Matt Welch | November 12, 2004
Daniel Henninger, deputy editor of the Wall Street Journal's opinion page, is complaining about the
Big Media's handling of Abu Ghraib, a real story that got blown into a monthlong bonfire that obviously was intended to burn down the legitimacy of the war in Iraq. I think many people thought the over-the-top Abu Ghraib coverage, amid a war, was the media shouting fire in a crowded theater.
Italics mine, to emphasize Henninger's enviable omniscience.
The fire-in-the-theater analogy is almostly precisely inapt:
This is from the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Schenck v. U.S. (1919), setting limits on the freedom of speech guaranteed by the First Amendment to the Constitution. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Junior, wrote: "The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic."
Key word being "falsely." I'm sure Henninger doesn't mean to imply that reporting on crimes committed by U.S. troops is not protected by the First Amendment, right?
As for Abu Ghraib coverage being synonymous with attempts "to burn down the legitimacy of the war" (an extremely widespread view), tell it to Christopher Hitchens, Andrew Sullivan, John McCain ... and Reason's own Charles Paul Freund, Cathy Young and Nick Gillespie. Speaking personally, I never backed the war (nor did I oppose it ... still making up my mind), I'm no fan of Bush's foreign policy, and I think Abu Ghraib is a horrifying story that deserves more media scrutiny, not less ... but I have no interest whatsoever in "burn[ing] down the legitimacy of the war," and in fact hope to hell we succeed like gangbusters over there. I would be surprised if this was a rare view in America's newsrooms.
Has Abu Ghraib coverage been disproportionate and colored by anti-Bush bias? Sure, that's plausible, even likely. But to accuse an entire profession of being essentially traitorious and agenda-driven is much less so. (Link via InstaPundit.)
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"Has Abu Ghraib coverage been disproportionate and colored
by anti-Bush bias? Sure, that's plausible, even likely. But to
accuse an entire profession of being essentially traitorious and
agenda-driven is much less so."
The truth hurts. It's hard to argue that we're spreading American
democracy when the people you're talking to are looking at
photographs of American torturers gloating over their
victims.
...and the issue was apt. The worst effects of imperialism are
typically unintentional. I know this is thread-spillover, but isn't
"Shooting an Elephant" the classic text for this argument?
Thanks, Matt, for saying what needs to be said. I'm a supporter of the war who's utterly disgusted by the right's pitiful attempt to ignore the Abu Ghraib scandal and dismiss opposition to torture as disloyal leftie "political correctness."
I'll save Reason's bandwidth and just post the link, but I think
the media went easy on Abu Ghraib. A truly anti-Bush media could
have (correctly, IMHO) explicitly blamed the evangelicals who
support Bush for the human rights violations there. Mine is the big
comment at the bottom:
http://getreligion.typepad.com/getreligion/2004/11/atheists_for_bu.html
Abu Ghraib coverage is only problematic in the context of
general ignorance regarding the history of U.S. military misdeeds.
Wars are very shitty things, and one of the reasons they are shitty
is because many people, once the constraints of normal society are
removed, as inevitably happens in war zones, start acting
reprehensibly.
This happens in every war. Read Ambrose's (who is no sharp critic
of the U.S. military) and one learns of soldiers who were known to
treat captured enemy very harshly, including summary executions.
Writer Paul Fussell, veteran of the WWII Pacific Theater, has
written extensively (and well) of how many Marines viewed the
Japanese as essentially sub-human, and treated them accordingly,
particularly after it became widely known how the Japanese were
treating captured Americans. This is what war means, and only the
histrically ignorant could have been suprised by Abu Ghraib. I
stand second to no one in my disrespect of the NYT, but I can't
wholly blame it that so many Americans don't know military history
very well, although perhaps a good newspaper should make some
attempt, in the course of several dozen stories, to provide some
historical context. Overall, however, the story is newsworthy, and
must be reported.
"Speaking personally, I never backed the war (nor did I oppose
it ... still making up my mind)"
Gonna wait to see how it comes out first?
"Gonna wait to see how it comes out first?"
Bingo, fishfry. You can't have a bandwagon effect until the wagon
arrives.
It's hard to argue that we're spreading American democracy
when the people you're talking to are looking at photographs of
American torturers gloating over their victims.
Is that why it's hard to argue that Islam is a religion of peace,
or that Middle Eastern culture is not an anachronism, when the
people you're talking to are reading news stories of Wahhabists
blowing up buildings in the name of some desert god?
Italics mine, to emphasize Henninger's enviable
omniscience.
