I like Anthony Gregory.  I really do

'Collateral Damage' as Euphemism for Mass Murder
by Anthony Gregory


Arguments about the moral issues surrounding war have emerged and multiplied 
since 9/11. These elevated controversies pertain to modern military 
operations, such as the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; potential 
interventions, such as an invasion of Iran or Syria; and even past wars, 
such as the ones in Vietnam and in Iraq the first time around.

Not much time will pass in an argument with a hawk before the inevitable 
question of "collateral damage" rears its troubling head. It usually comes 
down to this: According to the pro-war position, including that held by many 
self-described libertarians, bombing innocents is not murder, so long as 
they were not "targeted," or if the bombing can be seen as analogous to a 
"hostage situation," in which the U.S. bombing was an act of self-defense, 
or if the innocents killed were fewer in number than the number likely to be 
killed had the bombing not taken place.

I want to address these defenses of "collateral damage" killings, one by 
one.

First, the question of "targeting." As the argument goes, it is not murder 
to bomb innocents, or to kill them during an invasion, so long as the 
killing is incidental, and the primary target of the attack is a genuinely 
bad man or regime. If you are striking at an evil network of terrorists, and 
some innocents die in the process, it is justifiable, since it was not your 
intention to kill the innocents. And we should not hold the attacking 
State - especially if it's the United States - responsible for the 
unfortunate, but excusable, deaths of innocents. After all, "collateral 
damage" is inevitable in war. Innocents die.

Here we see the contradiction imbedded in this argument that invalidates it 
entirely. When you bomb a city, innocents die. When you wage war on a 
country, innocents will die. Whether or not you wanted them to die does not 
enter into the consideration that laying waste to a neighborhood, a city, or 
a country will predictably result in dead innocents. If you know that doing 
something will kill innocents, and you do it, you cannot exempt yourself 
from responsibility. Just because the belligerent is a State, rather than a 
private individual or organization, does not absolve it from moral 
culpability. Actually, if anything, the nature of States compounds the 
problem, but I will touch more on this later.

The second argument for collateral killing employs the "hostage" analogy. If 
a brutal killer kidnapped some innocent people and held them hostage, and 
was aiming a machinegun at you and all you had yourself was a machinegun, 
and you had nowhere to escape, would it be morally permissible to fire back, 
knowing that you might very well hit or even kill an innocent in the process 
of self-defense? Is this innocent your victim, even though you had no choice 
other than death but to fire back? Is he not the victim of the original 
aggressor who put you in this dilemma? This argument is advanced often by 
liberventionists to explain how, in these "hostage situations," the U.S. 
government isn't the aggressor in a war, and is therefore not violating the 
non-aggression principle.

There are multiple problems with this argument as it pertains to real-life 
questions of war and peace. The primary problem is that such a situation 
never comes up. Certainly, in looking at the U.S. interventions in Iraq, 
Afghanistan, Vietnam, Korea, and the World Wars, we cannot see anything 
nearly as clear-cut as the hostage situation to which war is supposedly 
analogous. There is no historical evidence indicating that had the U.S. not 
obliterated Dresden or Hiroshima, Nazi Germany or Japan could have 
obliterated America, or even come close to destroying any American cities or 
even threatened a feasible invasion. There is no reason to think that had 
the U.S. not killed hundreds of thousands in Vietnam and Cambodia, the Asian 
Reds would have killed Americans in America first. There is no proof that 
Saddam Hussein or the Taliban would have attacked Americans in America had 
it not been for the U.S. invasions and bombings in those countries, and, 
that, furthermore, there was no way of avoiding the killing of
innocent Afghans and Iraqis without dooming innocent Americans to their 
deaths.

Indeed, if such a situation actually came to be - where killing many 
innocents in a foreign country was the only way to protect innocents in one's 
own country - the pragmatic necessity of killing innocents would most likely 
have implications that most hawks would hate to confront. As an example, let's 
say that we knew for a fact that China was about to launch nuclear weapons 
at America and devastate New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. Let's say, for 
the sake of argument, that this was an absolute certainly, as was the 
stipulated fact that the only way to stop it was for the U.S. to launch 
nuclear weapons at China first, which would destroy the Chinese 
nuclear-weapons facilities and also lead to millions of dead innocents - 
"collateral damage" that would be quite unfortunate, but not a crime for 
which the U.S. would be ethically responsible, since it was acting in 
defense of innocent Americans. The Chinese government had held Chinese 
people hostage, and it was a clear-cut case of either kill innocents or be
killed.

