Tam Hunt: War Is (Still) Not the Answer

Preventive war doesn't make us safer, but the fallout is potentially more lethal

By | Published on 05.12.2009

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“Victory attained by violence is tantamount to a defeat, for it is momentary.”
— Mahatma Gandhi

President Obama stated more than once on the campaign trail that he didn’t only want to end the war in Iraq, he wanted to “end the mind-set that got us into the war.” This was one of the many visionary statements our new president made and was a major reason why I and millions of others voted him into office.

Tam Hunt
Tam Hunt

Obama has set in motion the process for fulfilling his promise to end the war in Iraq. He has ordered all combat troops out of Iraq by August 2010 — a few months later than his 16-month campaign promise, but close enough for government work. Some 50,000 noncombat troops are to remain, but he has also stated that all troops will be out of Iraq by 2011. If this comes to pass, our misadventure in Iraq will truly be over and the Iraqi-led process of reconciliation and re-building can continue.

While these are very promising developments regarding Obama’s promise to end the war in Iraq, it does not look so promising regarding the more visionary goal of ending the mind-set that got us into this horrendous war.

To date, Obama has ordered 21,000 new troops be sent to Afghanistan in order to quell the resurgence of the Taliban — the repressive fundamentalist movement that the United States and its allies removed from power in 2001. This is not the answer. Civilian deaths, maimings and other injuries mount by the day in Afghanistan and Iraq. There are no official figures regarding civilian casualties in Afghanistan and this is itself a major problem. Unofficial counts put U.S.-inflicted civilian deaths in Afghanistan at 8,000 to 28,000, based on news reports. This is surely an under-counting, as counts based on news sources always are. Hamid Karzai, Afghanistan’s embattled and ineffectual president, repeatedly pleads with our commanders and politicians to minimize civilian casualties — highlighting the obvious negative consequence of such impacts on the U.S. war effort and our image more generally.

The most glaring incident occurred in July 2008. A wedding party, considered by the U.S. military to be a “target of opportunity,” was attacked from the air. Forty-seven civilians were killed, including 39 women and children. The U.S. military at first denied any civilians were killed. But after investigations by many parties, the military finally agreed it had struck a wedding party and killed 47 civilians. Many other incidents like this have occurred in the last eight years, all of which are met first by official denials and then by an admission that a horrible tragedy has occurred.

A 2008 report from Human Rights Watch concludes: “The combination of light ground forces and overwhelming air power has become the dominant doctrine of war for the U.S. in Afghanistan. The result has been large numbers of civilian casualties, controversy over the continued use of air power in Afghanistan, and intense criticism of U.S. and NATO forces by Afghan political leaders and the general public.” Obama appears to be upping the ante on this failed strategy — exactly the wrong direction he should be going.

Civilian deaths and injuries in Iraq, however, have been far, far higher. The most recent comprehensive survey, from the British surveying company Opinion Research Business, found (based on interviews with 1,500 randomly selected Iraqis) that by the middle of 2006 there had been 1.2 million excess deaths, plus or minus 2.5 percent, since the 2002 invasion — fully 5 percent of the population. That same percentage of the U.S. population would be 15 million people. These figures, if even remotely accurate, obviously demonstrate a tragedy of the highest order has been perpetrated. And, in my view, crimes of the highest order have also been committed.

We cannot simply forget these impacts. The past is not wiped clean because we have a new president and a new policy to end the war in Iraq. We must learn from these mistakes, tragedies and crimes and never repeat them.

On Iran, a major foreign policy issue for the last administration and this one, Obama has not acted or sounded very different than former President George W. Bush, despite some promising rhetoric in reaching out to Iran’s leaders and people. Obama and his foreign policy team continue to make clear their view that Iran is seeking nuclear weapons, despite the International Atomic Energy Agency’s repeated failure to find any strong evidence that there is such an effort (although the IAEA has expressed long-standing concern about Iran’s lack of full compliance with information requests), and despite the 2007 U.S. National Intelligence Estimate concluding that Iran had suspended its attempts to make nuclear weapons in 2003 and that it was unlikely Iran had changed this policy as of mid-2007. Obama administration officials continue to state that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons without citing any new evidence to contradict the 2007 report, which still stands as the collective judgment of all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies. Obama’s tone toward Iran is encouraging, but Iran will continue to react negatively to threats that aren’t based on good evidence.

