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The Death Penalty for Killing Innocent Civilians?
Following the latest incident of civilian deaths - 27 killed in an air strike by "US-led coalition forces" in a border area between Daikundi and Uruzgan provinces - the Afghan news agency, Pajhwok Afghan News, reported that Hamidullah Tokhi, member of parliament from Uruzgan, declared the Afghan government was currently doing little more than issuing routine condemnation statements following each incidence of civilian deaths and that henceforth, "Anyone killing an ordinary Afghan should be executed in public." Another representative, Fatima Aziz of Kundiz, agreed, because, she said, foreign troops "time and again ... killed innocent people." Maulvi Abdul Wali Raji, senator from Baghlan province, added, "Being a Muslim, I would suggest Qisas (killing in retaliation) for such killers."
We can hardly be surprised at the failure of this item to show up in the mainstream American news media, nonetheless we should ask why. How is it not news when members of an allied or, we might even say, a puppet government suggest the killing of American soldiers for what they have done to their constituents?
American response to this ignored item would doubtless be agitated - "barbaric" would likely be one of the politer words used. And in this, much of the rest of the world would probably concur, since most nations have either formally abolished the death penalty (91 of them) or simply stopped using it (another 33), so from their point of view, the countries still utilizing it - including Afghanistan, the U.S., Iraq, Iran and China - probably do seem somewhat primitive in this regard.
Unfortunately, however, a story like this is not particularly likely to bring all that many Americans to the point of assessing the appropriateness of our own death penalty. Officials in Afghanistan countenancing the killing of "our boys" (and nowadays girls, too), after all we've done to help those people! They're there to fight the "bad guys," as the soldiers themselves will often put it, with a touch of that American naivete toward the rest of the world that might be considered charming - if it did not so often arrive armed to the teeth. No, this story would probably not prompt all that much soul searching in the U.S.
On the other hand, calls for the spilling of more Afghan blood are readily available in the American news media, one particularly notable example being the recent New York Times opinion piece, "Empty Skies Over Afghanistan." In this article, apparently solicited by the Times, Lara Dadkhah, a heretofore unknown employee of Booz Allen, one of the nation's largest defense and intelligence contractors, declares that so far as America's Afghanistan policy goes, "the pendulum has swung too far in favor of avoiding the death of innocents," because "no past war has ever supplied compelling proof" of the claim "that dead civilians are harmful to the conduct of war." Our goal, she writes, "should be victory in as short a time as possible, using every advantage." Kill as many of em as you want, there are American lives at stake.
When you read something like this, you have to wonder if the New York Times editors actually think about the real-life meaning of words like those above, written by defense analysts sitting in their safe offices. Do they spend any time trying to imagine what it would be like to have someone from their family killed in a bombing and then have the representatives of the foreign power that did it say, "Oops, our bad! But you know we mean well - and here's $2,000 for your trouble"? (That's the current amount offered as reparations - considered a lot of money over there, you know.)
However reflective or unreflective these editors may actually be though, they do seem to fairly represent a certain empathy deficiency in a country where so few have any direct experience of what it is like to live under bombs. Certainly this lack of appreciation of the realties of war has to be a major factor in the war machine's ability to roll on, decade after decade, against ever-changing enemies, with support that includes millions of Americans who largely scorn the government's activities at home while seemingly thinking it can do no wrong abroad.
For now, until more Americans can grasp the fact that Afghans (like people in most of the world) take the death of their own innocent civilians just as seriously as we do, we can probably expect continual cries for American blood coming from their country.
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16 Comments so far
Show AllRead Thoreau's "Civil Disobedience" to get a perspective on war and the military. The american citizens finance the death and destruction. Sleep well.
Dresden.
Coventry.
The legal system, the one which is charged with bringing justice to criminals, has failed to bring our own leadership to answer in court for their wrongs.
If anyone has earned the gallows, it is Bush/Chenney et al. Those guys make Kissinger look saintly.
Obama has launched more drone attacks in one year than Bush did in eight. Not defending Bush/Cheney. They do indeed deserve the gallows far more than Ted Bundy or Jeffrey Dahmers. Just sayin'.
Where is the investigation of the killing of 12 handcuffed Afghan children JSOC on 12/25/2009? Ask your Congressman.
William Rood, patriotic citizen of the world
I don't pay any taxes for this effort and oppose it. So I sleep pretty good. I do cry (really) for the civilians killed however.
Gary
"The important thing is this: To be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are for what we could become."
-- Charles Dubois
Great. Like Thoreau said to Emerson, "Why are you (they) out there?"
from vets for peace:
"I went down to the market Where all the people shop I pulled out my machete And I began to chop
I went down to the park Where all the children play I took out my machine gun And I began to spray"
This is a chant our young are taught to march to in our military today,
He said fear of and hatred for the Iraqi people would build up in the troops to the point where ripping apart homes, wrecking gardens and property, and arresting and abusing prisoners became commonplace. On the street, going out of the way to run a truck through mud to spray old people, or, during house searches, taking the dolls of little girls, twisting their heads off then giving them back became acceptable behavior. "Why do we make the locals fear the US military more than the insurgents?" he wanted to know. "We out-terrorized the terrorists!"
It seems to me that the Afghans will rise to the challenge of avenging their dead. Just give them enough time.
Who in America would want the sort of justice preached by Jesus? You know, that "do unto other" thing-a-ma-jig?
and here's $2,000 for your trouble"?
How much do the defence contractors charge for the actual bombs and missiles? 2,000 must be a fraction of that. Is it included in the price?
Thank you for showing this article. As I have stated on this web site before, I am completely for the conviction of American troops who commit murder. I am against the death penalty, but when a crime is committed in another country, we must abide by their law.
I see no other way for the Muslim world, and the rest of the world for that matter, to see that we are a nation that is seeking some moral compass, though we have lost it a long time ago.
"Afghans (like people in most of the world) take the death of their own innocent civilians just as seriously as we do"
I really hope this isn't true.
The marriage of business and "governance" has lead America to a transportation industry that kills more than 30,000 innocent civilians every year.
And most Americans couldn't care less. Literally. They even support new highways.
How many Afghans should the same industrial-governance sacrifice every year? Are Aghans as willing as Americans are to die for the transportation sector of the economy?
The Palistanis are not too thrilled about the 1600 innocent civilians we have murdered with our "Bolts From The Blue" either.
A few thousand American "heroes" need to be lined up against a wall and shot for being stupid, ignorant, vicious, or poor (and if you volunteer because you're poor, you're the very definition of "mercenary.")
When oh WHEN will CD columnists STOP using the term "defense contractor"? They are not 'defense contractors', -- that bloodless, businesslike term -- they are weapons builders, bomb makers, and war profiteers.