Now, let's explore this situation a little further. A Chinese official, who 
actually had nothing to do with the original plans to attack America but 
nevertheless has the authority and power to launch a nuclear missile, 
discovers that the U.S. is about to launch a nuclear weapon his way to 
preempt a Chinese nuclear attack on America, and he knows for certain that 
he and many innocent Chinese will die. This surely is not his fault. Indeed, 
he and his neighbors have circumstantially become potential victims of the 
U.S., through no fault of their own. Would it be moral for him to launch a 
nuclear weapon at America, if it would be necessary and sufficient to 
preempt and stop the nuclear attack on China? Would he be able to justify 
the innocent deaths that result, claiming that the innocent Americans were 
hostages of their own government?

In this bizarre scenario that actually conforms to the hostage analogy, we 
see that if it is defensible for one nation to nuke another in defense of 
its innocents, it would be equally moral for the latter to nuke the former 
in kind. In a nuclear standoff, there are innocent individuals in both 
countries. Once you take it as a given that innocents will necessarily die, 
you divorce yourself from the realm of pure ethics and into a realm of 
amoral pragmatism and survival instincts.

To make a similar analogy without the burden of explicit reference to real 
countries, let us imagine Nation A, Nation B, and Nation C. Pretend that 
Nation A is adjacent to B, and both are distant from C. If Nation A's evil 
government decides to nuke Nation C, and Nation C's government only has one 
option to stop it - destroying Nation A and its neighbor B along with it - 
does Nation B, up to this point a neutral, have a right to nuke Nation C to 
stop it from defending itself? Do potential victims of "collateral damage" 
have a right to preemptively attack their would-be killers, and kill 
innocents in the process, even if the would-be killers are only posed to 
cause the "collateral damage" as an incidental but necessary element of 
their self-defense? Following the logic of the "hostage" analogy, the closer 
we get to a "hostage" situation in war between nations, the more innocent 
people have an equal right to kill other innocent people.

As we see, the "hostage" crisis reveals a problem outside the realm of 
simple morality and ethics. If killing innocent hostages is moral to stop an 
aggressor, then those innocent hostages likewise have a right to kill you 
first to protect themselves. After all, hostages have rights to 
self-defense, too. Do they not?

This touches on the non-aggression principle and when it supposedly does not 
apply to real-life situations. It is possible to come up with anomalous 
hypotheticals in which nearly any rational, generally ethical human 
individual would violate the non-aggression principle. Perhaps there would 
be a case where almost any of us would steal bread if we were starving to 
death, steal a car to escape a madman, trespass onto private property to 
evade an axe-murderer, or forcefully push a man off a train track to save 
his life. Almost anyone I know, hard-core libertarian or not, would steal 
someone's bottle of water to put out a baby on fire. In all of these cases, 
the non-aggression principle has been violated, the person stuck in the 
moral dilemma is indeed responsible for the violation, but nearly any humane 
person would pardon the offender, given the extreme circumstances. Just 
because taking an action violates rights doesn't necessarily mean it's not 
pardonable. And, in a real-life, clear-cut hostage situation,
perhaps most of us would pardon someone who hurt innocent hostages as his 
only option in self-defense.

But extending these ethical dilemmas to the State is highly problematic. The 
State is not accountable for its actions. It can't be trusted to violate 
rights conscientiously, even in supposed emergency situations, since no one 
is held responsible for making a mistake. If I push you out of the way of a 
moving train, I am prepared to face the consequences if I break your leg. 
The State never has to deal with the consequences of its actions, and, 
perhaps as a result, it breaks many more legs than it saves lives.

It is a good thing that the "hostage situation" is indeed not comparable to 
actual wars between States. After all, in this real world of States fighting 
each other, all innocents are hostages of their own governments, and often 
of other governments as well. Any time the "hostage" analogy is invoked, 
there is a flaw in applying it to the specific war in question.

The third argument about "collateral damage" - that a smaller number of 
innocent deaths sometimes results when aggressive military action is taken 
than when it is avoided - is an essentially collectivist defense of mass 
murder, and has no libertarian element whatever. Indeed, it is perhaps the 
worst argument of them all.

It is often argued by hawks that the enemy regime embodies pure evil, and 
overthrowing it, whatever the cost in blood and treasure, is thus a noble 
act. We are told of the genocidal atrocities of the enemy State, and even 
shunned for opposing war given this stark and horrific reality.

The common contemporary manifestation of this argument concerns Saddam 
Hussein. I've seen many pro-war libertarians insist that, as bad as it is 
that the U.S. government has killed tens of thousands of innocent Iraqis, 
Saddam Hussein would have killed more if allowed to continue his reign.

