Home > Politics, News & Issues > International Politics > War & Terrorism
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| Yes | 45% | 173 votes | Total: 387 votes | |
| No | 55% | 214 votes |
Yes
Created on: May 12, 2010
If conflict becomes necessary, society should strive to minimize harm towards people. While it might seem this would deny the possibility of harming innocent people, that's simply not true. There are cases where you are stuck between two equally unappealing options, and you choose the lesser evil.
When a terror suspect is being attacked, there are a lot of actors. In cases where harm is acceptable, the evidence for believing the person is a terrorist should be fairly conclusive.
People shouldn't be put in danger if there is little evidence to support a threat. This means the terrorist should must also be a future threat. If a terrorist became brain damaged and was no longer threatening to society, it would be illegitimate to put innocent people at risk.
If we know a terror suspect is planning to destroy thousands of innocent people, it is justifiable to attack. This is justifiable not only when innocent people "may" be killed, but when they "will" be killed.
It depends on the numbers involved, and it's depressing that situations in life can reduce to numbers like this. If thousands of innocent people in the attack country are at risk, it is acceptable to put a few hundred innocent people at risk.
You have to judge how great the risks are, and things are very complicated. This is why it's a difficult job to determine when military missions are acceptable.
Criticism of this view comes from multiple directions. Many people believe killing is always wrong and those actions are "playing God." From a religious perspective, people have free will. If killing is unethical, reducing the number of killings seems acceptable when the only means of doing this is killing a smaller amount of people. Typically, the situations where this is necessary are the result of past mistakes.
Failures in both international relations and the development of particular nations can contribute to the rise of terrorism. Many of the injustices in the Middle East date back to decades of repeated mistakes both from inside the region and outside it.
Additionally, people say the issue is too complicated. They have a pessimistic view as opposed to the practical viewpoint being offered. They suggest we do nothing but let people die simply because we might make things worse.
The realist says you learn and improve society by at least making an effort. Furthermore, there are circumstances where mistakes are made and more people die than necessary. These always get focused on by the media. The victories are never victories.
Less people die than would've otherwise, but there is no crystal ball showing what terrible things might have happened without society having taken action.
I don't intend for this argument to be used to support every war throughout history. To be quite frank, it's been misused time and time again to support unjust wars and actions.
The mistake arose from human error in evaluating what should be done in a certain situation. The method of selecting the lesser evil is not flawed, but it's simply a reality that human error can occur. Furthermore, many unjust wars simply pretend to be just.
In those cases, the argument is simply being used to manipulate people. A proper implementation of that same reasoning could have been used against a variety of historical wars.
So as sad as it may be to accept, there are circumstances where some people are going to die, and the best way to minimize death is to take things into your own hands. Even if your actions leave you feeling guilty, it seems admirable to sacrifice yourself so others may live. Otherwise, you are weighing the importance of not feeling guilty against the lives of hundreds.
Learn more about this author, Lucius Trae.
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No
Created on: December 05, 2009
Imagine this with me.
A family taking a tour in a foreign country; the family consists of a father, a mother and a child not more than 5 years old. His parents have been trying to have a baby for over 3 years and finally they were blessed by this son. He is five years old now, he can walk, talk and started going to school. His parents can't be more proud of him.
Their bus parked and they went off to start site seeing, when all of sudden they heard people shouting, others running, lots of noise and Bam.. the sound of a shot! And whom did it strike?! No one but the forehead of their little boy! He died right away on the scene!
His parents are now in shock. His mum crying hysterically, his dad can't even talk, they are sitting on the floor. His mum resting his little head in her lap and his dad patting his mum and don't know what to say. Among all this, the man who shot their child came in a police uniform and told them, "I am very sorry madam, you don't know how sorry I am. There were a terror suspect right behind your child and we needed to catch him before he killed INNOCENT people!
Now you tell me, is it OKAY to attack terrors suspect when innocent people might get killed too?
Will the policeman's apology bring back the little child's life?
Will the boy's parents truly find it in their hearts to forgive him?
Is the logical answer to the policeman's apology go something like this:
"Oh, we totally understand, you were just doing your job. Our boy was just at the wrong place at the wrong time"!
I don't think so.
I mean come on "we needed to catch him before he kills INNOCENT people" and whom did you kill now! A threat to mankind?
Noo, just an innocent child, one among those you are trying to protect.
An end never justifies the means.
And killing innocent people, by mistake or willingly, will never be OKAY.
Not for a terror suspect, not for a thief, not for a killer, not for anything. Nothing on this earth makes it OKAY for a person to kill a little child who did nothing.
So, my answer is No, is it never OK to attack terror suspects when innocent people may also be killed.
Learn more about this author, Alyaa El-Kafrawy.
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