War Resisters' International
and the Myrtle Solomon Memorial Trust
in cooperation with
Korea Solidarity for Conscientious Objection
(KSCO)
Solidarity for Peace and Human Rights (SPR)
World Without War, WRI Korea,
Civil Network for Peaceful Korea
Counter Globalize Action, Women Making Peace
PEACE IN NORTH-EAST ASIA
International Seminar, Korea, June 2005
Introduction
War Resisters' International, the international network of pacifist
organisations with 100 affiliates in 40 countries, founded in 1921, is
cooperating with South Korean partner organisations for an international
seminar on Peace in North-East Asia, to be held in South Korea in June 2005.
The seminar will bring together about 120 peace activists and peace researchers
from North-East Asia and all over the world, to discuss the present threats to
peace in North-East Asia, and possible peace movement responses, based on War
Resisters' International's more than 100 years of experience with nonviolence.
The international seminar can build on the past cooperation between
War Resisters' International and Korean organisations, especially KSCO and SPR,
with a focus on conscientious objection to military service. This cooperation
goes back to 1999, and lead to an international conference on conscientious
objection to military service in Seoul in 2003. The seminar in 2005 expands the
issue, and puts conscientious objection to military service into the broader
framework of peace in North-East Asia.
Background
North-East Asia – North and
South Korea, China, Taiwan, and Japan, is a region with a wide range of threats
to peace, well beyond the issue of North Korea and Weapons of Mass Destruction.
Despite being one of the world's most dynamic economic and
political regions, North-East Asian security remains surprisingly dominated by
the past. Half a century after the uneasy conclusions to massive conflicts that
ripped apart China,Korea, and Japan, real peace in the region remains elusive.
Nearly 120,000 US soldiers are based in Japan and South Korea, with
those in Korea on trigger-ready alert for war with the North. The region
contains the world's second-most well funded military (Japan), one of its
largest arms importers (Taiwan), and over 1.6 million troops facing off amidst
escalating tensions on the Korean peninsula.
Legacies of the Cold War continue to shape the
world of war and peace in North-East Asia. Primary among them is the US
"wagon wheel" system of bilateral alliances. Designed to contain the
spread of communism, since the 1990s it has morphed into a strict realpolitik
tool to assure no state challenges US supremacy in the region, with faint nods
to the growing demands for autonomy and respect in Japan and South Korea.
The Cold War also left North-East Asia with two unfinished civil
wars, both of which periodically threaten explosion into massive military
conflicts with disturbing regularity. Ever since the US 7th Fleet interposed
itself between China and Taiwan in 1950, China has regarded Taiwan as a
renegade province and so claims the right to use force if Taiwan ever formally
proclaimed its independence from China.
In similar fashion, the armistice ending the Korean War in 1953
dividing the peninsula for the first time in history locked the two sides into
a zero-sum struggle over the right to rule a united Korea. As the South leapt
ahead of the North during its economic boom in the 19100s and "socialist
brotherhood" alliances with first the USSR and then China slowly
evaporated, North Korea has come to rely upon belligerent bluster, a million
person army, and a nascent nuclear pro-gramme to ensure its national security.
Anger with the oppressive US military presence, ongoing tensions on
the Korean peninsula and between China and Taiwan,and the human costs of Asia's
economic boom, are all major obstacles to building a stable, just, equitable
peace in North-East Asia. Security structures forged in the early days of the
Cold War are inadequate in response to these challenges; new approaches must be
sought out.
The militarisation of the societies on North-East Asia goes deep,
and is a major factor preventing the recognition of human rights such as
conscientious objection to military service, but also the full realisation of
equal rights and equal access for women.
Cooperation
between War Resisters' International and South Korean groups
The cooperation between War Resisters' International and South
Korean groups goes back to 1999, when War Resisters' International was first
asked for support by the then American Friends Service Committee's
representative in Seoul. From then on, War Resisters' International provided
information on the right to conscientious objection, to support the development
of a movement for conscientious objection in South Korea.
In 2001, representatives from Solidarity for Peace and Human Rights
and MINBYUN Lawyers for a Democratic Society participated in War Resisters'
International's seminar ¡°Antimilitarism
and feminism in Turkey: practice and ideology¡± in Sigacik in Turkey. This marked the beginning of direct
cooperation between WRI and South Korean groups.
War Resisters' International first visited South Korea in December
2002, and participated in a workshop on conscientious objection. The visit was
also important for the preparation of the first international conference on
conscientious objection in Seoul, which took place in March 2003, and was
supported by War Resisters' International. The situation of conscientious
objectors in South Korea was also the focus of WRI's 2003 Prisoners for Peace
Day campaign (1 December), and an intern from Solidarity for Peace and Human
Rights supported the production of the campaign materials in the WRI office. In
march 2004, WRI, MINBYUN lawyers for a democratic society and KSCO submitted a
joint report to the UN Commission for Human Rights.
The participation of two South Korean representatives in WRI's
international nonviolent action training in Israel in May 2003 (linked to
International Conscientious Objectors' Day – 15 May) and in the WRI seminar on Conscientious Objection and
Peace in Macedonia in June 2004, and the participation of a WRI
representative and nonviolence trainer in the SPR peace camp in Korea in August
2004 strengthened the links between War Resisters' International and South
Korean groups.