On Israel, Obama’s words and political appointments indicate the United States will likely continue its uncritical pro-Israel stance regarding the Palestinian conflict and conflicts with other neighbors, despite Israel’s noncompliance with numerous U.N. resolutions and violations of the laws of war. Israel is consistently the largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid, receiving about $3 billion each year in recent years and a total of more than $100 billion since World War II. Israel is a rich nation, so there is no good reason why it should receive this level of funding from the United States — or any funding from us at all, for that matter. Moreover, Israel’s aggressive policies were explicitly mirrored in U.S. action in Iraq and Afghanistan — leading to a similarly high level of civilian casualties. Recent statements from Israeli soldiers, described in detail in Ha’aretz and Maariv, two major Israeli newspapers, demonstrate that it was official Israeli policy to, among other things, shoot any and all Palestinians in homes invaded by Israeli troops in the recent Gaza invasion. One Israeli soldier talked about the permissiveness regarding the rules of engagement in Gaza: “That’s what is so nice, supposedly, about Gaza: You see a person on a road ... He doesn’t have to be with a weapon ... and you can just shoot him. With us it was an old woman, on whom I didn’t see any weapon. The order was to take that person out, that woman, the moment you see her.” The same soldier discussed his dismay about an order to kill every Palestinian upon sight as they entered homes in the Gaza Strip.

This is insanity and utter immorality. Hamas and some other Palestinian groups also indulge in extreme immorality by targeting Israeli civilians and this must stop — there is never justification for targeting civilians for any purpose. But Israel’s actions must not sink to similar levels of depravity. In many ways, Israel’s actions are worse because they are official policy. Terrorism can be practiced by nonstate actors and by states. The United States and Israel are, in Iraq, Afghanistan, Palestine and Lebanon, committing what would be called terrorism if practiced by nonstate actors. Amnesty International recently concluded that Israel had committed war crimes in its latest misadventure into the Gaza Strip. And these actions are all funded by our tax dollars. This must stop.

We are, then, far from ending the mind-set that got us into Iraq and are moving in the opposite direction in many ways. We must take Gandhi’s admonition seriously and reserve violence — war in this case — for the most rare occasions. International law allows for armed defensive actions when a nation is attacked and this is clearly good sense. Preemptive war is also permissible when it is certain that an attack is imminent. Preventive war — the essence of the Bush Doctrine — is very different than preemptive war. Preventive war advocates argue that the United States may take action when it fears a future attack but has no evidence an attack is imminent. There are no limits on war under this doctrine, because any argument may be made that a given country or region poses a future threat. This doctrine must be relegated to the trash heap of history.

Obama is, however, practicing preventive war in Pakistan, another major trouble spot regarding global security. He has ramped up unmanned aircraft strikes in the border region between Pakistan and Afghanistan. This is explicitly contrary to international law and good sense because there is no immediate threat to the United States from this region and it is counterproductive, to say the least, to ongoing U.S. efforts to create a stable democracy in this nuclear weapon-empowered Muslim nation. There are other ways to effect change in Pakistan and other troubled regions, through building civil society and dialogue. These “smart power” techniques have worked well in other hot spots around the world.

We must also strengthen international institutions like the United Nations, providing them with greater power to prevent conflicts and enforce international law. This is a long road, but Obama should take advantage of this moment in history, when the United States still enjoys great power and a renewed admiration around the world, and use his enormous influence to work toward a world in which no single nation can wage aggressive war against the judgment of its peers. We must also, as a nation, conduct a serious soul-searching about our collective reaction to the 9/11 attacks. As part of this inquiry, we should all question our own feelings about violence and its permissible use.

Through these actions we may eventually move toward truly ending the mind-set that got us into the Iraq war.

— Tam Hunt is a Santa Barbara-based attorney.

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» on 05.13.09 @ 08:08 PM

Basically you’re saying that Obama is serving Bush’s 3rd term.

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» on 05.14.09 @ 02:33 AM

Only Bush has the incompetence to pull off such a big plunder over a period of 8 years. Nice try Karl but there is only one worse President ever and that honor is clearly given to W. Tam is correct in that many of us feel that Obama is not directly addressing our collective reaction about violence but he is the direct opposite to W on just about everything else.

