Joe,
To begin with, please understand that I do not want you to construe anything I might say here as a personal attack. I think we are both decent human beings. We both have the highest regard for the truth. And I am sure you will agree that the emergence of the truth is what really matters here.
Your thoughtful and eloquent response (post #141) contains numerous statements that I find rather baffling. To begin with, using the phrase “nuke them all” or “crush them all” is a pejorative smear which would require considerable definition to rise to the level of a floating abstraction. It’s a foolish parody. No sane person would advocate such a meaningless “principle.” You do your cause no service by repeating it.
You accuse another contributor of having the will to wipe out entire populations armed with no specific knowledge of the enemies he wants to attack. I would never go along with the idea of wiping out an entire population (if that is what he is advocating). In the case of Iran, we know that there is a huge percentage of the people there who do not support the Islamic fundamentalist regime. On the other hand, why do you assume that he has no knowledge of the enemy? Why would you throw out such an accusation so cavalierly? I find that puzzling, and it makes me wonder whether you are making a serious effort to understand opposing points of view.
You ask:
Are the people at ARI really informed enough to decide what specific wars we should fight, and how to fight them? … [These philosophical] principles aren't a substitute for knowledge. They're a form of knowledge, or possibly a tool for gaining it. None of this says you can skip the hard work. When anyone thinks that philosophy is a substitute for knowledge, or worse, that it's moral to ignore the facts in an attempt to be "principled", it's a perversion of philosophy.
All of that would be true, except that you are talking without any knowledge of the extent to which the ARI spokesmen have worked to obtain the relevant information. Once again, you appear to be making an assumption with absolutely no foundation for claiming it to be true.
What are the facts about the present day world that demonstrate we should pursue war with Iran—and with what means or strategy?
The facts are easily available to anyone who follows the news and studies reports from the experts. You know what Ahmadinejad has said about his intentions to destroy Israel and the United States. You know what the Iranian madrassahs and Moslem temples preach and that it is only a matter of time before more Americans die. You know about the intelligence reports which show definite plans to instigate attacks on American soil. You know about the Islamic militant bombings in New Delhi, Bali, Jakarta, Madrid, London and Bombay. You know Iran provides a safe haven for terrorist training camps. You know Iran has been directly responsible for ongoing support of the insurgency in Iraq. You know they are busy acquiring nuclear weapons. You know that the Iranian Constitution, passed right after the radical fundamentalists came to power, codifies "trying to perpetuate [the Islamic] revolution both at home and abroad…” And you surely know that without state sponsorship, terrorist acts would be ineffectual and infrequent.
Facts are not the real issue. I could spend hours chronicling such facts, but you would undoubtedly contest the truth of those facts which were inconsistent with your viewpoint. I say the facts are obvious. You say well what about this or that. Back and forth, ad infinitum. Trotting out more "facts" would be a total waste of your time and mine. If the above facts aren't enough, we must agree to disagree.
Regarding the horrific sacrifice of innocent American lives in Iraq, you say:
Where I have a problem is when a philosopher decides, regardless of the empirical facts, that it's necessarily sacrificial. That there's no possibility that it can't be of interest. And when they try to use philosophical premises to rule it out, as if facts were irrelevant…
I don’t know of anyone who shares my view that the war in Iraq is an altruistic abomination who would draw that conclusion without reference to empirical facts. What are the facts about post-Saddam Iraq that show clearly that our war effort has been a tragic waste and that it will ultimately result in a return to dictatorship?
Ongoing Shi’ite-Sunni sectarian violence (temporarily suppressed by the troop surge); utter passivity on the part of the Maliki government; the ruling Shi'ite’s call for Sharia to be adopted in family and civil law; an Iraqi constitution which makes significant concessions to Sharia law, thereby empowering Wahhabi extremists within the government; polls showing that a strong majority of Iraqis want U.S. military forces to immediately withdraw from the country; polls showing widespread Iraqi support for a fundamentalist theocratic regime; the open persecution of non-Muslims in Iraq; incompetence and indifference displayed on the part of U.S. trained police forces; ongoing efforts by Iraqi citizens to protect Islamic insurgents; the facts of history (failures of democracy in Arab nations); the current absence of anything resembling genuine democracy in that part of the globe.
Is that what you call “absurdly simplistic”? But even if you conceded that it was not “absurdly simplistic,” you have another out. You will say: "Prove there is no possibility that it could be worthwhile." In other words, prove there is no possibility that we can kill another thousand or so American soldiers and it will not work out better for us in the long run. Sort of like proving there is no God. But us “bomb-throwers” are guilty of “perverting philosophy.”
You then proceed to over-generalize and assume that your ridiculous “nuke them all” parody of a principle implies that we should proceed to bomb North Korea, Afghanistan, Pakistan, England, Saudi Arabia and various European countries with large Muslim populations.
We have adequate evidence to act against Iran and we are hiding our heads in the sand as long as we let that particular malignancy continue to fester until it takes out another good segment of our population. I do not know of anyone with my perspective on national defense who is advocating attacking the other nations you refer to. It appears that significantly less drastic measures may be effective in neutralizing North Korea. I certainly hope so.