Other omniscient sentiments include "Bush lied," "it's an oil war,"
"there are no WMD in Iraq," "Dick Cheney (or Hillary Clinton) runs
the country," "OJ did it," "Gary Condit did it," and my favorite,
"all men are created equal."
I'm more than tired of how the media is portrayed as a holy opinion maker that needs to be kept in check at every turn. Any half wit knows that reporters are people, and as such they are susceptible to bias through exclusion and so on. I say report it all, every ugly photo and detail, biased or not. If Americans can't make a well informed decision from the plentifully sources available the media is the least of our worries. The press isn't free advertising for your pet story.
"Is that why it's hard to argue that Islam is a religion of
peace, or that Middle Eastern culture is not an anachronism, when
the people you're talking to are reading news stories of Wahhabists
blowing up buildings in the name of some desert god?"
I'll say it again because it's obviously easy to forget. Most
terrorists are Islamic fundamentalists, but most Islamic
fundamentalists aren't terrorists. And I'll add that most Muslims
aren't fundamentalists.
"Other omniscient sentiments include 'Bush lied,'"
When Bush has said things that are blatently untrue, he was either
lying or ignorantly repeating lies. The former is worse, but the
latter is inexcusable. Since we know the people directly below him
(Cheney, Rice, et al) have deliberately lied ("there is no doubt
that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction" "The tubes
are really only suited for nuclear weapons programs." "75% of Al
Quaeda leadership has been captured or killed"), it's inarguable
that even if he hasn't technically lied himself, he approves of it
as a communication strategy. Unless, of course, he's completely
ignorant. In which case, we can all feel better about this great
man.
Why does this guy, the editor of the WSJ opinion page, need to
refer to "Big Media," apparently distancing himself from the
"Mainstream Media"?
Outside of the NYT and the WA Post, I could think of nothing more
mainstream and perhaps more widely read than the WSJ. Or is the
f'ing Dow Jones Company now a mainstay of the new American
counterculture?
Frankly, this "the mainstream media are a bunch of raving liberals"
bit is getting incredibly old and more and more absurd.
Bitter, politically-motivated, obscenely biased news would be
preferable to the endless carping about media bias from both left
and right.
I'll say it again because it's obviously easy to forget.
Most terrorists are Islamic fundamentalists, but most Islamic
fundamentalists aren't terrorists. And I'll add that most Muslims
aren't fundamentalists.
I'll say it again because it's obviously easy to forget. The bad
apples at Abu Ghraib are US soldiers, but most military prison
guards aren't bad apples. And I'll add that most US soldiers aren't
military prison guards.
Works for me.
"I'll say it again because it's obviously easy to forget. The
bad apples at Abu Ghraib are US soldiers, but most military prison
guards aren't bad apples. And I'll add that most US soldiers aren't
military prison guards."
I couldn't agree more. But where has anyone here implied that all
U.S. soldiers are bad apples?
In which case, we can all feel better about this great
man.
By expecting your leaders to be great men you are setting yourself
up for disappointment. Seeking political office is not the hallmark
of greatness. When someone says they want to be your leader, you
are best served not trusting them any farther than you can throw
them. They're not in it for your well-being.
When Bush has said things that are blatently
untrue...
You have no basis to make this claim. You don't know these points
to be untrue, whether it is about the presence of WMD (which the EU
and UN had no problem stating "objectively" that he had),
yellowcake uranium, al Qaeda in Iraq, or the ratio of living to
dead al Qaeda leaders. You have doubt and there is evidence still
surfacing, as it will for some time. It's ok to be leaning towards
one side or the other, but pretending that all the chips are down
and the cards are called -- that these points were "blatantly
untrue" -- is ignorant.
but most Islamic fundamentalists aren't terrorists. And I'll
add that most Muslims aren't fundamentalists.
Um, yeah, that was the point. We're advising our own
uber-enlightened western folk not to judge an entire culture based
on the actions of a few, while worrying how events like Abu Ghraib
drive the Muslims to judge our entire culture based on the actions
of even fewer. Why are we mollycoddling?
When has anyone suggested that Abu Ghraib demonstrates the need to wage a military campaign against the US army, in order to kill its leadership and change its culture?
"This happens in every war."
In which war did the Secretary of Defense decide that he would no
longer respect the Conventions?
...thank God he saw how wrong he was to do that and changed his
mind.
P.S. If you'd like a copy of the Schlesinger Report, just send me
an e-mail.
