Arathain Kelvar wrote:
I understand that full well. That's what I've been saying all along, if you read my posts. There will be no victory, there will be no end. Like you say, the best we can hope for is to reduce their effectiveness. Now, compare that to the quote you are arguing against:
Which is not the same as them being some "nameless Enemy". The "nameless enemy" is a euphemism for "there really isn't an enemy, and we're going to be at war for the sake of being at war." That's why he capitalizes "Enemy". Furthermore, as I already stated, once we knock it down to the level of being mostly a law enforcement issue, or an issue that remains overseas, we've effectively won. Part of the reason terrorists do what they do is to exploit the wants of the public. The public wants the government to deal with the terrorists (this is the public in any given country, not necessarily the US) but does not want to be affected by the methods. The terrorist tries to ride that line, staying too dangerous for normal law enforcement, but making the military seem like an extreme response. People that are constantly suspicious of any government action, are, ironically, exactly what the terrorist wants. Terrorists, or at least their leaders, are very adept at grasping the fault lines of western society. They often overestimate the severity of those fault lines, but not so much the nature of them.
There's also the ugly truth that we probably COULD make this a lot shorter.. but the public is not that ruthless. People want it all. They want war to be a sanitary affair where targets are easily identified and "innocent" people are never hurt. Actually, the military would like that too. The military is designed to hit organized enemies with a weighted mass of combat power. But the military does not want to be ruthless either.
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The towers are gone now, reduced to bloody rubble, along with all hopes for Peace in Our Time, in the United States or any other country. Make no mistake about it: We are At War now -- with somebody -- and we will stay At War with that mysterious Enemy for the rest of our lives.
It will be a Religious War, a sort of Christian Jihad, fueled by religious hatred and led by merciless fanatics on both sides. It will be guerilla warfare on a global scale, with no front lines and no identifiable enemy.
On at least that point, it seems that you, Mus, me, and Thompson all agree.
Not really, since it won't be and hasn't been a "Christian Jihad" nor fueld by fanatics on our side. We are not at war with an enemy that's particularly mysterious, either. We understand the nature of terrorism and why the terrorist behaves the way he does pretty well. The
specifics of who is where and doing what
at any given moment can be very unclear, but the picture always improves over time because the enemy makes mistakes and we exploit them.
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At any given time there's a name for what the President (who now has that authority) determines is the threat. When I say "nameless" I'm discussing the fact that under the authorization, it can be redefined/renamed/etc. at any time and still fall under the authorization. Yesterday it was Al Qaeda, today it's ISIS, tomorrow it could be Elmostan
If Elmostan actually existed, it would be an enemy as well. Elmo advocates executing people without trial because they have violated a political sense of ideology he has. Elmostan also wouldn't fall under the authorization because it specifies INTERNATIONAL organizations (in the portion you cited) and Elmo is very clearly a US citizen.
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Get used to being at war forever though. If the enemy is willing to fight forever, we will have to. We don't reach some point where we get to just say "oh, well, it's been too long so we need to stop fighting. Would you guys please stop bothering us now?" Threats are what they are.
Exactly the point that I, Mus, and Thompson are making.
Not really. The willingness of the enemy to keep fighting or split into new entities does not make them some "nameless Enemy" that can just be anyone, or that doesn't really exist.
The problem is not all that different from various forms of organized crime. These organizations constantly adapt and change to avoid detection and exploit the letter of the law. That doesn't make them some nameless enemy that was just invented and doesn't really exist.
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It's a dramatic shift. We have given the Executive Branch the authority to decide who we are at war with, and adjust that definition as the President feels is appropriate. This, in an operation that everyone knows will never end. Only a handful of isolationists believe we should not be fighting; however, there are some legitimate concerns over this shift in power structure.
The nature of the conflict is what it is. Aside from the fact that the Executive was always really limited only by funding, not by the power to declare war, if only a "few isolationsists think we shouldn't fight (ignoring the large number of people that think we're just not being nice enough), if we do need to fight, then we need to fight the enemies that exist. They aren't going to decide to conform to our domestic sensibilities about what an enemy should look like or how long a war should last. Essentially this complaint amounts to "but doing what's necessary to deal with an enemy of this type has implictions I don't like!" Yes it does, but the enemy
knows that and that's why they do what they do. Keeping the conflict going long enough for the western public to tire of it is one way they think they'll eventually succeed. We're talking about people that are perfectly willing to commit suicide attacks - they take a very long view of things, and aren't necessarily concerned about winning any time
soon, since they expect to be dead anyhow, either from suicide attack, getting killed in the process, or even just old age.
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And on another note, if there's ever a legitimate reason to "whine" about something, I would think "never ending war" would be near the top of the list.
Not really. War always has and always will be a part of human experience. The idea that permanent, lasting peace is achievable, anywhere near at hand, or for that matter even desirable is among the most asinine examples of wishful thinking in our history. It's right up there with people bemoaning that "we" haven't learned to just not fight, or whatever - inventing some standard of behavior and then lamenting that people don't adhere to it. Wars happen over real issues that affect real people. Even our enemies, as unreasonable and fanatical as they are, are real people and fight over things that they perceive as really affecting them. People who want to whine about the futility and pettiness of war simply create a shield of ideas for the cynical and exploitive to hide behind.