galanter wrote:Andrew L. wrote:
Suicide bombing is the desperate reaction of subjects of foreign occupation. This is simply a fact. It may not be a just tactic, but wherever it occurs it is an indication of a radical imbalance of military, economic, and political power.
So when Timothy McVeigh used a truck bomb to kill 100's of civilians would you say that was a justifiable action because of the radical imbalance of military, economic, and political power he was up against?
Of course not.
It's not really a question of power imbalance at all. You've just taken a side and when your side does X it's justified, and when the enemy does X it's immoral.
And this kind of thinking leads to peace exactly how?
That's a bit of a deliberately stupid comparison. Which deserves another blunt comparison: would you say those who fought against the British in the War of Independence were terrorists? Because they killed a lot of people, not all in fashions that we would now deem honourable in the odd morality of Western observers.
Eliya, I'm really sorry, but I don't think that the kidnapping of two soldiers warrants the bombing of an airport and the killing of dozens of civilians. A proportionate response or expedition to free the soldiers is justified, but collective punishment is not. And the UK has had a fair amount of experience of dealing with terrorism, and bombing and shooting a way out did not work. It just made more angry young men.