"By expecting your leaders to be great men you are setting
yourself up for disappointment. Seeking political office is not the
hallmark of greatness. When someone says they want to be your
leader, you are best served not trusting them any farther than you
can throw them. They're not in it for your well-being."
I can't argue with that.
"You have no basis to make this claim. You don't know these points
to be untrue, whether it is about the presence of WMD (which the EU
and UN had no problem stating "objectively" that he had),
yellowcake uranium, al Qaeda in Iraq, or the ratio of living to
dead al Qaeda leaders. You have doubt and there is evidence still
surfacing, as it will for some time. It's ok to be leaning towards
one side or the other, but pretending that all the chips are down
and the cards are called -- that these points were "blatantly
untrue" -- is ignorant."
You're demonstrably incorrect. I've said this many times before,
but I'll say it again. If half the experts working for you say that
"A" is true and the other half say that there's not enough evidence
to say that "A" is true and you go on to tell everyone that "there
is no doubt that 'A' is true," you have lied, because there most
certainly IS doubt. That's exactly what Cheney did.
We now know that Condaleeza Rice was told by nuclear experts that
the aluminum tubes in question were probably not for nuclear
purposes. Afterwards, she went on to tell the American people that
they were "really only suited for nuclear weapons programs." That
was a lie.
When Bush said that the IAEA had reports that stated that Iraq was
"six months away from developing a [nuclear] weapon," the IAEA
immediately reminded the world that no such reports existed.
When Bush said Hussein didn't let the inspectors in, that qualified
as "blatently false."
When Bush and his administration say that "75% of Al Quaeda
leadership has been caught or killed," while at the same time
acknowledging that they don't know how many Al Quaeda leaders there
are (Rice stammered it was "in the tens to hundreds"), then
thinking people can deduce that they have pulled the "75%" out of
their collective ass.
You can believe in the war and the theories behind it, but to deny
that senior members of the Bush administration have lied to gain
support for that war is worse than being ignorant.
In which war did the Secretary of Defense decide that he would
no longer respect the Conventions?
conventions, treaties, are we really still so naive that we really
believe these things are held to a high standard? yeah, the US no
longer makes bio or chemical weapons, yeah right. neither does
russia right?
"Is that why it's hard to argue that Islam is a religion of
peace, or that Middle Eastern culture is not an anachronism, when
the people you're talking to are reading news stories of Wahhabists
blowing up buildings in the name of some desert god?"
When I wrote:
"It's hard to argue that we're spreading American democracy
when the people you're talking to are looking at photographs of
American torturers gloating over their victims."
It was in response to a statement suggesting that the pictures of
Americans torturing Iraqis were shown to suppress support for the
war. Are you countering my observation? Are you suggesting that
it's easy to argue that we're bringing American style democracy to
the people of Iraq when the people you're addressing are looking at
pictures of American torturers gloating over their victims?
How does the fact that suicide bombers make Islam look like it's
not a religion of peace change that? How do photographs of whatever
you're referring to that suggest that Middle Eastern culture is an
anachronism change this? Maybe I'm missing your point completely.
Are you suggesting that just as images of American torture were
used to suppress support for the war, so images of suicide bombings
and the mistreatment of women are used to increase support for the
war?
I have a hard time thinking that we haven't been lied to when the assertions have not been born out. At this late stage if proof does appear it will be very difficult for me to start believing that we haven't been lied to. They made a guess, they gambled it would be accurate, and it has turned out otherwise. Bad luck. If they had told the truth, that they weren't certain or couldn't prove it, they probably wouldn't have been able to sell the war. That gets back to the issue of, what was the point of all this? Why can't they just admit that they wanted to get Saddam, and really didn't care what the eventual costs would be?
"Bad luck. If they had told the truth, that they weren't certain
or couldn't prove it, they probably wouldn't have been able to sell
the war."
Personally, I think a war that can't be waged based on the truth
shouldn't be waged at all. And those who would lie in order to wage
war have no business waging it.
I am a democrat in Alabama.If you want to keep losing elections
keep taking shots at the military.Either forfeit nationally or tell
the people from the NYT to spend some time in Red America.PEOPLE
LIKED ARABS with SOCKS on their head HERE. THEY ALL HAVE GUNS and
if they caught anyone taking a shot at their friends in combat,they
would have done alot worse than put socks on these scum bags.If you
dont like that message ,I am sorry ,i am trying to be truthful.It
seems obvious to Red Staters that the liberal media are more
concerned with terrorists than our brave boys in the field.40 front
page NYT stories killed us.The military should be given credit that
even before the story broke investigations were on the way.And if
we are ever to win an election again ,nobody better say ,I dont
support the war or commander and chief but I SUPPORT THE TROOPS
!!!! That is a loss EVERY TIME. ALSO GAY MARRIAGE has got to
go.Republicans will bring it up before every national election and
since it wont happen anyway ,lets vote 100-0 and take the weapon
away.
