Showing posts with label Afghanistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Afghanistan. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 April 2011

True peacekeepers don't need more fighter jets - Belleville Intelligencer - Ontario, CA

Someone wrote this letter to the editor at the Intelligencer:

Will someone please tell me who we are planning to attack with these state of the art fighter jets the government wants to purchase?

There's already enough collateral damage being hoisted on our fellow human beings by man-made nuclear accidents, global warming, earthquakes and tsunamis.

If we're really interested in democracy, let's do it by example. We are in an election campaign right now because or democratic process was threatened by a Conservative leader who has set himself up as an aggressor both at home and abroad.

Peacekeepers and people with a moral conscience do not refer to human life as collateral damage.

Let's look at the civilian members we have killed, worldwide, in the name of democracy and then maybe we'll be able to put a moral price on jets that are supposed to be worth $1 billion.

God help us all.

A. Meyers

Belleville

I replied:

    I wonder if the people whom we have saved from the Taliban and Ghadafi would agree with A. Meyers?


   
 This person's grasp of world affairs and history seems weak, as many of the millions who've died in Cambodia's killing fields, Mao's manufactured famines and anti-intellectual purges, and myriad other cases of genocide and government mass murder in the last 50 years would probably have celebrated an interested world acting on their behalf. And of course their was the western intervention in the Balkans in the '90s for just that purpose.

    Consider, too, that the intervention in Afghanistan was a direct result of the 9/11 attacks, which led to the first ever invocation of Article V of the NATO treaty - the Article that states an attack on one member is considered an attack on all. As a result, the crude method of response would have been a simple brute force attack on Afghanistan, as it's government was complicit in the attacks. Instead, NATO aided the Northern Alliance to overthrow the Taliban, and has since aided in the suppression of the Taliban and Al Qaeda. Have there been civilian casualties because of Allied action? Of course, but the Afghan peoples have consistently stated their preference for accidental casualties from Allied action to the deliberate brutality and murder of the Taliban. Girls having acid thrown in their faces for going to school ring any bells, Meyers?


    Your comment, "Peacekeepers and people with a moral conscience do not refer to human life as collateral damage," is entirely out of line. Once you get down off your moral high horse you might check to see how the term "collateral damage" is used and what it means. Collateral is a term referring to things of value - such as your house which might secure a loan. It is not something anyone would allow to be damaged without grave concern.



    The term as used in describing civilians killed during military action refers to losses which are always concerning to military planners and soldiers on the ground. These soldiers, who are also the ones called upon to be peacekeepers, have a much stronger moral conscience for you, as unlike you they put their lives on the line every day to protect people they've never met, have no vested interest in, and may never see again. They are willing to put themselves in the line of fire to create a peace in the first place. When these men and women return, they bring with them memories of battles, of friends lost, of seeing the horrors of war and the brutality of an enemy who does not hold human life to be as valuable as we do. These are your people without a "moral conscience". The reality is sometimes the recognition that civilian casualties were unavoidable is the only thing allowing soldiers to have any peace after being involved in a battle that included 'collateral damage'.

    "Let's look at the civilian members we have killed, worldwide, in the name of democracy..."


    And let's ask those who risk death every day in Syria, seeking democracy in the face of a brutal dictatorship how valuable, how worthy of sacrifice, democracy is. Or how about Iran, Bahrain, Tunisia, Egypt, Burma, Russia, and the former Warsaw Pact states - those now free because people risked death or died, while those still under the heel of dictators risk their lives to hopefully achieve freedom in the future.


    Your statement implies that in the pursuit of democracy the west has discounted the value of civilian lives. The opposite is true - when the west has acted, with a rogue exceptions, it has acted in a manner consistent with minimizing civilian, and sometimes even enemy, casualties.
Sir or Ma'am, I think you ought to give your head a shake - to start. Then you ought to apologize to our military. And finally, you ought to seek to educate yourself on the issues before applying pen to paper in the future.


Sincerely,
James Phieffer


True peacekeepers don't need more fighter jets - Belleville Intelligencer - Ontario, CA

Wednesday, 25 November 2009

Miscellaneous Thoughts

    Sorry for the disappearance.  Much to the happiness of some and the dismay of possibly more, though, I am back.  Just some short thoughts on a variety of things.


  • While I am no fan of torture, no one in the opposition has answered the single most important question behind the Afghan prisoner debate - what do you do with any Taliban fighters captured by Canadian soldiers?  Do the Libs, Dippers and Bloc want Canada to build its own version of Guantanamo (maybe Layton et al are jealous of the US left having something domestic to get all frothy at the lips over...)?
  • Let David Mulroney speak.  Richard Colvin attacked him in a public forum, without evidence, and the House of Commons Special Committee on the Mission in Afghanistan listened up.  Now, they wish to deny Mulroney the opportunity to rebut the accusations of his former subordinate.  Whether it is as part of a maneouvre by an opposition dominated committee against the government, or a simple unwillingness to admit that they were had, right now the opposition members of the committee are standing at the precipice of a public relations disaster.  Apparently, someone told them it was amateur hour on Parlaiment Hill.
  • I am of the group who sees the anti - Sarah Palin vitriol being spouted by David Frum and other Republican Party insiders as a sign of the death throes of the old line GOP leadership - the same leadership that allowed infighting to sabotage the '08 presidential campaign and completely lost touch with the core beliefs of the typical Republican supporter.  The GOP has ended up in the same position the Ontario provincial PCs were in when Ernie Eves replaced Mike Harris.  Eves was part of a group that sought to move the party to the political centre in a bid to entrench themselves in government.  Instead, in a bid to gain support from the centre/centre-left, the Eves government watered down the party's principles to the point where there was very little to distinguish the Progressive Conservatives from the Liberals.  Since then, the Liberals have muddled along close enough to the middle of the road to avoid overly alienating conservative, while the PCs were confused by the 'Red Tory' leadership of John Tory and his crew.  Tim Hudak is a leader who seems to be putting the 'blue' back in the PCs.  Maybe Sarah Palin will do the same for the Republicans.
  • Just got my jacket back from the Woodland Dry Cleaners here in Belleville.  They took three weeks to send the jacket out (leather is sent to Toronto for cleaning), and two more weeks to get it cleaned and back.  FIVE WEEKS for a one week job (as I was originally told).  They knocked the bill from $65 down to $45.  Maybe I'm being unreasonable, but I think a much larger discount would be more appropriate.  I won't be going back - unless it's to speak to the management.  What used to be Majestic Dry Cleaners has gone way downhill.
    If I don't post before, in the Vanier Cup - Go Queens!; and in the Grey Cup - Go Roughriders!