The cooperation now goes beyond the issue of conscientious objection
to military service, and has broadened to general issues of peace and
nonviolent action.
Aims
of the seminar
The seminar has aims on several levels:
On a broader level, the organisers aim to raise
awareness for nonviolent and peaceful alternatives to a military-based concept
of ¡°national
security¡± in
North-East
Asia. Here, War Resisters'
International is well equipped to provide expertise on nonviolent social
defence, peaceful resolution of conflict, and feminism against war based on an understanding of
the links between gender and militarism, which are so far little known in the
region.
On the regional
level, the seminar aims to strengthen the links between peace movement
organisations in the region, therefore furthering future cooperation and
exchange on shared issues and problems, such as the issue of US bases or an
increased participation of the region's military forces in conflicts outside
the region, such as the deployment of Philippine, Japanese and Korean military
in Iraq.
On the
international level, the seminar aims to raise awareness for the problems in
North-East Asia within the international peace movement, which is especially
important regarding a potential escalation of the issue of WMD in North Korea,
which would leave the international peace movement with only little knowledge
and partners in the region. In addition, the seminar will also improve the
international network of the regional peace groups.
The
international seminar
The international seminar will cover a variety of related topics
over 3 ½ days, beginning on a Sunday
evening, and ending the following Wednesday. It will consist of a mixture of
panel discussions (with simultaneous interpretation), small workshops, and
nonviolence training session, to explore the issues in a participatory way. In
addition, the programme will allow for appropriate time for networking,
especially via the provision of a social space.
The topics are:
Day 1 (Sunday, 26 June): Peace in North East Asia (Opening Panel)
The opening panel will introduce the different security threats and
peace related issues of the region to the international and regional audience
and also introduce concept of non-violent resistance, which WRI has pursued so
far, and will contribute to peace movement in this region. For this panel, we
aim to get speakers from South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, China and WRI.
Day 2: Security Issues
The concept of ¡°national
security¡± is a common justification for
disproportionate military forces in Korea and Taiwan, but also serves as
justification for North Korea's WMD programme. On this day, the seminar will
look at issues of (national) security, and will develop a vision of security
with non-military means, based on the experience and visions of the
participants.
Day 3: Nonviolent resistance and nonviolent alternatives
Day 3 takes more time to develop themes previously dealt with on day
2 in the afternoon, and some of those on day 4 in the morning. Building on the
last session of the previous day, the concept of Nonviolent Social Defence as a
non-military alternative will be introduced. The day also includes a 2-session
long Nonviolence Training as a workshop, and will lead to some examples of
nonviolent struggle which will be used to draw out crucial elements of
nonviolent campaigns
Day 4 (Wednesday, 29 June): A Peace Movement Strategy for the future
The last day will build on the three previous day, to develop a
strategy for the peace movement for the future. It is important that this again
will be done in a participatory way.
Organisers
War Resisters' International
War Resisters' International was founded in 1921 under the name
"Paco". It was and is based on the WRI declaration:
War is a crime against humanity. I am therefore determined not to
support any kind of war, and to strive for the removal of all causes of war
War Resisters' International exists to promote nonviolent action
against the causes of war, and to support and connect people around the world
who refuse to take part in war or the preparation of war. On this basis, WRI
works for a world without war.
Nonviolence
Nonviolence can combine active resistance, including civil
disobedience, with dialogue; it can combine non-cooperation - withdrawal of
support from a system of oppression - with constructive work to build
alternatives.
No to war
http://wri-irg.org
Myrtle Solomon Memorial Trust
http://www.myrtlesolomon.org.uk
Korea Solidarity for Conscientious Objection
KSCO was launched on 4
February 2002. It is now a coalition of
36 civil and social organisations including SPR, and many supportive
individuals. Even before the official launch, it tried to give wider publicity
about Conscientious objection to military service as a fundamental human
natural right. It also embarked on activities such as legal aid for
conscientious objectors, internal/international solidarity, and counselling of
young people who are about to join the army. Now it is acting up to its
principles by researching, analysing, and developing case studies of
Alternative Civilian Services, and projecting and arousing public opinion. The
website of KSCO is http://corights.net/.
Solidarity for Peace and Human Rights
¡¯ spontaneous donations. It¡¯http://peace.jinbo.net/.
World Without War
¡®¡¯. It¡¯http://www.withoutwar.org.
WRI Korea
http://wrikorea.wo.to/.
Civil Network for Peaceful Korea
The website of CNPK is at http://peacekorea.org
Counter Globalize Action
We are pursuing solidarity of movements with diverse views and fields against
capital's globalization, including foreign workers¡¯
The website of CGA is at http://cgakorea.org
Women Making Peace
We carry out concrete social actions to facilitate Korean reunification and
peace. We try to facilitate the equal participation of women in the settlement
of conflicts and disputes and to promote women's leadership in peace-making at
home and abroad.
We work in solidarity with international peace groups, exchanging information
concerning peace and security and thus expanding international women's
peace-making networks.
Women making peace looks forward to a 21st century where justice and love,
tolerance and cooperation, respect and care, peace and hope will flower in
place of tension and confrontation, hatred and exclusion.
The website of WMP is at http://www.peacewomen.or.kr