NATIONAL ELECTIONS are about fighting the fights you can win and
not being stupid. Also we need an extended primary season as it
would have produced a candidate that didnt have 300 Marines and
POWS with a grudge,how could we possibly have run a candidate that
said GENGHIS KHAN!!!
I am a democrat in Alabama.If you want to keep losing elections
keep taking shots at the military.Either forfeit nationally or tell
the people from the NYT to spend some time in Red America.PEOPLE
LIKED ARABS with SOCKS on their head HERE. THEY ALL HAVE GUNS and
if they caught anyone taking a shot at their friends in combat,they
would have done alot worse than put socks on these scum bags.If you
dont like that message ,I am sorry ,i am trying to be truthful.It
seems obvious to Red Staters that the liberal media are more
concerned with terrorists than our brave boys in the field.40 front
page NYT stories killed us.The military should be given credit that
even before the story broke investigations were on the way.And if
we are ever to win an election again ,nobody better say ,I dont
support the war or commander and chief but I SUPPORT THE TROOPS
!!!! That is a loss EVERY TIME. ALSO GAY MARRIAGE has got to
go.Republicans will bring it up before every national election and
since it wont happen anyway ,lets vote 100-0 and take the weapon
away.
NATIONAL ELECTIONS are about fighting the fights you can win and
not being stupid. Also we need an extended primary season as it
would have produced a candidate that didnt have 300 Marines and
POWS with a grudge,how could we possibly have run a candidate that
said GENGHIS KHAN!!!
Anyone remember that Congress saw pictures that were "worse than
what was released to the prss?"
We still haven't seen them.
Skydome,
Is there anything the Bush Administration could have done so bad
that you would have withdrawn your support for the war. If the
answer is yes, what is that thing?
good question
I do know that Evangelical Christians identify with their Jewish
friends in Israel.It was hard to listen to anti-war activists who
claimed we should do nothing as Sadaam Hussien spent 25,000$ for
every suicide bomber who blew up Jewish babies.Also people get
tired of hearing Sadaam was no threat when the entire country
looked like a weapons dump with mass graves.Sort of put democrats
against the side of the sanctity of life.Why do 100,000 casualties
of a possible war bother democrats so much ,and a country full of
mass graves and the potential for more does not?
skybox,
The answer to mass graves is not, "Let's make more mass graves." In
case you haven't noticed, Iraqis are dying violently at much
greater rates now than they were in 2001.
"I do know that Evangelical Christians identify with their
Jewish friends in Israel."
This is because they believe (according to Revelations) that Israel
must exist before the second coming can occur and all of their
Jewish "friends" can burn in Hell for eternity for rejecting
Christ.
"It was hard to listen to anti-war activists who claimed we should
do nothing as Sadaam Hussien spent 25,000$ for every suicide bomber
who blew up Jewish babies."
We are paying the Israeli army a lot more than that as they kill
many, many more children than Hamaas does. This isn't meant to
excuse Hamaas or Hussein, but it does put the problem in
perspective.
Anti Israel is the new code for Anti-Semitic
Israel is a matchbox on a football field.The Palestinian problems
could be easily solved by rich Arab states.It is obvious their
presence is their to constantly distract you from the agenda of
these radicals.Also only an idiot would think 1 billion Jews would
be terrorizing 5 millio Arabs if the situation was reversed.
Also if Christians or Jews were blowing up babies with bombs,there
would be a line of ethical Christians or Rabbis protesting
vigorously in America.Where are the Muslims renouncing in mass
their mass murdering fanatics.
Why are the practioners of the religion of peace silence.If we are
ever to win a southern state ,we better identify with an aggressive
wipe out of Islamo-Fascism and not the Michael Moore wing of our
party.I am still waiting for mainstream democrats to apologize to
the nation for embracing Michael Moore.We are in WW3 and as soon as
we stop being pussies and protesters,we can win elections again.THE
60's are over.
