War’s deadly distractions

War is deadly. While this is an obvious fact regarding those who fight, it is less obvious regarding the life and death plight of many non-combatants trapped within battle zones.

May 20, 2022

Remains of the paediatric hospital in Mariupol. (Vatican News photo)

                                           Making a Difference Tony Magliano

War is deadly. While this is an obvious fact regarding those who fight, it is less obvious regarding the life and death plight of many non-combatants trapped within battle zones.

And even less obvious are war’s deadly effects on countless poor people far removed from the fighting. The Russian-Ukrainian war is a case in point.


Normally, Ukraine is a major exporter of grains, like wheat and barley, to millions of people who are unable to cultivate enough food to survive. But due to the war, its shipping ports are closed.

UN World Food Programme Executive Director, David Beasley, is pleading that “Right now, Ukraine’s grain silos are full. At the same time, 44 million people around the world are marching towards starvation. We have to open up these ports so that food can move in and out of Ukraine. The world demands it because hundreds of millions of people globally depend on these supplies.

“We’re running out of time and the cost of inaction will be higher than anyone can imagine. I urge all parties involved to allow this food to get out of Ukraine to where it’s desperately needed so we can avert the looming threat of famine” (see: https://bit.ly/3L9cGPA).

Beasley also reportedly warned that if the conflict in Ukraine was not ended, “the world will pay a mighty price and the last thing we want to be doing, as the World Food Programme, is taking food from hungry children to give to starving children”.

War, especially the Russian-Ukrainian war, is also distracting us from adequately addressing the quickly advancing deadly effects of climate change and global warming — largely due to greenhouse gases produced by continued use of fossil fuels (oil, gas and coal).

In its recent report drawing on the research of thousands of scientific papers, the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), stated that to get global warming greenhouse gases under control — and thus greatly mitigate the growing fierceness of floods, droughts, wildfires, hurricanes, typhoons and other extreme weather events — governments and corporations need to quickly accelerate a total transition away from fossil fuels to clean renewable energy (like wind and solar) and plant many new forests. If we delay any longer, the catastrophic effects of climate change will be irreversible for us, and future generations. The IPCC’s report bluntly warns: “It’s now or never” (see: https://bit.ly/3N6upbL).

The US and its NATO allies need to stop pumping billions of dollars into the Russian-Ukrainian war — which will not aid in the defeat of the Russian military, but will, instead, surely guarantee that the war continues — and instead, launch fair, open-minded multilateral negotiations with President Putin, with a genuine desire to obtain an immediate ceasefire, a lasting end to the war, and full speed ahead with grain shipments to the starving!

Just as with the Soviet Union-United States Cuban missile crisis, when honest, genuine negotiations secured a satisfiable settlement and avoided nuclear war, so likewise must the same happen today.

Just recently, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres insightfully said, “In our time — a time of conflicts, climate crisis and COVID-19 — there is simply no sustainable alternative to dialogue, international cooperation, and global solutions” — a wise and holy strategy right out of Pope Francis’ playbook!

(Tony Magliano is an internationally syndicated Catholic social justice and peace columnist. He can be reached at [email protected].)

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