Savage
Posted on May 22nd, 2008
by Daniel Larison |
|
Commenting on my ACLU post, James writes:
This is a perfect illustration of the failure to recognize why torture’s problematic in the way I claim. I oppose torture. (Though I conceptualize torture relatively narrowly, I do opposite it fully.) Yet I do think that winning wars very very often requires cruelty and savagery. The erroneous notion here belongs to Barnett and Co., who falsely think that winning this war requires cruelty and savagery far away from the battlefield in space and time.
What Barnett referred to as “cruelty and savagery” were, in fact, war crimes. He invoked the mass bombing of civilian centers as his “proof” that such things are “necessary,” and then applied this to the use of torture. I suppose cruelty in warfare is unavoidable, if we think of war itself as cruel, but savagery is exactly what is avoidable. The possibility of discriminating between combatant and non-combatant and also between enemy and captive rests on the assumption that there will be acknowledged limits imposed by a civilised code of conduct on how non-combatants and captives are treated. There will be what might be described dramatically as “savage fighting,” but savagery itself is not something that we can or should accept as inevitable. I take James’ point that the defenders of the torture regime deliberately confuse war zones with captivity far away from the battlefield to reduce every situation to the equivalent of combat, which they think allows for a wider range of permissible action, but I think we run the risk of blurring the difference between warfare and war crimes when we allow that savagery is required.
free viagra
buy viagra online
generic viagra
how does viagra work
cheap viagra
buy viagra
buy viagra online inurl
viagra 6 free samples
viagra online
viagra for women
viagra side effects
female viagra
natural viagra
online viagra
cheapest viagra prices
herbal viagra
alternative to viagra
buy generic viagra
purchase viagra online
free viagra without prescription
viagra attorneys
free viagra samples before buying
buy generic viagra cheap
viagra uk
generic viagra online
try viagra for free
generic viagra from india
fda approves viagra
free viagra sample
what is better viagra or levitra
discount generic viagra online
viagra cialis levitra
viagra dosage
viagra cheap
viagra on line
best price for viagra
free sample pack of viagra
viagra generic
viagra without prescription
discount viagra
gay viagra
mail order viagra
viagra inurl
generic viagra online paypal
generic viagra overnight
generic viagra online pharmacy
generic viagra uk
buy cheap viagra online uk
suppliers of viagra
how long does viagra last
viagra sex
generic viagra soft tabs
generic viagra 100mg
buy viagra onli
generic viagra online without prescription
viagra energy drink
cheapest uk supplier viagra
viagra cialis
generic viagra safe
viagra professional
viagra sales
viagra free trial pack
viagra lawyers
over the counter viagra
best price for generic viagra
viagra jokes
buying viagra
viagra samples
viagra sample
cialis
generic cialis
cheapest cialis
buy cialis online
buying generic cialis
cialis for order
what are the side effects of cialis
buy generic cialis
what is the generic name for cialis
cheap cialis
cialis online
buy cialis
cialis side effects
how long does cialis last
cialis forum
cialis lawyer ohio
cialis attorneys
cialis attorney columbus
cialis injury lawyer ohio
cialis injury attorney ohio
cialis injury lawyer columbus
prices cialis
cialis lawyers
viagra cialis levitra
cialis lawyer columbus
online generic cialis
daily cialis
cialis injury attorney columbus
cialis attorney ohio
cialis cost
cialis professional
cialis super active
how does cialis work
what does cialis look like
cialis drug
viagra cialis
cialis to buy new zealand
cialis without prescription
free cialis
cialis soft tabs
discount cialis
cialis generic
generic cialis from india
cheap cialis sale online
cialis daily
cialis reviews
cialis generico
how can i take cialis
cheap cialis si
cialis vs viagra
levitra
generic levitra
levitra attorneys
what is better viagra or levitra
viagra cialis levitra
levitra side effects
buy levitra
levitra online
levitra dangers
how does levitra work
levitra lawyers
what is the difference between levitra and viagra
levitra versus viagra
which works better viagra or levitra
buy levitra and overnight shipping
levitra vs viagra
canidan pharmacies levitra
how long does levitra last
viagra cialis levitra
levitra acheter
comprare levitra
levitra ohne rezept
levitra 20mg
levitra senza ricetta
cheapest generic levitra
levitra compra
cheap levitra
levitra overnight
levitra generika
levitra kaufen









I’m against torture and war, and probably even violence. Were we to apply a consistent standard, we would not do more to anyone “over there” than we do to the abortionists - what is the toll, 50 million now? - over here. We could have done sidewalk counseling or picketing in front of their embassies and residences.
That said, recognize that 4th generation war is not the same. As William Lind points out at http://www.military.com/Opinions/0,,Lind_Index,00.html and occasionally at TAC, we are trying to get to the jugular of a jellyfish.
When you have non-state actors playing war games, it becomes much harder to apply rules. There are methods of fighting, and we are doing EXACTLY THE WRONG THING in each case (read the archives). We would prefer any state - even an oppressive nominal enemy to the lack-of-state we created in Iraq (and was in Afghanistan). We think we can simply not merely reform a state, but create a vassal. We can do neither, but we can help conditions to restore order.
Fire is most often best fought with water, and savagery - including terrorism - is best fought by taking the moral high ground. By descending to their level, we are simply terrorists in military uniform. And wonder when we are treated like terrorists instead of soldiers.
And I didn’t see the old “ticking time bomb” requiring torture. But lets reverse that and if the demand is for one of our citizens to be publicly tortured and executed on live TV else a city gets nuked, should we do it?
I agree with the larger point of the ACLU post, but, how does it move the discussion forward?
Denial of rationality and essential humanity happen in every war…
Well, I suppose it does, but officially authorised torture doesn’t always happen, and I think there is something special in the way terrorists are categorised as less than human. Challenging the logic of dehumanising other people seems to be a beginning. Maybe that isn’t making much of a contribution, but I thought it needed to be stated again.
I didn’t mean that the way it came out, all critical and stuff…
I think it was an excellent description of the mechanism through which war degrades those who engage in it…
I just don’t know why this debate is proceeding as it is… All those who care are aware that the Bush administration is taking a hard line, and most are ok enough with it to have not demanded change via election. Thus, I don’t know why there is all this discussion of why what Bush is doing is so bad… Like I said, everyone who cares has made up their mind and the result was pretty much a giant yawn…
If one is opposed to what Bush is doing, changing tactics seems to be in order…