IF WE LET POLITICS END AT THE SHORE and run on DOMESTIC ISSUES ONLY
,and said GEORGE BUSH has been courageous on taking the fight
against RADICAL ISLAM and we support him and our troops
completely,we could have run SOLELY on DOMESTIC ISSUES and GEORGE
BUSH would have HAD NOTHING TO TALK ABOUT and we would have WON IN
A LANDSLIDE.
"Anti Israel is the new code for Anti-Semitic"
Which, it would seem, is a code for Anti-Intellectual.
http://www.nkusa.org/index.cfm
http://urj.org/
Are the Jews in the above organizations anti-semitic?
"The Palestinian problems could be easily solved by rich Arab
states."
How?
"Also only an idiot would think 1 billion Jews would be terrorizing
5 millio Arabs if the situation was reversed."
To suggest that EVERY Arab is terrorizing EVERY Jew is hyperbolic
nonsense.
If you think there are no Muslim organizations that renounce the
actions of terrorists, you are (as with your "anti-Israel =
anti-semitic" statement) admitting to a willful ignorance.
http://www.islamfortoday.com/terrorism.htm
And to suggest that protesters are "pussies" is rather pathetic.
There are many people against this war who are not pacifists and a
good many of them are ex-military. Why don't you tell them they're
pussies to their faces?
Thomas Jefferson said, "Dissent is the highest form of patriotism."
Was Jefferson a pussy?
"We are paying the Israeli army a lot more than that as they
kill many, many more children than Hamaas does. This isn't meant to
excuse Hamaas or Hussein, but it does put the problem in
perspective."
It puts the problem in exactly the wrong perspective, unless you
equate accidentally killing civilians in the course of military
actions with deliberately targeting them for death. This should be
obvious, but when then Israeli military retaliates against
Palestinian terrorists they have to do so in heavily urbanized
areas in which the militants hide amongst the civilian population.
Naturally this often leads to innocents being killed. In contrast,
Palestinian terrorists deliberately target Israeli civilians for
death -- they are easy targets and produce more spectacular news
coverage. There is no moral equivalence between the actions of the
Israeli military and those of Palestinian terrorists.
all MUSLIMS are NOT terrorists
ALL TERRORISTS are MUSLIMS
THE PRACTIONERS of the RELIGION of PEACE
are involved in 14 WORLD CONFLICTS
from THAILAND to TUNISIA
and most of them have nothing to do with
the USA or ISRAEL.So for the blame America first
crowd in our party we better stand together as a nation
to wipe ISLAMO FASCISM off the face of the EARTH.
WE NEED MORE PATTON and less PATTON LEATHER.
BESIDES now that the media is totally discredited with nonsense
like MEMO GATE we can not count on such a biased media 4 years from
now.
With KERRYS pussified stance on fighting terror ,we would have lost
70-30 if the media showed Americans jumping out of windows,or the
beheadings or even the Practioners of the religion of peace kill
those poor Russian Babies in Beslan.
After all the 7 year old girl asked for a glass of water after 2
days in 95 degree heat and was tired of drinking her own urine.They
bayoneted her took a shit on her cut her throat and threw her body
out the window to the courtyard below.
I am tired of ceding all the domestic issues to the REPUBLICANS
because we cant unify in turning these ISLAMO FASCISTS to
powder.
David,
I never argued that there was a "moral" equivalence. Israel has
employed methods of dealing with terrorists that inevitably kill
more civilians than the terrorists do. Then they and their
supporters shrug their shoulders and say, "Hey, what can you do?
We're at war!" Then the family members of killed civilians go
insane with grief and target Israeli civilians. Then Israel attacks
terrorists, killing more civilians in the process, and the pattern
continues.
Morally, this is better than targeting innocents, but the result is
the same or worse. And whether or not a child is blown to pieces or
burned alive due to evil or arrogant negligence, dead is
dead.
Israel responds to terrorism in ways that produce more civilian
deaths than are caused by terrorism and then guarantee increased
terrorism. They have a responsibility to reconsider their
methods.
Israel has its hands tied.
If they really got our help
we would station 1000 troops on anyone of their borders and
announce any crossing of US troops would be an act of war against
the US.
There would either be peace or we could use the full weight of our
military to crush
HAMAS and HeZBOLLAH.
Also Syria should be given 72 hrs to expel HAMAS and HEZBOLLAH or
DAmascus will immediately be destroyed.Killing terrorists is great
,but until we make it worth the while of these scummy women and gay
hating princes and kings the problem will continue.
David, your description of the Israelis' military activities is
dishonest. They don't "accidently" kill civilians as they try to
target terrorists. They take actions knowing full well that
civilians are going to be killed. They fire HE missiles into
crowded streets and occupied buildings, hoping there will be 1 or 2
terrorists among the dozen dead civilians.
