The Church and Nation Committee of the
Church of Scotland has, for many months, been pressing in public and in
private for the international situation surrounding Iraq to be debated
and decided by the United Nations. It is therefore with the most
profound sorrow that we view what has come to pass - a decision for war
which has not even been put to the vote at the Security Council because
its proponents had been unable to convince that Council's members of
their case.
In this situation, we call on all church
members to pray for the peace of the world. We must all remember in our
prayers the ordinary children, women and men of Iraq, who will be the
first and worst casualties of the onslaught to come. We must remember
the ordinary men and women of the armed forces, on whose loyalty and
professionalism and bravery the politicians depend when they launch a
war. And we must remember their families and their chaplains as they
offer their own prayers for safe return.
We ask that congregations will open their
church buildings wherever and whenever possible, and trust that in those
houses of prayer hopes of a peaceful future can be sustained and
encouraged. Such a future will only be possible if those who would see
the current conflict in terms of a war between faiths are confounded -
and so we urge joint witness to goodwill and unity involving people of
all faiths.
On the battlefield and in its wake the
care for the victims of war must be of paramount importance - and
humanitarian aid must receive the priority and the funding it requires.
And, though we must all now hope for a short war, we must not accept
that the conduct of the war can be a scrutiny-free zone. If the weapons
used are such as to leave large amounts of unexploded ordinance or a
legacy of environmental degradation, there will surely be answers
required and a price to pay.
In the corridors of power the question of
peace must already be top of the agenda. It is a question which requires
joined-up thinking, which holds together the problems of Iraq and those
of Palestine, and which takes account of the legitimate aspirations of
the people of the Middle East. If a brutal dictator is only to be
replaced by an imperial viceroy or a puppet government little of value
will have been achieved.
It is, we believe, on the reassertion of
the importance of the United Nations that peace depends. The building of
the future is its reason for being. Those who have found it convenient
to ignore the UN in going to war will yet require that same organisation
to construct what follows. Support for international institutions and
international law will be needed from all of us, most of all from our
political leaders. That support is the best guarantee in today's world
of life and dignity for the weak and the vulnerable, the poor and the
dispossessed. When might has had its way, right must find a way.
Ends
Convener of Church & Nation Committee The
Reverend Alan McDonald
19 March, 2003