The practical counterargument has to do with distrust of the government, the 
information it gives us, and its ability at central planning. If the U.S. 
government cannot be trusted to save us money by investing in schools, save 
lives through its criminal-justice policies, and ensure national well-being 
by investing in healthcare - if the information it gathers and puts to use 
is blurred by the famous calculation problem and it has public-choice 
incentives to distort the truth regarding the costs and benefits of its 
domestic programs - we should view its foreign policy with similar 
skepticism. How do we know how many people Saddam Hussein would have 
murdered, and if it is really a greater number than how many the U.S. has 
killed? We don't. In this particular case, the U.S. government even admits 
it doesn't do body counts.

The ethical counterargument is just as important, if not more so. If we take 
this collectivist argument for "collateral damage" at face value, set aside 
the calculation problem with foreign central planning, and assume the U.S. 
government is honest in its intentions and able in its deeds, we would 
presumably agree that the U.S. government has a right to kill innocent 
people, so long as it is ousting a human monster that would kill more 
innocent people. In other words, the U.S. government, in overthrowing a 
foreign regime, can justifiably slaughter any number of innocents up to the 
number that regime would slaughter if left in place. Ousting Hitler in 1939 
would have therefore justified the killing of millions of Jews, homosexuals, 
dissidents, Gypsies, and disabled people by the one doing the ousting - so 
long as the number killed was fewer than the number Hitler would have 
ultimately killed. Ousting Stalin, Pol Pot, or any other mega-murderer would 
justify committing any crime less serious than the crimes
committed by the enemy. The statistical utilitarian argument for mass 
slaughter is no more than a defense of mass murder on a grand scale, so long 
as it is known that the enemy would murder even more. This is not an 
individualist, libertarian, or even humane argument. It looks upon innocent 
human lives as mere numbers. And, as was pointed out earlier, there is no 
way to gather accurate information on the costs and benefits even in sheer 
numbers of lives lost, in order to act upon the information with a feasible 
and successfully centrally-managed implementation of slaughter-minimizing 
coercive action. Furthermore, there is no reason to trust the U.S. 
government's numbers, even if it bothered to present any, on how many it has 
killed and how many it has saved. This argument for "collateral damage" is 
effectively no less than a blank check to the State to go to oppressed 
countries and murder large numbers of their populations, claiming all the 
while that it is saving lives.

There are other arguments for "collateral damage" that usually break down to 
nothing more than nationalist and collectivist justifications for mass 
murder. To say, as the head of the Ayn Rand Institute said, that innocent 
civilians are part of their State's "war machine," and therefore "directly 
targeting civilians is perfectly legitimate" and they "should be killed 
without any moral hesitation," is to make an argument that should have no 
resonance whatsoever with the individualist. Arguments that America, by its 
nature as a "free country," is tautologically permitted to slaughter 
individuals to spread its civilizing warfare and move the backwards world 
toward the sensibilities of Western Civilization, should likewise fall on 
deaf ears - at least if those ears belong to individualists who believe that 
all human beings, and not only Americans and Westerners who have read 
Aristotle, have individual rights.

"Collateral damage" is a euphemism for mass murder. It is perfectly moral to 
protect innocents against aggressors. It is not moral, nor has it ever been 
necessary, to blow up cities filled with innocent people. When a State drops 
bombs on another country and predictably kills innocents, it cannot be 
exempted from ethical culpability simply because it didn't want to kill 
innocents. It cannot be compared to a desperate man firing at an attacker 
holding hostages, for the analogy breaks down when the actual reality of any 
given war is examined. It cannot be compared to an individual actor breaking 
some rules to save his life, for States do not have rights or face the 
consequences of their actions the way individuals do. And it cannot be free 
of guilt simply due to collectivist notions of nationalism, civilization, or 
inaccurate bean counting of individual men, women, and children as if they 
were statistics and not individuals. Just like most euphemisms surrounding 
war - "sphere of influence," "nation-building,"
and "liberation" - "collateral damage" is a rhetorical trick to cover up the 
most serious of political crimes. The phrase should not be in our 
vocabularies, except as vulgarity to be avoided.

Yes, it is true that innocents die when war is waged upon them. Yes, it is 
true that innocents dying is inevitable when cities are bombed. All the more 
reason that people, and especially libertarians, should oppose the State's 
wars and its killing of innocents as much as we oppose anything else the 
State does.

April 30, 2005

Anthony Gregory [send him mail] is a writer and musician who lives in 
Berkeley, California. He is a research assistant at the Independent 
Institute. See his webpage for more articles and personal information.

Copyright © 2005 LewRockwell.com

Anthony Gregory Archives


-- 
Jay P Hailey ~Meow!~
MSNIM - jayphailey ;
AIM -jayphailey03;
ICQ - 37959005
HTTP://jayphailey.8m.com

No human being has the right -- under any circumstances -- to initiate force 
against another human being, nor to advocate, threaten or delegate its 
initiation



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