Brian Doherty | January 17, 2007
...says Reuel Marc Gerecht in the New Republic. Matthew Yglesias wonders if he means it:
[T]the consequences of the view that the US government should draw no distinction between its responsibilities to Americans and to non-Americans has far reaching and radical consequences for policy areas far removed from the Iraq withdrawal debate. Immigration, say, or international intellectual property policy. Why not mothball a carrier group and spend the money on mosquito nets? Why not dedicate 3 percent of GDP to direct subsidies to the world's 25 poorest nations? I mean, who knows. Gerecht obviously hasn't given any thought to this position whatsoever. He's a hawk. Since he's a hawk, he against leaving Iraq. Since hes against leaving Iraq, he needs some arguments. He came to a point in the debate when arguing that the US government should value Iraqi and American lives equally was convenient, so he started espousing this position. Does he espouse it consistently? Has he considered its implications? No, no, of course not. He's just bullshitting around.
Indeed, some pro-warriors are sounding a a bit desperate these days. They ought to relax, though. As this Radar mag story shows, being wrong on Iraq seems better for your career as a pundit than having been right all along.
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They should draft one USian for every foreign citizen USians
kill. If a conflict is serious enough to do collateral damage, it
should be at least serious enough to draft in equal measure of
lives.
An Iraqi or Somali civilian's life may not be as important as a US
citizen's life, but it should be deemed equal to four years of
coerced service, doled at random (and no deferrals or other outs,
no age limits).
by following my scheme, a C in C will think twice about killing
civilians in a conflict that is less than critical. OTOH, if the
conflict is critical then it will make it easier to do the
neccessary conscription.
Not to mention the fact that Yglesias is conflating "sins of
omission" from "sins of comission."
Sorry to go to the Catholic terminology on this, but our jingoistic
national political discourse does not even address this distinction
thru euphemism. Just like we don't have a non-religious term for
"unjust war."
some days I miss gaius marius.
[T]the consequences of the view that the US government
should draw no distinction between its responsibilities to
Americans and to non-Americans has far reaching and radical
consequences for policy areas far removed from the Iraq withdrawal
debate. Immigration, say, or international intellectual property
policy. Why not mothball a carrier group and spend the money on
mosquito nets? Why not dedicate 3 percent of GDP to direct
subsidies to the world's 25 poorest nations?
You don't even have to apply it to statist solutions like subsidies
or whatever. You could use that argument for free trade: "This deal
will create a hundred thousand new jobs...in Bangalore, but
still!"
For the record, I'm all in favor of free trade for all sorts of
reasons, and I have all sorts of reasons for not objecting to a
trade deal even if most of the jobs created are overseas. But I
still think it would be...interesting to watch a politician make
that argument.
Why not mothball a carrier group and spend the money on
mosquito nets?
You mean the carrier group that delivered the mosquito nets to the
tsunami victims not that long ago? Yea, great idea. Oh yea, I
forgot that the tsunami damage was the fault of GWB for not
donating a warning system to the folks who got flooded, leading to
the next question.
Why not dedicate 3 percent of GDP to direct subsidies to the
world's 25 poorest nations?
Just like that student loan program in the previous story! Yes,
let's just toss money at those folks in amounts equal to or less
than what they dedicate to oppressing people within their own
borders, like the beloved Darfur.
Of course, that soultion could never be accomplished by the
existing governments changing their ways, allowing commerce, using
thir military to eliminate lawlessness instead of being lawless
themselves, oh no, we should not interfear in their internal
affairs, just subsidize them.
Speaking as an ex-officer from an aircraft carrier, they are
colossal wastes of money and should be mothballed. As mechanisms
for humanitarian assistance, you could save money by building a
ship dedicated for the purpose which had boilers that were fed with
paper money. It would still cost less to operate.
On the other hand they do visit some nice liberty ports on occasion
- ah to see Hong Kong again on someone else's dime
tarran,
Aircraft carriers are not meant to be delivery systems for
humanitarian aid so the fact that they are not cost effective in
that role is irrelevant. Are you suggesting they should be
mothballed because they are unsuited to their real role though?