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» on 05.14.09 @ 03:17 AM

You actually believed that crap about “change”? ha ha ha suckers don’t you understand yet that Obama is using you to take over the world? he he he

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» on 05.14.09 @ 03:57 AM

“Iraqi-led process of reconciliation and rebuilding?”  Why do you think they get the chance for this?  War!  Think Saddam was going to go quietly?  Smoke another one, bro’.  As for that Opinion Research Business Poll, you must have missed that they updated their poll and dropped their estimate by over 20%.  Of course, I notice you went with their numbers anyway rather than the World Health Organization numbers for the same period that were about 10 times less.  Yeah, 10 times less.

And you believe that stuff about the Israeli Army?  Were you born yesterday? Have you stopped to think that if that were the actual policy and it had been carried out (which it should have been if it were the actual policy), we might have heard about it?  You think Hamas wouldn’t have been blaring it from every newspaper?  And yet…nothing.  But I do love how you’ve given equal time to the hundreds of indiscriminate rocket launches from Hamas into Israel, all the terrorist attacks by Palestinians over the years, including attacking a Sbarro full of moms and their toddlers with a bomb full of ball-bearings and nails to inflict maximum carnage.  They were just being indulgent unlike those evil Israelis. 

The final inanity is your belief that the UN can prevent any injustice anywhere in the world.  That just defies experience and logic.  I have more faith in Obama than I do in the UN.  So spare us your BS.

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» on 05.14.09 @ 04:37 AM

Seriously.  Would you sit down and chat with the pres of Iran, a man that has called for the total destruction of Israel?  A man who is adamant that the holocaust did not take place.  Do you think you can reason with someone like that?  Not that it has not been tried before.  there have been many times in past that the US has sat down with Iran only to be later slapped in the face and told that Iran is “at war” with the US.  ( http://www.hillsdale.edu/news/imprimis/archive/issue.asp?year=2008&month=10 ). 

At least you are starting to understand what some of us knew from the beginning: Obama is just another politician, not much different from Clinton or Carter and we know how well they did with foreign policy.

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» on 05.14.09 @ 05:22 AM

This constant criticism of President Obama is unwarranted. Do you really believe that he thinks war is the answer? He is not Bush. Never in our history has a president faced as many grave challenges as President Obama and he has tried to spend as much time as he can fixing our economy after eight years of reckless mismanagement. Fortunately, his efforts are ending the Bush recession and I trust he will soon turn his attention to the Middle East. President Obama has not yet had a chance to meet with his counterpart in Iran and other nearby countries. Once he does, I think you will be surprised at how quickly the situation is resolved. But criticizing President Obama when he is trying to do so much is way out of bounds.

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» on 05.14.09 @ 07:04 AM

So Tam,
I for one do not supporta strong UN. How dare you support a call for an outside organization to have authority over us. The UN is like the death penaly in American. It sounds good I theory but ultimately does not work.
What do you offer as an alternative? You don’t. That is the problem with bleeding hearts. Europe followed a policy of appeasment in the 1930’s. Look where that got them. Have a clue buddy.

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» on 05.14.09 @ 04:00 PM

Tam, your column is so self-contradictory that it defies understanding.  Do you really think you can reason with people who call for the total destruction of the US and the murder of all its citizens?  This is just softheaded and foolish. Get out of the Santa Barbara paradise bubble and into the real world for a while.  What would your views be if someone were holding a gun to your head?  Be nice and hope for the best?  Jeez…

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» on 05.14.09 @ 04:37 PM

OK, Tam IS a bit softheaded and foolish. But Patty is an absolute idiot!

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» on 05.14.09 @ 06:11 PM

Actions that got America into the Iraq War can end absolute types of minds that got us all eventually moving towards being “over there” if still not understanding as to what is ACCOUNTABLE. In not knowing foreign policy to deal of the types of minds, America not understanding what it meant to oppose will be unknown by the minds more knowing.

Seeking relevancy, Gandhi is not an answer to deal with the Middle East - the wisdom of Mohamed is better suited. Granted the Indian Subcontinent has for ages grasped more of Mohamed’s teachings, any in America will be least to understand. In the United States, even Bibles are closed and favored for television allowing self discovery for many by media driven by capital to make profit.

Even if religious books are not read correctly, our American mind set will continue to be nonsensical and taken absurd by the rest of the world because the rest of the world already understood far greater experience than any have felt suffering at home. Without understanding such first hand accounts other nations have felt, any presupposed notion of what is good for America is necessarily good for the rest of the world will be absolutely absurd.

We should instead start studying the religious books the rest of the world are reading to better grasp that Mohamed through his teachings by least was allowed to understand rather than to dictate Gandhi to be the all end global idea. Most of the world does not mirror the makeup, abundance, diversity, and sense of liberty we understand to be ideal for everyone here at home.

