Posted on 05/19/2018 5:31:08 AM PDT by Kaslin
Is torture always morally wrong? Is it sometimes justified?
These are questions swirling around the nomination of Gina Haspel to head the CIA. Critics (mainly Senate Democrats) claim that torture is always wrong, even though some of those senators were aware of waterboarding and other enhanced interrogation for years and never once complained about it. In her defense, Karl Rove told Fox News viewers that whatever we do is legitimate if its for the defense of the United States.
As I explain below, both sides are wrong. But first things first.
Zero Dark Thirty. This is Hollywoods version of Haspels backstory. She apparently supervised the harsh interrogation of al-Qaeda captives, gaining information that eventually led to the location of Osama bin Ladens compound in Pakistan. She then supervised a raid on the compound in which U.S. special ops forces assassinated (a word which I dont choose lightly) bin Laden and several of his colleagues. In what follows I am going to assume that the movie basically got it right.
Morality in the fight against terror. There is probably no country in the world that hasnt tortured people. But ours is the only country that admits it. We not only admit it, we publish official government investigations of it, hold public hearings on it and make movies about it.
Having done all that, we could do the world a favor. Why not use this as a teaching opportunity? Given a world awash in ethical relativism, why not use bin Laden as a case study to explore what is and is not ethically permissible behavior?
Lifeboat ethics. Believe it or not, there are certain circumstances when ethics simply do not apply. Imagine you and one other person are in the middle of the ocean with a lifeboat built for one. What should you do?
According to (my admittedly lay interpretation of) Emanuel Kants universalizability principle, ethical behavior requires that you act on a principle that can be applied to everybody else not just you. Lets say that you selfishly push the other person aside and grab the lifeboat to save yourself. If the other person acts on the same principle, he will push you aside. So, you both cant successfully act on the same principle.
On the other hand, suppose you behave altruistically and sacrifice yourself for the other persons benefit. If he acts on the same principle, he will sacrifice himself for you. And you both drown.
Bottom line: there is no universalizable ethics that can solve the lifeboat problem. Ethics dont seem to apply.
Now if all the world were one big lifeboat, we would be living in a Hobbesian jungle. Each of us would be pitted against the other. One persons gain would always be another persons loss. Life, in the words of Hobbes, would be nasty, brutish and short.
Fortunately, most of the time we can live by universal ethical principles that allow peaceful coexistence. We can also draw boundaries around the circumstances where ethics dont seem to apply. But what are those principles and boundaries? When Kant was alive educated people believed there were ethical principles that philosophers could discover. Today, its hard to find philosophers who believe that anymore.
Extensions of lifeboat ethics. The idea of trading one life for another has fascinated ethical philosophers and psychologists alike. In one thought experiment, a runaway trolley is barreling down the track, about to kill five people. However, you can save the five by pulling a switch diverting the trolley to a different track where only one person will be killed. Should you pull the switch? Why? Or why not?
Psychologists have experimented with a version of this dilemma by giving college students the opportunity to spare a group of mice from electric shocks by diverting the entire electric jolt to a single mouse.
In all of these cases, normal ethical rules dont seem to apply.
The movie Dirty Harry provides an example more relevant for our purposes. Clint Eastwood tortures an unsympathetic villain to learn the location of an innocent girl who is about to suffocate in an underground tomb. Is it okay to torture someone to save a life?
Is torture worse than killing? Its amazing how many people think it is. They include Barack Obama, the editorial board of the New York Times, Sen. John McCain and many Senate Democrats.
Lets return to Osama bin Laden. The special ops forces killed him outright, along with several others in the compound that night. None of these people were armed. They werent in uniform. They werent resisting. If the movie is to be believed, they could easily have been captured. These really were assassinations. Yet the New York Times, which never hesitates to editorialize on the evils of torture, thought these assassinations deserved high praise. So did President Obama and the national Democratic Party which used the raid as a reason to re-elect the president.
Of all the senators who are complaining about the use of torture to locate bin Laden, I dont think a single one has objected to Haspels role in killing him.
