Friday, February 22, 2013

American Exceptionalism and Dehumanization Laid Bare


Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham has revealed what he says is the death toll in the U.S. drone war overseas. At a speech in South Carolina Wednesday night, Graham said: "We’ve killed 4,700. Sometimes you hit innocent people, and I hate that, but we’re at war, and we’ve taken out some very senior members of al-Qaeda." Graham’s comments mark the first time a U.S. official has offered a figure for those killed in nearly a decade of U.S. drone strikes abroad. The 4,700 figure matches the high end of an estimate by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which has extensively covered the strikes and faced a concerted U.S. government effort to discredit its work.- Sen. Graham Reveals Toll of 4,700 in U.S. Drone War- Democracy Now

This quote witnesses to more than the soul-less blather of an obnoxious pseudo-statesman from a state, whose government, is dysfunctional as his frontal lobe.  This quote encapsulates the tacit justification of not only the drone program, but our greater military approach to not only its current campaigns, but its role in the world and our national interests.  I'd like to analyze this statement through several different lenses.

1. A thought experiment: If this statement had been referencing some kind of domestic war on drugs, and the senator was referring to Americans when he said: "We’ve killed 4,700. Sometimes you hit innocent people, and I hate that, but we’re at war, and we’ve taken out some very senior members of [insert cartel/gang here]" This would be on every news channel as a leading story, reviling the Senator for his lack of care or respect for the lives of American citizens.  Not to mention it would constitute political suicide.  This differentiation in audience response is simply because the men, women and children murdered were not American citizens.  I am just as grateful for and aware of the opportunities and securities guaranteed to me by the Constitution as anyone.  But in this case, it's interpretation seems to symbolize our government's gross misunderstanding of the universal nature of humans' right not to be murdered, and then cursorily disregarded by the ignorant and powerful as collateral damage.  The senator not only disregards the inherent worth of their lives, but also identifies their death as justified, in that it helped us kill other targets (whose aims, allies, groups, and names change every day) that we take for granted are legitimate threats, from a military with an historically bad track record on preemptive warfare.

2. Thought experiment: Had zero terrorist targets been "taken out"  would the 4,700 deaths be justified still under Senator Graham's thinking?  The answer to this question would remain contingent and debatable, not enough information is available but I believe the question illustrates a larger point.  The point being, that these foreign lives have become the means to an end, determined by the interests of a small group of men, remotely.  In addition to all those ethical quandaries, their involvement (the murdered people) is not only accidental, but inevitable, a known unknown if you will.  The "taking out" these particular terrorists seems to be the fully absolving end goal, so I would assume that had the drone program been ineffective at first, that the future goal would still act as a worthy justification, and the murdered civilians as necessary deaths. 

3. What is going on here, is that our government is engaging in , and creating a new kind of warfare.  It is one that is unprecedented:  fighting an enemy  that has no standing army, no state, no cohesive mission.  As this is a new framework of warfare, it is difficult to approach it with the "ethical" frameworks used to "structure" previous conflicts. i.e. Geneva convention, ICC (which the US is not a signatory to), etc... These are just well known examples of precedent for philosophical examination of warfare, though they could not begin to address the brazen adolescent imprudence that has characterized our warfare.  In short, we are making it up as we go along.  And the voices of the military industrial complex symbolized in both parties make the implicit injunction to not question the grave practices that are being carried out by our country.  In the case here, Senator Graham, is ideologically, presenting the ultimate good as fighting terror, a goal which is endless, implying consistent threat and fear, while implying that opposition to this paradigm is relegated to the Utopian idealism of a fantasy world.  I challenge not only his juevenille cynicism, lack of ethical scope, and disrespect for life, but also his use of the word: war, and the validity of the targets he identifies.  I would question whether defeating an organization that repoduces in correlation with Western agression can ever be achieved when our, citizen to "very senior members of al Qaeda" ratio, is what it is.  If the government is going to continue to set us up for a endless war on terror, I would advise a mindful population to begin to care.

4. As long as we can hear: "We’ve killed 4,700. Sometimes you hit innocent people, and I hate that, but we’re at war" and let whoever said it go on as a legislator, and accept new undefined concepts of warfare to be simultaneously created and self regulated by the most powerful military in the world, I question whether it is "we" who are more deserving of the right to life, or the men, women, and children "we" murdered, and dismissed, in the same way one laments a broken egg in a carton one dropped.

4 comments:

  1. First, in terms of writing, I think you should omit this part: "This quote witnesses to more than the soul-less blather of an obnoxious pseudo-statesman from a state, whose government, is dysfunctional as his frontal lobe." Other than that the writing seems fine.

    As far as your outrage goes. I don't share it. AT ALL. I don't like Graham, but his statement is one that I can live with. Your idea that we should surrender to evil is appalling to me. We are fighting the enemy of civilization and humanity in general. Just last week a report was published about an Islamic Cleric who doubted the virginity of his five year old daughter, so he beat her to death.

    The only thing I'm sorry about is that we haven't killed many more of the Evil Ones.

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  2. Thank you for reading and i appreciate your suggestion of restraint on my description of the senator in question. However my argument for restraint in military force is equally valid, in that i denounce a de facto constant state of war, until humans stop feeling fear of the inevitable ideological outrage of other humans. Our war on terror is nameless until new names occupy positions of power in terror organizations. While i appreciate your time reading and concern and comment, I must say i disagree with the idea that our military is "fighting the good fight" against muslim extremism. We are simply eliminating targets and murdering men women and children. True change must come from an inner cultural shift. Belief that military strikes are combating chauvinist, bigoted, draconian culture by killing "evil ones" is a misdirection of logic at best. We are breeding the hate we seek to reconcile, exacting the terror we preach against, and confirming OUR cultural ignorance and "evil" to the "evil ones" who would accuse us of such.

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  3. "Right, as the world goes, is only in question between equals in power, while the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must." ~ Thucydides in the Melian Dialogue

    Is it not strange that the murder of 27 plus children and teachers in Sandy Hook has created such outrage, while hundreds of other children killed by our government do not bother us? Our application of morality, our sense of justice even, places the value of our own citizens lives as superior to those of foreigners.

    Drone warfare is a clear example of “the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.” As with Athens of old, the morality of warfare can be perceived as a 'good' to the strong and as an 'evil' to the weak. The perspective of the violence depends upon who has the power to do their will. The points made by both those for and against the use of drones as means to violence upon their fellow man follow along lines laid down those many centuries ago by the Athenians. The language and technology have changed, but the dispute on use of force remains the same.

    An extract from my own post on the subject at http://mabloom77.blogspot.com.

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  4. You make good points and its obvious you mean to inflict damage on the institution of degradation known as capitalism. That, in itself demands respect. Now the bad, your adjective count is a little high, your using the same terms those idiots use describing the same people...Once the anti cap mentality takes hold of someone it becomes apparent the lack of interest toward establishing a verbatim of which to work from. The great ones could spit a couple of chapters with content that hurt it made so much sense, all that off the top of they're heads. But if you itemized what they brought out as example, it would be simple, easy to picture in your head....familiar objects which allows the reader/listener to follow and learn. Thorstein Veblen wasnt good like that but many of them were...

    Have you read many works from Europe? Not many were noted here mostly because the style of prose lacks authenticity which makes it feel, watered down. Please continue sharing your views, getting the point across might be difficult at times right, thats where I come in with some views they most certainly will be inclined to run from.

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