Though the deaths of the civilians are not the primary purpose of
Israeli "targetted killings," when you choose to kill everyone in a
room to make sure you get the one bad guy too, those other deaths
are just as deliberate as those of civilians targetted by
terrorists.
Your call for the unmitigated support of the Bush Administration
is frightening. I reserve unconditional support two people only,
Jesus Christ and Mom. (I don't have any kids.) Even when I
supported Bush (I voted for him the first time around.), I could
think of things Bush could do that would make me withdraw my
support. Most of those things fell far short of him having to be
worse than Saddam Hussein.
That is what you were trying to say, isn't it? ...That in order for
you to withdraw your support of President Bush, he would have to be
worse than Saddam Hussein?
I believe Kerry and the Democrats and the MSM helped to get the
boys killed,when they were forced to fight gravestone to gravestone
,because they were afraid to nick a holy shrine.
JOE SMITH from DAYTON OHIO is the HOLY SHRINE.
Now although the mighty US military will destroy
these scum ,we should have used the heavy weaponry sooner.Yes it is
correct ,I believe criticism of our troops when they are in harms
way is WRONG.whether I am for a war or against it ,I know that the
administation has the finest military minds and dont us morons 2nd
guessing every move.SO DO ALL THE PEOPLE IN THE RED STATES.
that is why there is an executive branch so when congress
authorizes war ,they are free TO FIGHT IT,and as long as we are
Vietnam protesting MICHAEL MORONS ,we will get smaller and
smaller.
I a speaking the truth ,I am talking political reality.DOVE TIME IS
OVER.
AMERICANS WANT ISLAMO FASCISM DESTROYED.
THEY HAVE SPENT BILLIONS OF DOLLARS on HEAVY WEAPONRY .
they DONT mind
THEY WANT TO SEE THEM USED
1 QUESTION
DO YOU SEE ANYMORE JAPANESE SUICIDE BOMBERS?
1 ANSWER
NO
I REST MY CASE
1st DEMOCRAT WITH ANY BALLS wins the SOUTH
BOB KERREY is such a man
Zell MILLER is such a man
the party is deep
lets just run away from War phonies like KERRY
lets run away from HOLLYWOOD and MICHAEL MOORE
GET AWAY from GAY MARRIAGE
WHICH WILL NEVER EVER HAPPEN ANYWAY
get into the fight and defeat ISLAMO FASCISM
people dont care about nonsense issues like Health care and minimum
wage
because if we dont win the war on these HITLERS in HEADSCARVES our
civilization is worth nothing anyway.
DEMOCRATS WAKE UP !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Joe,
I have a hard time believing that the IDF launches missiles into
buildings "hoping" to kill the enemy. I can easily believe that
they launch missiles at the enemy knowing civilians will probably
or even certainly be killed.
Under the law of war it is legal to attack the enemy knowing that
civilians will be killed as long as you take steps to minimize the
damage. Thus use of a guided missile is preferable to the use of a
bomb or rocket. Whether that is enough minimization of damage is
arguable.
I am willing to entertain argument or evidence that the IDF
conducts "reconnaissance by fire" in the way you describe but I do
not find it very plausible. It's ineffective and
counter-productive, hence the use of Hellfire missiles.
Of course the alternative is to use infantry capture or kill the
enemy. Infantry is both more discriminate and more effective in
getting at specific people while not shooting the innocent. Of
course, when the enemy does not wear a uniform, that complicates
things. Last time IDF tried using infantry, the results were
reports of a massacre. One can only surmise that the IDF and
government decided to accept the use of missiles as the "least bad"
option.
While I think launching missiles at cars and bulldozing houses is
at best distasteful, I have no sympathy for a cause whose tactics
involve deliberately blowing up little kids and grandmothers over
and over and over again. If the majority of their attacks were
directed at the IDF, they might make a little more headway with
American public opinion.
And Joe, as wrong as you are about the Jews and Arabs, that does
not make you an anti-semite or jew baiter. It just makes you
wrong.
Is 'skybox' crazy or is he a provacateur or is he a straw
man?
I don't know but I'll be damned if I'll use my real name and e-mail
where he might read it.
You still haven't answered the question. What would President
Bush have to do in order to make you withdraw your support, not for
the troops or for the War in Iraq, just your support for President
Bush?
P.S. I don't know why you're calling out to the Democrats. There's
only one Democrat commenter that I'm aware of that frequents this
site.
