The most famous painting of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso's "Guernica," commemorates the bombing of the small Spanish town on April 26, 1937, by the German air force, in support of General Francisco Franco's fascists in the Spanish Civil War. Hard to believe, but this was history's first extensive bombing of a civilian population.
In his book "Postwar," the late historian Tony Judt pointed out that more civilians died in World War II than did soldiers. That was not true of World War I or most earlier conflicts.
Guernica was a German dress rehearsal for the London blitz and the destruction of Warsaw. Soon to come on the Allies' side were the destruction of Dresden, the firebombing of Tokyo and, of course, the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Today when we think of war, bombing from the sky is one of the first images that come to mind.
One consequence of this and other developments in warfare has been a blurring of the distinction between soldiers and noncombatants. Wars used to be conducted on battlefields, between soldiers in uniforms lined up in rows. People took picnic baskets to watch the first battle of Manassas, thinking that the Civil War would be like that. It wasn't.
The War on Terrorism's contribution to this unfortunate history has been the drone: an unmanned plane that can hit a target with enormous precision. As with earlier developments, we're getting used to it. The eye passes over headlines such as "Yemen: Drone Strike Kills 2" inside the newspaper. Right now, we have more or less a monopoly on drones, which won't last any longer than our monopoly on nukes did.
The advantages of using drones are obvious. No American lives are put at risk, and the precision minimizes collateral damage.
The disadvantages follow from advantages. When a military option seems less painful, it is more likely to be resorted to. The ability to strike at the enemy with zero risk to your own people must be especially appealing to politicians such as President Barack Obama, for whom the decision to put Americans in harm's way is surely the toughest one to make.
But drones also highlight a terrible anomaly of civil- libertarian societies: the contrast between how we treat killing - state-sponsored killing - in battle, and how we treat killing in civilian life. There are no Miranda warnings in the trenches. In fact, the entire edifice of protections against convicting the innocent is irrelevant in battle. You kill the other guy because he's trying to kill you, and unless you're raping women or slaying babies, you're going to get a medal, not criticism. Collateral damage - including the deaths of complete innocents - comes with the territory.
Once upon a time, these two spheres were separate, with different rules for the battlefield. Now every place is the battlefield. The World Trade Center, for example.
Why is it not only OK but praiseworthy for the government to kill Anwar al-Awlaki because he is an al-Qaida "operative" who may not actually have killed anyone directly (though no doubt he would have liked to), while Adam Lanza, who shot and killed 20 schoolchildren and seven adults, including his mother, before killing himself, could have had a trial that lasted weeks and cost millions of taxpayer dollars?
What about the other person in Awlaki's car who was killed with him? What about Awlaki's 16-year-old son, who died in a drone attack two weeks later? Awlaki was a U.S. citizen and his child was born in Colorado, if that makes any difference.
The Obama administration's position is that it has looked at this carefully, and there's no legal problem with drone assassinations for reasons that regrettably must remain secret. U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon's wonderfully acerbic decision, issued last week, reluctantly acknowledges the administration's right to maintain this absurd position.
A "thicket of laws and precedents," she wrote, "effectively allow the Executive Branch of our Government to proclaim as perfectly lawful certain actions that seem on their face incompatible with our Constitution and laws, while keeping the reasons for their conclusions a secret."
Stalin may have said it best: "One death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic." The deaths of Awlaki and Lanza may not be tragedies, but the differences in how we think about them deserve better than a "because we said so" - especially from a liberal Democratic administration.
I wonder especially about the teenage son killed in a separate drone attack, and the two killed just before New Year's Eve because, according to Reuters, they were "suspected of being insurgents linked to al-Qaida." Is that good enough for you?
Michael Kinsley is a Bloomberg View columnist.