To my knowledge, no one was tortured during the Obama presidency. But that was because no one was captured. That was because we killed them instead. Obama ordered more people killed outside of ordinary war (by drones), than all previous U.S .presidents combined. Again, none were in uniform, none were resisting and more than a few may have been innocent civilians killed by mistake.
See Licensed to Kill and More on Licensed to Kill.
Are women and children different? In the movie, our guys killed the men in the bin Laden compound, but they spared the women and children. Im not sure this is normal. Ive been told by someone who should know that our special ops forces normally dont leave witnesses regardless of age or sex.
Is this a distinction that should be part of the ethical boundary lines we want to draw? When the Titanic went down, everyone believed in chivalry. But these days, the whole idea of chivalry may be politically incorrect.
Are civilians different? Almost everything we call an act of terrorism is an assault on people we call civilians. As reprehensible as these acts appear, we have never come to grips with our own countrys similar behavior in the past. The allied firebombing of Dresden in World War II had no military purpose. Nor did the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Millions of civilians were killed for no apparent reason other than to terrorize the enemy.
If these acts were wrong, if we never intend to do anything like that again, we need to say so.
Hamburg, Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki targeted and killed hundreds of thousands of women and children in a most horrific manner.
Im not saying I wouldnt have done it - but the military justification, which was to terrorize civilian populations and collapse support for the war, makes the wide-area firebombing into a military target in only the broadest sense.
True that. The “man” is as giddy as a school girl. Disgusting display. Switched to BBC coverage.
John Goodman: “The allied firebombing of Dresden in World War II had no military purpose. Nor did the nuclear bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.”
Mr. Goodman would have scant good luck selling his brand of crazy to any of the Marines and GIs scheduled to make the first amphibious assaults of Kyushu and later Honshu...
Our own estimate of American casualties was 1 million taking the Japanese home islands...The bombs forced Japan to surrender, and saved millions of lives, on both sides...
He's living vicariously through Meghan.
Are we at war? Is torture worse than murder? Have previous POWs gone back to the battle field? Are we truly doing everything we can to win this war? What is the end objective of this war? War should never be fought unless you have no other option. But if you go to war and you want to win the end result must result in a cultural change by your enemy. Enemy casualties should not be considered. For they are not concerned about yours. So if torture achieves these goals is it appropriate? Does urgency important. Does this individual likely have the information you need or are you just fishing?
The nukes saved thousands of American lives.
And millions of Japanese lives were saved by causing them to surrender instead of continuing to fight a war they would lose.
The nukes also saved the lives of tens of millions of Japanese.
Contrary to other leftist delusions, Hiroshima and Nagasaki were military targets. There is plenty of evidence in military documents now available on the internet. In his The Making of the Atomic Bomb Richard Rhodes discusses Hiroshima as a military target (pp. 626-7) and Nagasaki (pp. 392-3), which had the Mitsubishi Munitions plant making torpedoes.
Also, civilians working in military sites and in military areas were warned to leave. If civilians specifically were to be targeted, the atomic bomb could have been dropped in a different location, especially in Nagasaki, for a higher civilian death toll.
And if the United States had developed the atomic bomb six months earlier, it is possible that the German military target, Dresden, would have been destroyed in a nuclear blast rather that destroyed by firebombs. Again, in war, that would have been completely and morally justified. In fact if Truman were to have decided against using the bomb, he would have been a traitor to the United States.
Of course some of the Allied bombing did hit civilian areas with no military significance. The Allied pilots (many who died trying) would have preferred to accurately bomb military manufacturing plants, oil depots, railroads, bridges and ball bearing factories, and repeatedly tried. But with factories and rails near some residential areas, obscuring smoke, poor accuracy, and occasional interference from the Luftwaffe and anti-aircraft flak, residential areas were sometimes hit with bombs.
Perhaps some would like the widows and orphans of Allied bomber pilots killed in Germany to send sympathy cards for the misplaced bombs of their husbands and fathers.
If you are in dry clothes and OK in time for dinner, its not torture.
They saved japanese lives too.”
Mighty white of Truman.
nukes also saved the lives of tens of millions of Japanese.””
Mighty white of Truman.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.