The repeated mass murder of US school children undermines the US in the eyes of both its allies and its adversaries.
It calls into question US values and gives enemies like China and Russia reason to mock the US as a beacon of stability. As such, mass gun deaths have become both a foreign policy and national security threat which makes the US less capable of defending itself in a hostile world. JL
Jacob Ware reports in the Council on Foreign Relations via NBC, image Pete Luna, Uvalde Leader-News:
America’s failure to protect school children in their place of learning, again, is a national disgrace of historic proportions. It has international dimensions, which underscore the wide impact of the tragedy. The school shooting epidemic undermines the U.S. in the eyes of its allies and its adversaries, damaging its ability to provide leadership and increasing its vulnerability to enemy propaganda. At a time when the U.S. finds itself in a renewed ideological Cold War between democracy and autocracy, the shootings hurt Washington’s ability to project U.S. values or serve as a model for what democracy offers. The geopolitical ramifications of the Uvalde massacre ripple all the way to China (and Russia).A war may be raging on their eastern flank, but Ukrainian political leaders still took time out from their busy, traumatic lives to send condolences across the Atlantic after America’s latest horrific school shooting in Texas on Tuesday. In a sickening twist of fate, they even compared the U.S. — so long seen as a bastion of freedom and security, an impenetrable city on a hill — to their own tragic situation. “As a nation that goes through the pain of losing innocent young lives, Ukraine shares the pain of our U.S. friends,” Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba tweeted.
The simple, inescapable fact is that America’s failure to protect elementary school children in their place of learning, again, is a national disgrace of historic proportions. And as such, it has international dimensions, which underscore both the wide impact of the tragedy and the urgency that Washington take serious steps to address the problem. The school shooting epidemic undermines the U.S. in the eyes of both its allies and its adversaries, damaging its ability to provide leadership on human rights and increasing its vulnerability to enemy propaganda.
The geopolitical ramifications of the Uvalde massacre rippled all the way to China, where the spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry was asked to address it in a news conference Wednesday.
The United States is prepared to deploy its soldiers around the world in the name of protecting its citizens from threats and — as shown in Ukraine — is also willing to provide massive amounts of arms to allies so they can do the same. But as four-star former Marine Gen. John Allen wrote for the Brookings Institution in 2019, “Americans today are more likely to experience gun violence [at home] than they might in many of the places to which I deployed in the name of defending our nation.” Compared to other high-income countries, a child under 5 in the United States in 2019 was 29 times as likely to die from a gunshot wound.
That disconnect in American values isn’t just evident to military leaders like Allen. At a time when the U.S. finds itself in a renewed ideological Cold War between democracy and autocracy, the shootings hurt Washington’s ability to project U.S. values and serve as a model for what democracy can offer. The geopolitical ramifications of the Uvalde massacre rippled all the way to China, where the spokesperson for the Foreign Ministry was asked to address it in a news conference on Wednesday. The fact that he was asked such a question alone shows how these deadly events offer openings for our adversaries and distract from other international priorities.
“The U.S. government is callous about the systemic violation of the human rights of American people,” Wang Wenbin, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson, declared in answering the question posed about the shooting. “But in the meantime, it has been keen on wantonly attacking other countries and grossly interfering in their internal affairs under the pretext of human rights. This fully indicates that the U.S.’s claim to champion human rights is nothing but hypocritical rhetoric and empty talk.its founding ideal.
An editorial in France's Le Monde similarly pondered on Wednesday, “If there is any American exceptionalism, it is to tolerate the fact that schools in the United States are regularly transformed into bloody shooting ranges.” The Times of India, believed to be the world’s largest English-language daily in circulation, took a more mocking tone: “The fiasco effectively answered one of the more stupid gun lovers’ suggestions to counter school shootings: Post armed guards at schools.”
Since the school shooting epidemic began 23 years ago, the federal government has usually relegated it to the sidelines as an inconvenience rather than viewing it as a critical national security priority. Why? Because national security is typically understood as a foreign threat to the state. But just because school shootings are a purely internal danger doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be considered a homeland security priority.
In political theory, the so-called social contract posits that civilians sacrifice a degree of individual rights in exchange for protection by the state. If civilians — especially schoolchildren — are not being protected, then do we even have a functioning state? Some will argue that “If everything is a ‘national security’ priority, nothing will be.” But if our schoolchildren aren’t safe from gun violence, then why does any other national security issue even matter?
The U.S. national security apparatus has shifted its focus away from terrorism — a threat which, in its worst year of 2001, killed around one-fifth of the average number of Americans who die yearly by gun violence — because of success on that front. Now it’s concentrating on protecting the projection of U.S. power abroad and defending allies in the Asia-Pacific against a rising China; in other words, combating threats that are even less likely to directly affect the everyday safety of Americans. We need to spare some energy for critical battles here at home, daily troubles that actually do impact our way of life.
If we start talking about school shootings as a serious national security priority, maybe we could finally move the needle. School shootings not only provide a pressing, daily threat to our communities but also to our foreign policy and national security. The issue requires the resourced, collaborative, bipartisan and top-down response usually reserved for external threats against the state
2 comments:
To all those constitutionalists and 2nd Amendment advocates I have a question.
The 2nd Amendment says...
"A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed."
If the founding fathers and writers of the Constitution meant for everyone to be able to own a gun, why didn't they just write "It is the right of the people to keep and bear arms."???????
Thank you for sharing this post and I hope keep posting it.
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