Fabius,
I'm sure we all agree with you that the Palestinians should target
only military personnel. But can we also agree that IDF methods
have killed more Palestinian civilians than Palestinian terrorists
have killed Israeli civilians? (I hope so, since it's a fact.) But
have the IDF's methods worked to make Israelis safer? Are there
better ways to achieve that goal?
Coward,
I think it's a little of all three. But since he refuses to respond
to direct questions, I think he's probably more of a coward than
you.
I would criticize our President,if he started acting like a
pussy and withdrew from the mission without using all the
weaponry
INCLUDIDNG NUKES !!!!!!!!!!!!!!
THE THOUGHT OF HAVING THESE OIL FIELDS CONTROLLED BY IRANIAN
HITLERS,IS TOO BRUTAL
TO COMPREHEND>
THE COUPLING OF WEALTH and WEAPONS IS UNIMAGINABLE>
I WOULD SOONER SEE ALL OF IRAQ AND IRAN as a 57,000 degree PARKING
LOT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Les,
I don't know about civilian casualties. I would guess that because
the IDF has so much more firepower that it would be true but I
would also guess that Palestinian casualty figures, both in total
and as to fighters versus civilians, are as reliable as Soviet
economic statistics.
Even Sharon knows bulldozers, tanks and missiles are not working. I
am a big fan of the wall and am heartened by the actions of Isreali
courts as to its route, and to how the government have obeyed the
courts (in a metter of national security no less, Mr. Bush please
note).
I think that if Sharon or a successor PM can complete the wall and
get the settlers behind the wall without provoking a civil war or
the election of a "Greater Israel" type of PM, things might be OK.
The Palestinians can expect to get "spanked" (innocent and guilty
alike) every time someone tries to go over, under or through the
wall and I can't see any Israeli governement giving up Jerusalem or
allowing a "right of return" so if that's what the Palestinians
really want, they'll have to take it by force.
Long term after that, who knows. They really, really don't like
each other. The draconian and morally wrong solution would have
been for the Israelis to drive the Palestinians out after the 1967
war. The Jews weren't capable of that atrocity and have been stuck
with their half-assed occupation and desultory "tit for tat" war
ever since.
The Palestinians have missed every chance to shame the Jews into a
compromise or to act in any other way than to make their enemy
suspect, very strongly suspect, that the goal of Palestinian
liberation is also the goal of driving the Jews into the sea.
I'm a big believer in big opinions, skybox, and that opinion
you've got there, it's huge.
You shouldn't just drop it here, you should spread it around some.
Go tell it on the mountain, you know? If I was you, I'd share that
opinion, same conclusion and same logic, with the people over at
National Review Online. You also might consider enlightening the
folks over at Tech Central Station too, the libertarians tend to
break a little more to the right over there. And if you're lookin'
for a place run by someone who'll really appreciate your brand of
logic, don't miss LoneWacko Blog; that'll be right up your
alley.
Good luck and God bless.
Thank you, Fabius, it's rare I'm able to have a conversation of
this sort with someone who is both passionately committed to the
other side of the question, and who recognizes that criticizing IDF
tactics is not an indication of antisemitism.
The distinction you draw between "a bomb or a rocket" and a guided
missile is irrelevant, in moral and legal terms, when the missile
is being guided at a target full of civilians.
Your reference to Jenin really takes the cake, though. The Israelis
have to use tactics that lead to the real widespread killing of
noncombatants, because it wants to avoid being falsely accused of
killing noncombatants.
The use of a missile in a crowded urban area, fired into a building
or street crowded with civilians, is the very definition of failure
to adequately protect civilians. When Iraqi insurgents kill
civilians along with soldiers, they are rightly denounced as
terrorists. The distasteful tactics of Hamas neither excuse
equivalent behavior by their enemies, nor make the Palestinian
casue illegitimate.
Fabius,
So, what to do? Here's a link to an essay by one of those Cato
Institute nuts ;) that seems all too reasonable. What do you
think?
http://www.amconmag.com/11_3_03/feature.html
Les,
I agree that their is a clear cycle of violence in the
Israeli-Palestinian situation, and I'm not saying that the Israelis
always choose the best response. And yes, to the person that is
killed (and often to their family & friends)it makes no
difference whether or not they were killed accidentally or
deliberately, they are still dead. But in assessing the situation
from an outside perspective, you still have to take into account
the overall situation and the intent of the combatants.
