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Foreign Affairs, War, and Peace
Our nation should seek to befriend others, work
with them to secure peace and enhance the lives
of all, and address the grievances and problems
that foster terrorism. America must work with
others on overpopulation, environment, hunger,
disease, illiteracy, and unemployment, and
encourage development of representative
government.
Law and diplomacy must
replace force in international
decision-making. Our nation must strengthen,
participate equitably in adequate funding of,
cooperate with, and use international
institutions such as the UN, its agencies, and
the International Criminal Court. Such
institutions should be responsible for
eliminating international terrorism.
An efficient military ready to defend our
country is essential.
We must use
military force only as a last resort. Our
government must renounce the illegal,
destabilizing policy of preemptive force when
there is no imminent threat to our nation.
Our country should work with other
nations to eliminate nuclear weapons, weapons
in space, land mines, chemical and biological
weapons, and other weapons-related threats to
people and the environment. Nuclear weapons'
development must stop. Existing nuclear
weapons should be de-alerted and disposed of in
agreed, verifiable stages. Ballistic missile
defense plans should be abandoned. The
international arms trade should be brought
under international control. War industries
should receive assistance for converting from
military manufacturing to the manufacture of
peaceful products.
.
A Department
of Peace should be established to support
national policies for a safe and peaceful
world.
We can best support our
military personnel by not placing them in
harm's way unnecessarily. We support fully
meeting all material and medical, including
psychological, needs of our active military and
veterans. For those who have served in the
military, the Peace Corps, or similar agencies,
we support full, lifelong medical care and
generous educational, housing, and employment
programs.
We support the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and urge U.S.
ratification of the treaties that implement it.
Foreign aid should be allocated to
meet basic needs and encourage human rights.
Our nation must never employ economic sanctions
with genocidal effects.
Our
country's immigration policies should be fair
and applied fairly. We should offer refuge to
victims of oppressive regimes without regard to
political persuasion.
We support
agreements to expand international trade,
provided that they do not erode worker
compensation, worker safety, environmental
standards, or democratic control. We oppose
fast-track legislation limiting Congress' trade
authority. Our government should block
multinational corporations' practices of
avoiding U.S. taxes and work for international
control of their monopolistic practices.
