Unnecessary concessions
By Justin Podur
Nov. 18 Is there something wrong with using a bomb to
destroy a building that might have civilians in it just because there
might be an insurgent hiding there?
Is there something wrong with an assassination that succeeds
in killing members of the resistance if, as the US promises, care is
taken to minimize harm to civilians?
Is there something wrong with taking all military aged men to be the
enemy, sealing them into Fallujah and killing them all, just to try
to get at guerrillas who might be hiding among them, even if these guerrillas
are only some 1500 to 3000 out of tens of thousands who remained in
the city?
Clearly, there is.
But there is a more fundamental issue here as well. Nobody has the right
to kill those insurgents and resistance members in the first place.
It is odd that even antiwar commentators seem to be forgetting this.
Tom Engelhardt, for example, takes an even-handed approach
in the most un- even of situations. Discussing, as he frequently does,
parallels between the ongoing US-slaughter in Iraq and the mass murder
inflicted on the Vietnamese in the 1960s and 1970s, Engelhardt discusses
the blowing up of a mosque in Fallujah:
Last night on the prime-time news, a video was run of an American tank
blowing the minaret off a mosque (where, again contravening the Geneva
Conventions, one or more snipers were hidden). The only comment or commentary
offered was a brief interview with an American soldier on the scene
offering the completely understandable ground-level view that this was
no holds barred warfare and his troops had to be protected.
Was that view really completely understandable? To unleash
the kind of weaponry that the United States did, to people trying to
defend it with rifles and improvised explosives? Did the troops really
need to be protected from the defenders - would they need that
kind of protection if they were doing what national armies, as opposed
to imperial ones, do, which is defend their own borders from attack
and not invade other peoples countries?
Adam Jones wrote in Counterpunch: US estimates of the number of
active rebels in Falluja range between 1,500 and 3,000. Most observers
claim that between 60,000 and 100,000 people remain in the city, overwhelmingly,
it seems, battle-age men. Let us take the high-end estimate
for the rebels, and the low end for the population as a whole: 3,000
rebels, 60,000 people total.
If this is accepted, only about one in twenty five percent
of those in the city are combatants. Joness point is well-taken.
But in arguing that its wrong to attack 60,000 to get at 3,000
he implicitly concedes the point that it is okay to get at the 3,000,
and that point ought not to be conceded.
Its true that the slogans adopted by a tiny fraction of antiwar
people about supporting the resistance are often just posturing,
since it is not clear how that is to be done, exactly. Send money? Go
fight? But I have never understood why folks writing for alternative
media outlets felt the need to go to such great lengths to be even-handed,
or to condemn excesses in a way that implicitly accepts
that occupations and assaults on countries are acceptable, but killing
innocent people (defined as people who dont resist
occupation and assault) in the course of doing so is unacceptable.
Nor have I ever understood why liberal antiwar figures harp on the fact
that Iraq never had weapons of mass destruction making the Iraq war
a pointless one. That argument, too, validates future invasions and
occupations, implying that if Iraq had had weapons of mass destruction,
the invasion would have been justified. If you start out accepting the
premise that the US gets to decide who should have weapons and who not,
and invade countries it doesnt like having weapons, then the contortions
you will have to perform to be against this war or the next one will
be that much more agonizing.
If antiwar activists are adopting these kinds of arguments because they
think that unadorned anti-imperialism is too hard for Americans to swallow,
maybe they should reconsider. Americans were presented every soft half-hearted
watered-down imperialist argument that could be dreamed up, from we
should have invaded Afghanistan because they had bin Laden, to
we should have invaded North Korea instead because theyve
really got weapons, to we should invade Saudi Arabia because
the hijackers were Saudis, to we shouldnt have gone
to war and we should send 40,000 more troops.
They didnt swallow any of those. While there is no reason to think
a simple, clear stand (that the US shouldnt be invading and occupying
countries and that the other crimes flow from that crime) based on immediate
withdrawal will be more acceptable, the other approaches have, in addition
to being inconsistent, failed.
Source: Counterpunch