Joe,
There is nothing dishonest about my characterization of Israeli
miltary activities. It is your opinion, not a fact, that the
Israelis don't care if they inflict civilian casualties. They do
what they think they have to do in order to protect their citizens
and their military. In order to minimize their own risk they choose
to use such tactics as firing firing hellfire missiles from
helicopters at terrorist targets in urban areas. I happen to think
that this is justified given their overall situation. You may
disagree and find it immoral and an unwarranted risk to innocent
civilians. Fine. But that is still very different from Palestinian
terrorists deliberately targeting civilians for death. Although I
support Israel, I personally have no problem with the Palestinians
carrying out attacks on Israeli soldiers and security forces. To me
those types of attacks constitute legitimate acts of war against
military targets. But there is a clear difference between attacking
a military target and killing civilians in order to destroy the
target, and in specifically targeting the civilians themselves,
purely to inflict terror.
David,
"But in assessing the situation from an outside perspective, you
still have to take into account the overall situation and the
intent of the combatants."
I don't disagree with you. It is relevent that suicide bombers
deliberately target civilians, but it's also relevent (and perhaps,
strategically, more so) that the IDF kill more civilians than the
the suicide bombers do.
What do you think of the article I posted above? I'm still learning
a lot about the subject and appreciate all opinions from all
sides.
"It is your opinion, not a fact, that the Israelis don't care if
they inflict civilian casualties."
I haven't ventured an opinion about "the Israelis'" feelings. My
comments have been strictly limited to the tactical decisions they
make, the implications of those decisions, and their awareness of
those implications. I'm sure quite a few IDF people feel like shit
when little Palestinian kids gets blown up. But that's not what's
being discussed here.
"They do what they think they have to do in order to protect their
citizens and their military." Yes, they do. And if they were
following the rules and customs of war (that is, if they were
acting in a manner that would justify viewing them as being more
moral and responsible than their enemies), they would also be doing
what they have to do to minimize the collateral damage of their
operations.
BTW, please note that none of the above suggests that it is
acceptable for the Palestinians to target civilians themselves. The
deliberate use of force against civilians, whether it is the
destruction of their homes, murdering them, destroying their means
of supporting themselves, or attempting to sow weadspread fear
among the general public, is immoral and unacceptable.
Les,
I just read that Cato article you posted. Sorry, I missed that
before. It's a good article that points out the complexity of the
Israeli-Palestinian question. Unfortunately, there is no easy
solution, and from how i see it, there is currently no solution at
all. It is a big mess and there are hardened, intractable positions
on both sides. Having said that, from a U.S. policy perspective, I
don't believe that the Palestinians have done anything or acted in
any way in a manner that is deserving of our support. Until they
demonstrate, by concrete actions not words, that they are actually
willing to renounce terror as a weapon, accept the existance of
Israel, and live in peace with Jews, I do not think we should be
attempting to help them create a Palestinian state. I am aware that
the Palestinians have many legitimate grievances with Israel and
its policies and I don't support everything the state of Israel
does. But I currently see no reason at all to support the
Palestinians. Placating other hostile or semi-hostile Arab states
by helping the Palestinians is not a good reason in my book.
Joe,
I understand your argument but I disagree with your assessment of
the tactical realities of the situation. In order to take out
terrorist leaders who hide amongst the civilian population, it is
sometimes necessary to kill civilians in order to do it. The blame
for the civilian deaths in this case falls on the terrorist leader,
not on the military that kills him. Hamas leaders and other
militant types do not conveniently present themselves on a military
battlefield where they can be attacked without fear of killing
civilians. If you reject this principle of warfare, you allow
terrorist types to be immune from attack simply by sheltering
themselves close to civilians.
Please note, however, that I am talking about a general principle
here and not defending every Israeli tactic. If it is reasonably
possible for the Israeli military to use a sniper to kill a target,
and they use an Apache helicopter instead, killing a bunch of
civilians in the process, then I agree with you that this is
totally uncalled for and counterproductive as well. In addition,
you mention the Israeli policy of destruction of homes. I agree
with you that this tactic is both unjustified and punitive,
deliberately punishing the innocent as well as the guilty. In my
opinion it is not only immoral, but also stupid, as it simply
creates more hatred and more enemies.
Sure, that's plausible, even likely. But to accuse an entire
profession of being essentially traitorious and agenda-driven is
much less so. (Link via InstaPundit.)
That last part made this post hilarious.
Incidentally I wish we could refer to this as the "torture scandal"
instead of the "Abu Ghraib" scandal. It was more than Abu Ghraib,
you know.
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