Michael Kinsley / Public deserves an explanation of drone killings - pressofAtlanticCity.com: Commentary
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Michael Kinsley / Public deserves an explanation of drone killings
Posted: Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:01 am
Michael Kinsley / Public deserves an explanation of drone killings
The most famous painting of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso's "Guernica," commemorates the bombing of the small Spanish town on April 26, 1937, by the German air force, in support of General Francisco Franco's fascists in the Spanish Civil War. Hard to believe, but this was history's first extensive bombing of a civilian population.
In his book "Postwar," the late historian Tony Judt pointed out that more civilians died in World War II than did soldiers. That was not true of World War I or most earlier conflicts.
Guernica was a German dress rehearsal for the London blitz and the destruction of Warsaw. Soon to come on the Allies' side were the destruction of Dresden, the firebombing of Tokyo and, of course, the nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Today when we think of war, bombing from the sky is one of the first images that come to mind.
One consequence of this and other developments in warfare has been a blurring of the distinction between soldiers and noncombatants. Wars used to be conducted on battlefields, between soldiers in uniforms lined up in rows. People took picnic baskets to watch the first battle of Manassas, thinking that the Civil War would be like that. It wasn't.
The War on Terrorism's contribution to this unfortunate history has been the drone: an unmanned plane that can hit a target with enormous precision. As with earlier developments, we're getting used to it. The eye passes over headlines such as "Yemen: Drone Strike Kills 2" inside the newspaper. Right now, we have more or less a monopoly on drones, which won't last any longer than our monopoly on nukes did.
The advantages of using drones are obvious. No American lives are put at risk, and the precision minimizes collateral damage.
The disadvantages follow from advantages. When a military option seems less painful, it is more likely to be resorted to. The ability to strike at the enemy with zero risk to your own people must be especially appealing to politicians such as President Barack Obama, for whom the decision to put Americans in harm's way is surely the toughest one to make.
But drones also highlight a terrible anomaly of civil- libertarian societies: the contrast between how we treat killing - state-sponsored killing - in battle, and how we treat killing in civilian life. There are no Miranda warnings in the trenches. In fact, the entire edifice of protections against convicting the innocent is irrelevant in battle. You kill the other guy because he's trying to kill you, and unless you're raping women or slaying babies, you're going to get a medal, not criticism. Collateral damage - including the deaths of complete innocents - comes with the territory.
Once upon a time, these two spheres were separate, with different rules for the battlefield. Now every place is the battlefield. The World Trade Center, for example.
Why is it not only OK but praiseworthy for the government to kill Anwar al-Awlaki because he is an al-Qaida "operative" who may not actually have killed anyone directly (though no doubt he would have liked to), while Adam Lanza, who shot and killed 20 schoolchildren and seven adults, including his mother, before killing himself, could have had a trial that lasted weeks and cost millions of taxpayer dollars?
What about the other person in Awlaki's car who was killed with him? What about Awlaki's 16-year-old son, who died in a drone attack two weeks later? Awlaki was a U.S. citizen and his child was born in Colorado, if that makes any difference.
The Obama administration's position is that it has looked at this carefully, and there's no legal problem with drone assassinations for reasons that regrettably must remain secret. U.S. District Judge Colleen McMahon's wonderfully acerbic decision, issued last week, reluctantly acknowledges the administration's right to maintain this absurd position.
A "thicket of laws and precedents," she wrote, "effectively allow the Executive Branch of our Government to proclaim as perfectly lawful certain actions that seem on their face incompatible with our Constitution and laws, while keeping the reasons for their conclusions a secret."
Stalin may have said it best: "One death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic." The deaths of Awlaki and Lanza may not be tragedies, but the differences in how we think about them deserve better than a "because we said so" - especially from a liberal Democratic administration.
I wonder especially about the teenage son killed in a separate drone attack, and the two killed just before New Year's Eve because, according to Reuters, they were "suspected of being insurgents linked to al-Qaida." Is that good enough for you?
Michael Kinsley is a Bloomberg View columnist.
Posted in Commentary on Tuesday, January 15, 2013 12:01 am.
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