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President Bush has rallied his troops for what he calls “The first warof the 21st century”. What is your view of this crisis, where, briefly, do you stand? This is the question we are putting to people around the world, especially those with their own public reputation and following. Our aim, to h

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Does anyone believe war will stop acts of terror? Won’t an attack on  Iraq breed only more humiliated and hate-filled terrorists? Even if we  hide every plastic knife in Europe and America, will it stop an attack  from a man who is desperate enough to commit suicide? Isn’t it time we  addressed the grievances that are generating so much hostility and  hopelessness - the suffering of the larger world community whose misery  we so coldly dismiss as of little consequence? Whose God ordained that a  privileged few may pamper ourselves in luxurious underwear, while  millions in Afghanistan and Angola can’t even get ill-fitting artificial  limbs?

If history teaches anything it is that the outcomes of war are  unpredictable. How many of us remember the Soviet invasion of  Afghanistan in 1979 that eventually led to the startling collapse of the  Soviet empire twelve years later? Would Adolf Hitler have launched his  war for world dominance had he known the outcome? Or, for that matter,  would the US have fought its war in Vietnam had it foreseen the  humiliating outcome of that adventure?

In America, the past is not only relegated to history but is often  banished even from memory. Countries have histories, and events their  consequences. It is dangerous to disregard the past; if we don’t learn  from history, the future will come back to haunt us. Some aspect of it  already has, in the shape of the biggest terrorist attack of all time,  on the Twin Towers in New York.

©Bapsi Sidhwa 2003

Originally published as part of a debate on 6 February 2003 Writers, artists and civic leaders on the War: Pt. II

See also Writers, artists and civic leaders on the War: Pt. 1.

Bapsi Sidhwa

Bapsi Sidhwa is a Pakistan-born writer in US, author of Cracking India.

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