Obama accepts peace Nobel, defends “just wars”

OSLO, (Reuters) – President Barack Obama defended the  right of the United States to wage “just wars” as he accepted  the Nobel Peace Prize yesterday, acknowledging that as a  wartime president he was a controversial choice.

In a speech at the award ceremony in Oslo, preceded by a  fanfare of trumpets, Obama declared he would not “stand idle” in  the face of threats to the United States.

He raised the spectre of a new nuclear arms race,  potentially in the Middle East or East Asia, and called for  tough sanctions against nations that did not abide by  international laws, a warning to Iran and North Korea.

Obama also acknowledged criticism that he does not deserve  the prize and has few tangible gains to show from his nearly 11  months in office, saying he was “at the beginning, and not the  end, of my labours on the world stage”.

The president’s acceptance speech, punctuated with  references to past winners of the peace prize, was notable for  its dominant theme of war.  He was speaking just nine days after ordering 30,000 more  U.S. troops to Afghanistan in a major expansion of the  eight-year-old war. Obama hopes the additional troops will help  to break the momentum of a resurgent Taliban and buy time to  train Afghan security forces to take over from the Americans.

In his only reference to the troop build-up, Obama said: “We  are at war, and I am responsible for the deployment of thousands  of young Americans to battle in a distant land. Some will kill.  Some will be killed. “

Obama walked a rhetorical tightrope in addressing the  paradox of a president receiving the highest award for peace  while waging two major foreign conflicts, in Iraq and  Afghanistan.

“Perhaps the most profound issue surrounding my receipt of  this prize is the fact that I am the commander-in-chief of a  nation in the midst of two wars,” he said.

“There will be times when nations — acting individually or  in concert — will find the use of force not only necessary but  morally justified,” he said, adding that the Afghanistan war had  been forced on the United States by the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks,  which were masterminded by al Qaeda from there.

He said he was mindful of civil rights leader and Nobel  peace laureate Martin Luther King’s statement that “violence  never brings permanent peace.”

But, Obama said, “I face the world as it is, and cannot  stand idle in the face of threats to the American people.”

There was loud applause from some 900 invited guests as  Obama accepted the award in a grand room in Oslo’s city hall,  becoming the third sitting U.S. president to receive the Nobel  peace prize in its 108-year history.

While the award has excited international interest,  Americans are preoccupied with double-digit unemployment and are  more concerned about how Obama plans to generate new jobs.  Americans remain anxious about the economy, nudging Obama’s  approval ratings to 50 percent or below.

Obama said the United States must uphold moral standards  when waging wars that were necessary and justified.