I think that looking at the costs in human lives of a U.S. pullout is a legitimate argument. Regardless of your opinion, an ensuing bloodbath might be something worth considering when looking at the U.S. options. It is certainly a relevant fact; maybe not dterminative but at least relevant. Admitting as much doesn't mean that "US government should draw no distinction between its responsibilities to Americans and to non-Americans". What a bunch of horseshit that is. One side, "gee if we leave, millions of people could die and the entire middle-east could be drawn into a Sunni, Shia civil war" and this guy's response is "well you are just saying the U.S. government has the same responsibilities to non-Americans it has to Americans". Is there any piece of sophistry or tinfoil hat thinking attacking the war that Reason won't endorse? The Hit and Run posts on the war have all of the thought and balance of the loudspeakers at Khmer Rouge reeducation camp these days.
Ever go back and read what the hawks were saying about Iraqi
lives during the runup to the war, when they were pushing the WMD
button?
These people will say anything to avoid admitting they were
wrong.
It's tough to take seriously warnings of the terrible things that are going to happen if we leave, since the last set of terrible things that would happen if we leave (civil war, ethnic cleansing, imposition of a death-squad government) have all come to pass under our very noses.
"These people will say anything to avoid admitting they were
wrong."
You're probably right. I say let's leave and then you can be
wrong.
"These people will say anything to avoid admitting they were
wrong."
You're probably right. I say let's leave and then you can be wrong.
The fact is, there is probably nothing that can be done that is
"right".
Did you see the news report where various Arab states are proposing
a "land for Iraqi peace" deal? It is being reported that the Saudis
and other Arabs are proposing to Condo Rice that if Israel will
just give back all the land it took in the '67 war then they (the
Arabs) will deliver peace in Iraq. This of course begs the
question, if they can deliver peace and stability in Iraq why have
they not done it already? I thought the muslims all loved each
other.
It's a fallacy that the U.S. is saving Iraqi lives by refusing
to pull out. All they're doing is enforcing a stalemate where no
party has a monopoly on violence and so every party has an
incentive to use it. Only when the U.S. withdraws will the
groundwork for peace begin to form. This is so obvious I don't know
why nobody is making the point.
Stop killing Iraqis, get the troops out NOW.
"I say let's leave and then you can be wrong."
I certainly hope I'm wrong, and leaving doesn't produce all the
terrible things I expect, but I'm not optimistic.
'The fact is, there is probably nothing that can be done that is
"right".'
Now you're getting it. Our chance to do the right thing was in
2003, and we blew it. At this point, we're not going to find a pony
in the pile of manure. When we leave as Iraq turns into a
bloodbath, it won't be the leaving that caused it, but the entirety
of the invasion and occupation, from beginning to end.
"This of course begs the question, if they can deliver peace and
stability in Iraq why have they not done it already?" Because, like
every other country in the world, they want to get something in
return for taking action? Or maybe becaise they need the political
cover of a peace deal, and can't just "deliver peace and stability"
by waving a magic wand?
"I thought the muslims all loved each other." What's the Arabic
word for straw man?
Tarran:
That you were once an officer makes me proud to have been an
enlisted man. No, 6K of personnel and all the associated
infrasructure required for a WAR MACHINE, are not
an efficient relief delivery system. Duh! I would
also imagine the Red Cross is woefully ill-equipped to fight a war.
I am awaiting your rational response to this post.
I think that looking at the costs in human lives of a U.S.
pullout is a legitimate argument.
So let's recap: potential loss of life is not good if John's
positios is strengthened.
Actual loss of life is not too bad if John's position is
strengthened.
Wow, if Mary Todd Lincoln had the support of this bunch the USA could be two countries right now.
It's a fallacy that the U.S. is saving Iraqi lives by
refusing to pull out.
No, we're delaying the bloodbath that will surely follow an
eventual U.S. withdrawal.
If you want evidence that some traits skip a generation, look at
the Bush family as it relates to intelligence and prudence.
OK, for the people who didn't read my post carefully, I
repeat
Speaking as an ex-officer from an aircraft carrier, they are colossal wastes of money and should be mothballed. As mechanisms for humanitarian assistance, you could save money by building a ship dedicated for the purpose which had boilers that were fed with paper money. It would still cost less to operate.
