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Originally Posted by jjshabado
Whenever people say this (and I agree its generally true) I realize I don't really have a problem with it.
That is to say - I generally prefer preemptive strikes and targeted assassinations over conventional warfare all else being equal. And that's not to say that I'm condoning all (or most) preemptive strikes / assassinations.
The doctrine of preemptive war runs in direct opposition to many of our well established legal principles. Furthermore, as practiced, it is heavily dependent on intelligence which has shown to be highly malleable (to put it nicely) in conforming to the evidence requirements of pre-developed foreign policy.
If you just take it for granted that yeah, our intelligence was good and that bad guy was actually going to do said bad thing, then yeah it sounds practical if not morally sound. The problem is it is impossible to establish these conditions pretty much ever. The results of the practice have been disastrous. I don't see how you can look up and see ISIS and think "what fine work we've been doing with our pre-crime unit let's keep this going". Or the Iraq war proper was not enough of a referendum for you? What
would it take to make you dark on preemptive war?
Quote:
Originally Posted by jjshabado
Its similar to the whole droning complaint. I just can't get myself worked up over a relatively large percentage of the strikes done with drones. If the alternative is to invade an area in the classical sense and kill or capture a person that way - droning seems better.
Do you order these false dichotomies from like some super propaganda outlet or something? Were you attracted to the shiny "no muss no fuss" label? One alternative is to find someone guilty in a court or by some legitimate means before executing them along with whoever else happens to be standing around. And it's not the technology people are worked up about per say, its the slide into barbarism that comes with abandoning well established legal principles such as seen in the magna carta, our constitution, or international human rights conventions. You know that we were executing people whose names we didn't even know because they fit a relatively broad profile, right? Google signature strikes. That happened.
Quote:
Originally Posted by jjshabado
My concern is more just with the oversight and secrecy of it. How/When/Why a target is authorized to be killed is much more worrying to me than the means by which its carried out.
The secrecy is a feature, not a bug. And again, no one really cares that much about the actual machinery. Its the idea of:
killing innocent people
creating more terrorists
creating more terrorism directed at us
dissolution of even the aspiration to the rule of law