United for
Peace and Justice opposes any military action against Iran, as
well as covert action and sanctions. We reject the
doctrine of "preventive war." All
diplomatic solutions must be pursued.
Send
a clear message to the Bush Administration: Don't Attack Iran! As a
first and
immediate step, we urge you to add your signature and comments to AfterDowningStreet's
petition to President Bush and
Vice-President Cheney opposing an attack on Iran.
Many UFPJ
member groups, including AfterDowningStreet, Gold Star Families for
Peace, CodePINK: Women for Peace, Progressive Democrats of America,
Democracy Rising, and others, are all promoting this petition. UFPJ
encourages you to circulate this message and help expand the growing
list of signers.
Efforts to
resolve any dispute with Iran should include promoting negotiations –-
including Israel
–- on a Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone in the Middle
East. We
call for the global elimination of
nuclear weapons. The United States
should stop blocking negotiations on abolition and demonstrate
leadership by
taking steps to fulfill its own nuclear disarmament obligation. We call
for the
development and promotion of sustainable energy alternatives. We need
to stop
going to war for oil. And we need to
address climate change. But nuclear
power is not the answer: Every nuclear power plant is a potential bomb
factory
and a source of radioactive waste that will remain deadly forever.
For additional
Iran
resources and action items, visit our Iran Resources page.
BACKGROUND
Seymour
Hersh's stunning article in the April 17 New Yorker,
"The Iran Plans,"
revealed that the Bush administration has intensified planning for
bombing
Iran, and that U.S. combat troops are already in Iran preparing for
military
operations and recruiting local supporters from minority groups. Of
gravest concern, Hersh reported that the Bush administration is giving
serious
attention to the option of using nuclear weapons to attack buried
targets.
From Hersh's
article and other sources, it has become clear that the
administration is prepared to launch an attack should Iran
not accede to U.S.
demands that it abandon its uranium enrichment activities. Regardless
of
whether the nuclear issues can be resolved, the administration seems
committed
to regime change in Iran.
An attack on Iran
would be an act of aggression, barred by the UN Charter and prosecuted
at Nuremberg.
If executed, U.S.
military action would apply the Bush doctrine of “preventive” war in an
unprecedented way that would set the template for years or decades of
regional
and global violence, unrestrained by law. U.S.
use of nuclear weapons against Iran
would be an atrocious act violating the existing near taboo that has
held since
the U.S.
devastation of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki.
That would in turn make it far more likely that the weapons will be
used
elsewhere as well -- including against cities in the U.S.
While Washington
accuses Iran
of seeking nuclear weapons under cover of a civilian nuclear power
program, in
violation of its obligations as a non-nuclear nation under the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), the U.S.
is itself in blatant violation of its own NPT obligation to eliminate
its vast
and sophisticated nuclear arsenal. There
is no evidence that Iran has a nuclear weapons program. The U.S.,
however, retains a nuclear arsenal of more than 10,000 weapons, some
2,000 on
hair-trigger alert. With nearly 500
tactical nuclear weapons deployed in 6 NATO countries, the U.S.
is the only country with nuclear weapons deployed on foreign soil. And
the U.S.
is modernizing its existing nuclear weapons and publicly making plans
to
develop and produce new ones.