Note the bolded clause. It is a conditional clause, implying that
there are other uses for aircraft carriers, such as launching
airplanes which then go and kill people and destroy property. This
being their primary function, aircraft carriers are quite efficient
at it. However, I was responding to a comment that implied that
their usefullnes in humanitarian relief justified the money spent
on them.
You may go back to your regular sniping now.
"Now you're getting it. Our chance to do the right thing was in
2003, and we blew it. At this point, we're not going to find a pony
in the pile of manure. When we leave as Iraq turns into a
bloodbath, it won't be the leaving that caused it, but the entirety
of the invasion and occupation, from beginning to end."
So, no matter what it is America's fault? The Sunni/Shia schism has
no relevance? Thirty years of Saddam/Sunni dominance over the Shias
has no relevance? The religious meddling of the Iranians has no
relevance? The fanatical Sunni Wahabis in Saudi Arabia has no
relevance?
I think this place has been a powder keg for a very long time, and
if there is fault to be assigned then only the middle easterners
themselves are to blame. The invasion and occupation was Iraq's
opportunity to shed itself of Saddam and become a democracy. They
have probably missed the opportunity, small as it was.
Oh, and I should apologize for the confusion caused by my
calling for them to be scrapped.
I believe their primary purpose of enabling pilots to commit acts
mass-murder and vandalism to be immoral, and thus I do believe they
should be scrapped. Thus I reject them because I consider their
primary purpose to not be worth 1 cent let alone the billions spent
on their upkeep.
Tarran,
Point taken. I was not sniping, and I apologize if it seems I
was.
I am interested in this statement though:
"Speaking as an ex-officer from an aircraft carrier, they are
colossal wastes of money and should be mothballed."
I am curious why you think they should be mothballed?
"The Hit and Run posts on the war have all of the thought and
balance of the loudspeakers at Khmer Rouge reeducation camp these
days."
Yeah, it makes me wonder why you seem to spend every waking minute
on this site. I think you are actually writing a book, one post a
time. At the end of the year you'll pubilsh it: "Reason's Watchdog:
Keeping Them Honest, 85 Posts At A Time"
""The Hit and Run posts on the war have all of the thought and
balance of the loudspeakers at Khmer Rouge reeducation camp these
days.""
EVERYBODY DRINK! TWO DRINKS and one HFCS. Plus, someone gets to
read the leather-bound copy of "Heather Has Two Mommies" (the
edition with the sweaty pillow fight scene on page 69).
Between the drinking game and H&R BINGO, it's gonna be a long
day. Hey - Crane! Warm up some Diet Mountain Dew on the Stove! We
got work to do!
The Land-for-peace thing is complete bullshit. Sure, Syria might
cut off supplies to some militias, and other states will crack down
on funding...but when Iran doesn't join in and the Arabs realize
they're accelerating the Sunni defeat, they'll jump back in.
If the neighboring states get more involved than they already are,
there might be regional war. The US Army should be back offshore by
then, and should have been back offshore long enough to make
intervention a credible threat. Remember--it's the Army's ability
to occupy countries that has been shaken, not our ability to beat
armies.
what say what?
shit man i heard there was a 50% off sale on merkins at moo 'n
oink. what's this about diet mt. dew?
oh right, khmer rouge re-education camp! i been there before.
"attention campers. this is dr. klahn. we are building a fighting
force of extraordinary.. magnitude. we are forged in the traditions
of our ancestors. you have our..gratitude."
craft hut opens at 3PM!
wayne,
I agree that joe was being pretty heavy on the blame America side
and light on the blame the Middle East guys. But saying
if there is fault to be assigned then only the middle
easterners themselves are to blame.
is as equally wrongheaded as saying
no matter what it is America's fault
Land for peace? BAHAHAHAHA!
EVERY 'land for peace' scheme involving Israel results in their
enemies getting to rocket and shell more of Israel.
Then again, folks like James Earl Carter III, the new 'president'
of Iran and anybody else who wishes every Jew be pushed into the
sea or burned in an oven promotes this 'idea' as a way toward
peace.
Yea, if your idea of 'peace' is the extermination of all Jews, it
works. Sorry, I forcefully disagree.
