isolationism,
which affected the way it dealt with refugees from Nazi terror
during World War II and evoked widespread condemnation, now seems
to be shifting. Switzerland finally became the second to last
nation state to join the United Nations on September 10, 2002 (the
Vatican maintains its Observer status, which Switzerland previously
shared). In doing so, the people of Switzerland shared some of
their sovereignty with that global institution.
My father identified two more modern examples of experiments in
the uses of sovereignty to contain conflict and improve human
relations that are especially relevant. One began just over two
hundred years ago in America, and is still evolving. The other
started half a century ago in Europe and is also still
unfolding.
Americans replaced a government that was over them with a
government that was under them. The United States' founding fathers
believed that sovereignty belongs to the people, not to any
government. Thomas Jefferson wrote in the American Declaration of
Independence that "Governments are instituted among men, deriving
their just powers from the consent of the governed."
"The greatest experiment in the peaceful expanding and
merging of sovereignty that has occurred since the creation of the
US is now underway in Europe," my father wrote, "the site
and source of so many devastating wars over the centuries."
Historical animosities have been thrust aside and war between the
nations of Europe now seems unthinkable.
The European Union (EU) began in 1951 as a six-nation treaty to
combine coal and steel resources. But Jean Monnet of France, the
inspiration behind the movement, had something much grander in
mind. "We are not forming coalitions between States," he said, "but
union among people." Once the people of those six nations found
they could collaborate peacefully over coal and steel matters, they
began to cooperate on broader matters.
The EU has continued to expand its membership and now has its
own currency and its own flag. Its citizens carry European
passports (that nevertheless also denote the country), and, for the
first time in history, elections for the EU are coordinated among
all the member states, blurring long-established national borders.
Delegates to the European Parliament, elected by the people of each
country, rather than appointed by their governments, are
apportioned in general accordance with the population of member
states, a significant departure from the traditional one-nation,
one delegation basis of most multilateral institutions. My father
wrote that these unique features of the EU recognise "the
dawning concept that the sovereignty of half a billion European
individuals is superior to the sovereignty of a few European
nations."
The United States and the European Union are models of unions
that are successfully preventing violence and solving common
problems within their respective borders. However, just as no
nation alone can hope to address all problems of a global nature,
neither can a regional union hope to solve all of the world's
challenges.
"Are the lessons learned in America, Europe and Switzerland,
and being learned elsewhere, applicable to the world as a
whole?" my father asked.
"Certainly the differences among the people who inhabited the
thirteen states when the Constitutional Convention met in 1787 were
small compared to the differences among the people who inhabit
almost 200 nations now," he wrote. "And certainly even the
differences between the people of Europe that led to so many bloody
conflicts over so many centuries are less than those among the
people of the whole wide world. But great as the troubles were that
led to the creation of the US and the EU, they were small compared
to the troubles that cry out for global action today."
My father recognised the United Nations' distinct potential to
cope with global problems: "When a nation becomes the violator
rather than the protector of the rights and liberties of its
citizens, it is now often the UN that is called upon by the
conscience of humanity to intervene."
But the UN also "lacks the requisite tools," he wrote.
The main tool the UN needs is a carefully defined share of
sovereignty from each of us. Because history suggests "that
nations are more likely to survive in the more orderly and stable
world that they and their citizens could create by pooling a
limited amount of their sovereignty than they are in the present
anarchistic, lawless world of rising violence with the authority of
nations waning and events spinning out of control as untamed forces
work their will."
To the naysayer, my father would answer, "This is not as
revolutionary as it might sound. Actually, most of the nations and
people of the world have already placed a portion of their
sovereignty in the UN." The only nation states other than the
Vatican that have not taken this step are the five veto-wielding
members of the Security Council: China, France, Russia, the United
Kingdom, and the United States. Any of the five can exercise its
sovereignty to block UN actions.
My father did not necessarily see the UN as the whole answer,
however. "Portions of American sovereignty and that of other
nations and their people have already been delegated to other
regional and global institutions.... The earliest such actions had
to do not with momentous issues like war, peace, and violence but
with small and routine day-to-day cross-border commercial
transactions and social intercourse. Prime early examples of
treaties and institutions created for such purposes were the Postal
Union, the Telegraph Union, and the Patent Convention, all
negotiated in the latter half of the nineteenth century when the
first signs and tokens of globalism were encountered. Each of these
agreements brought about limited transfers of sovereign authority
to global institutions."
People's fear of a loss of sovereignty to a central global
organisation may preclude the UN from being the only or even the
central institution confronting global challenges in the long term.
In that event, several distinct world institutions may emerge to
tackle different categories of global concern. "One institution
could emerge to deal solely with the apparent common need to halt
global warming, and perhaps to take on other environmental threats
to the quality if not the actual survival of life on earth," my
father wrote. "Another could deal in a carefully limited but needed
way with the economy.... Still another could deal with weapons of
mass destruction...."
In any event, whether the chosen instrument is the UN or not,
reforms are needed that account for the fact that "the single
most significant characteristic of any organisation is how it makes
decisions, how voting power is divided up among its
members."
In essence, my father was calling for a long-overdue change - to
make the UN and the rest of the international system more
democratic. "If no giants appear to lead the way," he wrote,
"then it will fall to the members of civil society to demand
more of the leaders they have - if need be engaging in a supreme
exercise of their own sovereignty by transforming leaders into
followers who are made to understand that common people will accept
nothing less than uncommon actions from them."
The Sovereignty Revolution by Alan Cranston,
with Jane Goodall, Mikhail Gorbachev, Jonathan Granoff and Jonathan
Schell, is edited by Kim Cranston (Stanford University Press, July
2004). For more information visit http://www.gsinstitute.org.
Kim Cranston is Chair of the San
Francisco-based Global Security Institute. Alan Cranston, his
father, represented California in the United States Senate from
1969-1993. Especially noteworthy were his efforts before, during
and after his 24 years in the Senate in regard to world peace,
nuclear disarmament, enhanced hemispheric relations, environmental
protection, and reduced military spending. Alan Cranston founded
the Global Security Institute in 1999.
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