Posted by
mgraves on Wednesday, March 14, 2007 6:39:44 PM
I've gotten behind on my dead-tree NR, so forgive me if I reference a Mark Steyn column (Happy Warrior) from a couple issues ago.
Steyn has started attempting to hawk his book on NPR/PBS type shows and in this article recounts one of the complaints made by callers. The complaint to which I refer is that we are confronting violence with yet more violence.
I disagree: we are confronting violence with force.
Perhaps it is merely my profession and training, but I draw a distinction between violence and force. Force is legitimate, measured, and discriminating violence; violence, on the other hand, is a larger class, so to speak. All force is violence, but not all violence is force.
We are conducting confronting mere violence with force. Mere violence, if I may coin the term (assuming it hasn’t been coined already), is illegitimate, indiscriminate, and unmeasured. The terrorists target civilians, and other non-combatants. The terrorists do not follow a command structure or wear uniforms. They utilize weapons, such as roadside bombs, which are indiscriminate in their targeting. The new IEDs, imported from Iran, maim and rend. The pipe bombs and car bombs which blow up in markets and mosques, even if they were targeted at legitimate military targets, still represent overkill and are not legitimate military weapons. Even accounting for the “need” for such insurgents to take advantage of every available force multiplier, there is no excuse or rationalization for the targets of choice of the terrorists.
To suggest that the U.S. is no better than the terrorists is to suggest that the U.S. is not a legitimate government and does not field a legitimate military, that the U.S. utilizes indiscriminate violence, and that the U.S. uses violence without regard to the target to be struck. This is a facile argument. It hardly bears rebuttal, but I’m looking to fill some space here, so I’m not bound by such considerations.
One, the government of the U.S. is selected by the people (through popular vote and electoral vote) under processes that have been established long before. Even if one believes that Vice President Gore was robbed in 2000, one must admit that the decision was made in accordance with established fallback processes. Further, Vice President Gore eventually conceded and the U.S. Congress counted the ballots of Presidential electors and President Bush was victorious. Even if one believes that 60,000 votes could have swapped in Ohio, vaulting Senator Kerry into the White House, one must admit that Senator Kerry could have paid for a recount, if he had desired. Senator Kerry conceded and President Bush was duly elected by the Presidential electors and sworn in.
Two, the U.S. military is willing to place its members in harm’s way to avoid civilian casualties. The U.S. does not target mosques, even if used by insurgents. The same is true with hospitals. The U.S. slowly and painfully conducts dangerous house to house searches in order to discriminate between insurgents and “not” insurgents.
Mistakes are made. The Canadian troops in Afghanistan, for example. But “mistakes” is the operative word here. Such mistakes are news because they are rare (the same is true with Abu Grahib, where Saddam’s rape rooms and the like weren’t news because they were commonplace, whereas the acts at Abu Grahib represented a deviation from U.S. military doctrine and training).
Three, the U.S. uses smart bombs, forward observers, spotters, and combat controllers to direct aerial fire to specific locations. The U.S. hierarchy carefully plans and counter-plans all actions so as to be able to best adapt to the changing situation. It would have been easier to carpet bomb Sadr City and Fallujah, but the U.S. instead, in Fallujah engaged in ruthless house to house fighting, confronting terrorists and insurgents on every corner; and in Sadr City has endeavored to win over the population and provide security by clearing and holding neighborhood by neighborhood.
In sum, the force used by the U.S. is not in any way equivalent to the mere violence of the terrorists. To attempt to equate the two is to engage in "violence" to the English language.