For the true humanitarians out there, send some goodies ton the
good guys at http://www.pizzaidf.org
No, we're delaying the bloodbath that will surely follow an
eventual U.S. withdrawal.
How could anyone look at the headlines from Iraq over the last year
and conclude that the U.S. is delaying a bloodbath? They
initiated a bloodbath and now they're refereeing a bloodbath. The
bloodbath will continue until after they leave. It will not end
before they do. Ergo, pull out now.
The bloodbath will continue until after they leave. It will
not end before they do. Ergo, pull out now.
Make that until long after they leave and I
concur.
Then again, folks like James Earl Carter III, the new
'president' of Iran and anybody else who wishes every Jew be pushed
into the sea or burned in an oven promotes this 'idea' as a way
toward peace.
Oh, I get it. In your view, people who want to negotiate Israel's
borders are a lot like the Nazis of the 1940s under their leader
Adolf Hitler. fascinating.
"Oh, I get it.... people who want to negotiate Israel's borders
are a lot like the Nazis of the 1940s under their leader Adolf
Hitler"
Do you not see the obvious similarities between the nazi's position
on the Jews and the Iranian government's position? The Arabs and
the Iranians pretty much want Israel gone, and the Jews dead.
Sounds like nazis to me.
Sounds like nazis to me.
The way you put it, it does sound exactly like the Nazis of the
1940s under Adolf Hitler.
One additional similarity is that Hitler was willing to let the
Jews leave the country alive before the war started, and Iran has
indicated a willingness to let the state of Israel to be set up
somewhere else, too.
So many similarities!
Ah, as long as it is getting rid of Jews Sam Franklin will go,
but if it is defending freedom he will stay here and gripe.
Well put Sam, well put.
I believe their primary purpose of enabling pilots to commit
acts mass-murder and vandalism to be immoral, and thus I do believe
they should be scrapped. Thus I reject them because I consider
their primary purpose to not be worth 1 cent let alone the billions
spent on their upkeep.
Tarran, what is it like to live in Candyland where the military is
not required for an independant nation? Yes, bird farms are
designed to break things and kill people. Didn't they teach you
that at OCS?
I misunderstood the question. I thought I was being asked if I were willing to go fight in for the US army to protect for the interests of Jewish people in Israel. i was indicating that I would do this if called. I saying the opposite of what you think I was saying.
AH, that doublespeak gets me every time.
I admit that there are similarities with the Nazis and then I say I
will go fight against those same "nazis" if called.
that seems more like single speak to me.
Look at how we've policed Iraq since the invasion ended and the
occupation began
what would any US urbanite (and Iraq's pop is almost all urban) do
under the same circumstances?
we used snipers to summarily execute Iraqis for the "crime" of
selling guns in an open market. While an imperial edict issued the
day before told the Iraqis it would be illegal to sell weapons, it
neglected to say it would result in non-judicial executions.
how about our use of helicopter gunships and for urban
policing?
Dropping bombs on suspected insurgents
hosing down crowds of pedestrians for curfew violations
Roadblocks, identity checks, travel restrictions, house-to-house
forced entry searches, mass arrests of "combat aged males"
I imagine the rage I'd fly into if some foreign troops came here
and did me and mine like our troops did theirs and them...
if anything, the Iraqis (after Saddam) were too timid or simply
didn't know how to freak out as a nation, so they freaked out as
ethnic groups
but most any urban dwellers on the planet would freak out if
subjected to such treatment by foreign invaders
wayne,
I wasn't assigning "fault" - defined as moral culpability - to
America alone. Obviously, the jihadists who are setting off bombs
bear greater moral culpability than we do for creating the
conditions that allowed them to do that.
My point was about consquentiality, not morality. There was indeed
a powerder keg there. We threw a hand grenade at it. That wasn't
very smart.
J sub D,
I believe I'll let Maj General Smedley Butler, former Commandant of
the Marine Corps and two time medal of honor winner, answer
your riposte. Then again, perhaps he's just another dumbfuck
ignorant officer to you... ;)
jb,
"The Land-for-peace thing is complete bullshit. Sure, Syria might
cut off supplies to some militias, and other states will crack down
on funding...but when Iran doesn't join in and the Arabs realize
they're accelerating the Sunni defeat, they'll jump back in.