I would like to see more aggressive action taken against tribal sanctuaries for Al Quaida leaders in remote sections of Pakistan, but such military action would be strictly limited to those specific areas. England, France and Spain are not actively sponsoring terrorism, so any suggestion of military action against them would be totally ridiculous. If we have intelligence which shows that Saudi Arabia is being used for terrorist training camps, I would sanction bombing those delimited areas, not the general population. As I said, aggressor nations are the legitimate targets for our bombs, not just any country where terrorists might possibly be hiding (which would obviously include the United Sates).
The recent Iranian harassment of US Navy ships in the Strait of Hormuz was not blurry at all. The Iranian government was obviously testing us, hoping to provoke us into actions that would have resulted in embarrassment and negative publicity for the United States. They got away with kidnapping British Naval officers—with no adverse consequences. They succeeded in making that particular escapade look ambiguous. I blame Britain for that. If they had attacked our warships, however, I have little doubt they would have been blown out of the water—and justifiably so. To our credit, we made clear that there was nothing ambiguous about it—just as there is nothing ambiguous about the thugs running Iran. If an aggressor nation succeeds in portraying themselves as “ambiguous,” it is likely due to the timidity of the victim.
A note regarding methods and strategy: “Rules of engagement” are generally a travesty of justice which arbitrarily place the lives of foreign citizens above the lives of our soldiers. The only situation that might make so-called “rules of engagement” legitimate would be a conflict where we are operating within the borders of an ally, with their permission, assisting them in repelling a foreign invader. In that situation, we would want to take measures to protect the rights of the innocent citizens of the non-aggressor. The 1990 “Operation Desert Storm,” where we came to the aid of Kuwait against Saddam Hussein, would be an example of such a conflict. Looks like we might have a potential point of agreement here. I can live with that.
I vehemently disagree that the “rules of engagement” binding the hands of our soldiers in Iraq and needlessly placing them in mortal danger is anything but obscenely altruistic.
Then you say, speaking of the consequences of using weapons of mass destruction against our enemies:
But how about alienating allies, pushing enemies to join forces, fighting wars where our justification is less that 100% certain (coupled with violence as if it was 100% certain), possible trading sanctions against us, weakening our military and economy, and who knows what else. The first part seems like a good case until you start looking at the rest of the factors, some of which may in some cases outweigh the first.
Here’s what Norman Podhoretz had to say about that:
"The opponents of bombing—not just the usual suspects but many both here and in Israel who have no illusions about the nature and intentions and potential capabilities of the Iranian regime—disagree that it might end in the overthrow of the mullocracy. On the contrary, they are certain that all Iranians, even the democratic dissidents, would be impelled to rally around the flag. And this is only one of the worst-case scenarios they envisage. To wit: Iran would retaliate by increasing the trouble it is already making for us in Iraq. It would attack Israel with missiles armed with non-nuclear warheads but possibly containing biological and/or chemical weapons. There would be a vast increase in the price of oil, with catastrophic consequences for every economy in the world, very much including our own. The worldwide outcry against the inevitable civilian casualties would make the anti-Americanism of today look like a love-fest. "I readily admit that it would be foolish to discount any or all of these scenarios. Each of them is, alas, only too plausible. Nevertheless, there is a good response to them, and it is the one given by John McCain. The only thing worse than bombing Iran, McCain has declared, is allowing Iran to get the bomb." The Case for Bombing Iran
The plain truth is that we cannot sit on our hands and fail to act when the negative consequences of inaction are so clear. We cannot concoct worst case scenarios and use that as an excuse for appeasement. How did we know the future price of dropping the atom bomb on Japan, or the carpet bombing of major cities in Nazi Germany? If Truman had taken your advice, we would have launched the ground and sea invasion of Japan at the cost of untold thousands of American lives.
We are not omniscient. We did not know if the Japanese people would band together and plot and scheme to destroy us years later in retaliation. We did not know if the world community would condemn us and isolate us. How could we have possibly known? And what good would it have served to curtail action based on that unknowable? That’s what principles are for—to guide us in making decisions using the facts that are available, looking at the essential nature of the alternatives—not refusing to act because bad things might well happen.
This is how you characterize the viewpoint of ARI:
But instead of focusing on where they offer the most value, the philosophy, I think they stepped over the line and now are judged as amateurs who promote mindless violence. Instead of keeping it focused on a method of analysis and a standard of moral judgment, they've put the focus on their own foreign policy proposals.
Only those who ignore the details and nuances of their arguments could accuse them of being mindless. The truth is, based on what I have observed, most of the people who denounce them for preaching “mindless violence” are quasi-Objectivist libertarians. I have heard Yaron Brook many times on local radio treated with the utmost respect. He has been tremendously successful in helping a vast audience to see the enormous practical value of the Objectivist ethics for dealing with the threat militant Islam now poses for our nation’s survival.
One final point. You have suggested that ARI’s position amounts to a form of rationalism. The definition of rationalism is focusing on abstractions to the detriment of empirical facts. Which of these is an example of rationalism?
(1) The Spartan warrior who responds to the explicit threats of the Persians by building an army, equipping them with weapons and marching to meet the enemy long before they reach the outskirts of his city?
(2) The ivory tower philosopher who tells him it would be morally wrong to go to war until the evidence is beyond all question—i.e., until the Persian army is poised to attack on the edge of the city and countless innocent citizens will certainly die?
|