But I know some people believe that we should just crush our enemies. If someone is a threat, we kill them. End of story.
Just curious, Joe. How many American soldiers’ lives are you willing to sacrifice to help set up (in Bush’s altruistic and Polyanna scenario) a “friendly democracy” in Iraq? Or for that matter, a “genuinely free country,” if that were feasible. And exactly how do you reconcile the consequent loss of American lives with an ethics of rational self-interest?
No one is suggesting that we do not need allies, only that it is not our responsibility to create them with the dead and maimed bodies of our military. No, we do not need to “crush the enemy” every time he threatens us. We can use “gunboat diplomacy” and give them a polite warning first. And when they do not promptly cease and desist, proceed to crush them. And without altruistic “rules of engagement” and immoral “just war theories” that send our soldiers into battle without the highest regard for their rights and safety.
What would Ayn Rand likely have written about the war in Iraq?
“When a country is at war, it has to use all of its power to fight and win as fast as possible. It cannot fight and non-fight at the same time. It cannot send its soldiers to die as cannon fodder, forbidding them to win. When a country is at war, its leaders cannot prattle about “cultural exchanges” and about “building bridges” to the enemy, as our leaders are doing—trade bridges to bolster the enemy’s economy and enable it to produce the planes and guns which are killing our own soldiers. When a nation resorts to war, it has some purpose, and the only justifiable purpose is self-defense.
“Our national leaders tell us that we must defend Iraq’s right to hold a ‘democratic’ election, and to vote itself into theocracy, if it wishes, provided it does so by vote—which means that we are not fighting for any political ideal or any principle of justice, but only for unlimited majority rule, and that the goal for which American soldiers are dying is to be determined by somebody else’s vote. They tell us that we must defend Iraq’s right to ‘national self-determination’—and that anyone upholding the national sovereignty of the United States is an isolationist, that nationalism is evil, that the globe is our homeland and we must be prepared to die for any part of it, except the continent of North America.
“President [Bush’s] plans for spending billions of dollars for the development of Iraq means that we are fighting for the privilege of turning every American taxpayer into a serf laboring part of his time for the benefit of his Middle Eastern masters. In today’s conditions, the only rational alternative is to fight that war and win it as fast as possible.
“When a foreign [enemy] initiates the use of armed force against us, it is our moral obligation to answer by force—as promptly and unequivocally as is necessary to make it clear that the matter is nonnegotiable.“
The above is almost an exact word for word quote (with a few obvious substitutions, since her topic was Vietnam) from “The Wreckage of the Consensus,” written in April, 1967. The final paragraph is also a Rand quote, from “The Lessons of Vietnam,” written in May, 1975.
|