If the neighboring states get more involved than they already are,
there might be regional war. The US Army should be back offshore by
then, and should have been back offshore long enough to make
intervention a credible threat. Remember--it's the Army's ability
to occupy countries that has been shaken, not our ability to beat
armies."
Iran could likely be brought around, if we agreed not to support a
hostile regime in Iraq, and if we foreswore attacking their
country. Remember, Saddam invaded Iran in the early 80s, killing
maybe a million Iranians. We've been threatening them for decades.
Their primary interest is not to make Iraq an Iranian puppet state,
but to avoid another disasterous war.
The fact that we don't like the idea of cutting a deal with those
bastards shouldn't lead us to conclude that it's impossible.
"Do you not see the obvious similarities between the nazi's
position on the Jews and the Iranian government's position?"
Do you not see the obvious differences between Jimmy Carter and
Iran?
Jimmy Carter negotiated peace between Israel and what was the most
powerful Muslim country on the planet. Iran proclaims that waging
war against Israel is the duty of every Muslim.
I don't believe I've ever called you ignorant, but to deny the need of a military in a multi-national world is Pollyannaish (simplisticly optimistic). Do you disagree with that? Oh, a high ranking officer, like all sane people, opposes war in the abstract. I certainly hope so. His history lessons are subject to debate. Those that don't live by the sword can still die by the sword.
Joe,
Your posts drip with accusations of "moral culpability" for
America. Maybe it is an unconscious reflex on your part and you
don't realize you are doing it, or maybe you are just trolling. I
probably should not take the bait.
joe should come out and say that America has a fair degree of moral culpability. sometimes joe is a bit political for my tastes./mild criticism
I guess I am in trouble when Sam seems to be in (partial)
agreement with me.
I don't think America is morally culpable at all for the sectarian
violence, or the Al Qaida violence or the violence brought by the
kind muslim neighbors of Iraq.
Wayne,
If you kick in my front door and leave it that way, can you deny
all moral responsibility when thieves walk in and steal my
stuff?
Saying that you bear some responsibility does not diminish those
thieves' responsibility.
Same thing in Iraq. We set the table for Al Qaeda. That doesn't
make us terrorists, but we don't get to proclaim "Not my problem,"
either.
BTW, wayne, I'm not sure you know this, but in your eagerness to
discuss how my posts make you feel, you completely failed to
address any of the substantive points I made.
I was talking about what we should DO, and your response was to
chide me for not sounding patriotic enough. That's really
shallow.
Joe:
"Ever go back and read what the hawks were saying about Iraqi lives
during the runup to the war, when they were pushing the WMD
button?
These people will say anything to avoid admitting they were
wrong."
"Now you're getting it. Our chance to do the right thing was in
2003, and we blew it. At this point, we're not going to find a pony
in the pile of manure. When we leave as Iraq turns into a
bloodbath, it won't be the leaving that caused it, but the entirety
of the invasion and occupation, from beginning to end."
"I wasn't assigning "fault" - defined as moral culpability - to
America alone. Obviously, the jihadists who are setting off bombs
bear greater moral culpability than we do for creating the
conditions that allowed them to do that."
I don't see where you suggested doing anything, but maybe it was in
a different thread.
I do want to answer one thing you said: "Obviously, the jihadists
who are setting off bombs bear greater moral culpability than we do
for creating the conditions that allowed them to do that."
here is what we did to "create the conditions that allowed them to
do that":
We deposed a murderous dictator, and rid Iraq of his even more
dangerous and cruel sons who were preparing for the next generation
of the Hussein reign of terror.
We presided over a free and fair election where a large majority of
Iraqis got to vote in the first free election in Iraq in at least
thirty years and maybe ever. We nurtured the creation of a
democracy and a constitution.
How you construe those actions to be equivalent to kicking down the
doors to the house of Iraq and throwing it open to burglars is not
entirely apparant to me.
I said nothing about patriotism by the way, I said you were
unfairly characterizing America's intentions, and you were
portraying American soldiers as thugs and murderers, and you
were.
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