K
koda
Guest
Thank you for taking the time to spell out, in an easily understandable way, the problems with our current tactics.Here’s the fundamental difference, though. Germany and Japan were nations. They had infrastructures that you could attack, governments that you could deal with. You could actually point to a tangible series of actions that could be taken to render Germany and Japan incapable of attacking us.
Terrorists are criminals operating at an individual or cell-based level. You can’t attack their infrastructure. Killing their leaders doesn’t stop attacks – in fact, it encourages more. Having a war on terror is like having a war on crime. It sounds good until you actually try to do it, and then you realize you’re approaching it wrong. No matter how many criminals you kill, you can’t stop crime. In order to decrease crime, you need to take a step back and find a way to prevent people from becoming criminals (or, since that’s impossible, prevent as many people as possible from becoming criminals) which requires first understanding why they become criminals and acting to alleviate those conditions.
We have killed a whole lot of insurgents in Iraq. In that time, the insurgency has grown. Really stop and think about that for a second. It’s as if we’re fighting a hydra. Every time we kill an insurgent, two more take his place, and the reason for that is that the means we’re using to kill them are themselves creating conditions conducive to turning people into terrorists.
You can’t fight terrorism like MacArthur. You have to fight it like Eliot Ness.
And you certainly can’t do it by treating your enemies like they’re subhuman. That will only increase the number of people who make themselves your enemies.
Put more simply: If we keep fighting the war on terror the way we have been, we simply garauntee that terrorists will continue to attack us. This has led certain paranoid types (and I’d be lying if I said I couldn’t be a bit of a paranoiac myself at times) to wonder if this isn’t exactly what our leaders want. It’s a whole lot easier to keep your people under control in wartime than in peace. And unlike every other war we’ve ever fought, the War on Terror in its current form all but garauntees a state of perpetual war.
Now, maybe it’s accidental that our leadership has brought us into an Orwellian forever war. Certainly, stranger things have happened. But that doesn’t mean we should go along with it.