Spree killers are criminals not warriors

Yesterday I asked why putting terrorists on trial was such a big deal, looks like other people have been wondering as well.

In political terms, the right likes the war idea because it involves taking terrorism more “seriously.” But in doing so, you partake of way too much of the terrorists’ narrative about themselves. It’s their conceit, after all, that blowing up a bomb in a train station and killing a few hundred random commuters is an act of war. And war is a socially sanctioned form of activity, generally held to be a legally and morally acceptable framework in which to kill people. What we want to say, however, is that this sporadic commuter-killing isn’t a kind of war, it’s an act of murder. To be sure, not an ordinary murder—a mass murder—but nonetheless murder. It’s true that if al-Qaeda were something like the “blowing up train stations” arm of a major country with which we were otherwise at war, it might make the most sense to think of al-Qaeda as fitting in with spies and saboteurs; criminal adjuncts to a warrior enterprise.

After all, do we really want to send the message to the world that a self-starting spree killer like Nidal Malik Hasan is actually engaged in some kind of act of holy war? It seems to me that we don’t. A lot of people in the world are interested in glory, and willing to take serious risks with their lives for its sake. Insofar as possible, we want to drain anti-American violence of the aura of glory. And that means by-and-large treating its perpetrators like criminals.

Also, in terms of catching suspected terrorists it would probably be much easier to get the rest of the world to help, if you are trying to catch people who have actually done something, rather than invading countries because many of the people in the country look like the suspected terrorists.

This entry was posted in Words. Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Spree killers are criminals not warriors

  1. John Rove says:

    I know I am kind of talkingto myself here, but it seems that the neo-cons have elevated the status of terrorists because they have a need to fight a mortal enemy, they kind of pine for the days when their grand parents got to fight the nazis. In fact it seems that much of what the right-wing is all about now days is solving imagined problems so that they can see themselves as heros.

Comments are closed.