The world is not uniform and still broken into regions with different mindsets that as to war, people there have their own preconceived notions as the ideal solution. Already having difficulty to understand people in those regions, policy better understood as to where we cannot allow more of waste to hurt our own policy at home.

(1) Caesar proclaimed, “Si vis pacem, parabellum.” Wanting peace, preparing for war is also our policy; our standing Army is to be maintained and have purpose. Placing such an army beyond the outreach of our dominion, policy was not understood or properly ASSESSED.

(2) How Caesar came about to say, “Veni, vidi, vici,” Julius, as his own name implies, won the hearts and minds of the people. All agree in conquering Gaul that people often OVERLOOK jovial moods how friendships were created to have pax (peace).

(3) Marching back to take the Capitol, none still understood the ANSWERS of the triumvirate.  Allowing his enemies to fight each other, he did not have to subdue the victor knowing he can dictate all policy. To be the only standing army left, he knew all others were tired of war.

ASSESSED + OVERLOOK + ANSWERS = ACCOUNTABILITY

Caesar better summing all accountability, organizational skills allowed his victory proper triumph. Salus.

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» on 05.15.09 @ 02:00 AM

And suddenly a new winner has emerged.

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» on 05.15.09 @ 09:17 AM

Yes Tam, and we want to end starvation and social injustice and make sure everyone is happy and has everything they want for free. Your assessment of aggression and war is every bit as naïve as your assessment of global warming. You just come off sounding like a MoveOn.org boiler plate with no real thinking on your own. Either that or you’re so damned naïve about the world that you actually believe the rubbish you wrote.
There is a way to stop violence once and for all and that is a one world government dictatorship that is extremely repressive and very powerful. It would have to run every individual with an iron fist and not allow individuals to think or act for themselves. There would have to be a strong fear mongering police state that weeded out anyone who went against the state. These types of autocratic totalitarian states are very successful at maintaining peace within their borders, so extrapolating that process globally would be the objective. There is only one problem Tam, we don’t want our liberty and freedom to be sacrificed for peace at any cost. And as long as human beings are free they are likely to have conflict and that conflict will eventually become violent. You simply cannot have your cake and eat it too.
So take a deep breath and back away from your liberal left wing talking point lecture and give the world another look. The environment is not that bad and if we adapt to its changes we have a chance to survive. There will always be poor and social injustice. But thank God we have compassion with which to battle it with, just leave governments out of it. And yes Tam, there will be anger and violence, some of it driven by evil and some of it driven by righteousness. The trick is in knowing the difference and getting on the side of good rather than trying to knock the good guys down because they want to fight the bad guys.

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» on 05.16.09 @ 01:29 PM

I love people who say war is not the answer , but have no solution. War has been with us since the dawn of
civilization. Get used to it. Wherever there is weakness there will be aggression. Greed and evil are always going to be realities. The UN is run by our enemies. You’re a fool to think they are the answer. And OMG how dare you criticize President Obama? He is “ending the BUSH recession” by doing what Bush did times FOUR? Spending us into debt and poverty faster than a kid that just broke into the piggy bank. But don’t criticize him for that! I mean after all he is the Messiah. He’s trying so hard to turn us into a weak socialist country!

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» on 05.16.09 @ 01:35 PM

Don’t be so hard on Tammy Pammy - he’s obviously still wet behind the ears and needs a few knocks to get rid of his unrealistic Utopian idealism.

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» on 05.18.09 @ 08:22 AM

Seriously.  Would you sit down and chat with the pres of Iran, a man that has called for the total destruction of Israel?  A man who is adamant that the holocaust did not take place.  Do you think you can reason with someone like that?  Not that it has not been tried before.  there have been many times in past that the US has sat down with Iran only to be later slapped in the face and told that Iran is “at war” with the US.  ( http://www.hillsdale.edu/news/imprimis/archive/issue.asp?year=2008&month=10 ). 

At least you are starting to understand what some of us knew from the beginning: Obama is just another politician, not much different from Clinton or Carter and we know how well they did with foreign policy.

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» on 05.19.09 @ 11:46 AM

So then, Patty, constant criticism of Bush is warranted, but criticism of Obama is not when he does the exact same things? We are supposed to just go along with whatever he says… why? Because he is the anointed one or what? Love the double standards.

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