Ivo Skoric on Fri, 14 Sep 2001 22:29:09 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: On Vengeance and the people of Afghanistan |
Bin Laden had essentially drive himself into a hole. And I am not sure that it is in the Taliban's best interest to continue to protect him. Afghanistan was hit by retaliatory strikes after Bin Laden's proteges set bombs off in the US embassies in Africa. The US chose to play fair and not retaliate when USS Cole was hit - because that was a military vessel and, in a war, it was a legitimate target. Obviously, there is no way anybody would forgive the mastermind of this tragedy. Retaliatory strikes would not do this time, either. Bin Laden is needed alive and in court. Also, it would be nice to have him around, so he can tell us how many more groups of pilots live among us as silent neighbors and wait for the commercial flights resume so they can hijack planes and smash them in largely populated areas. I think that Taliban understand very well that their best wager at the moment is to capture and surrender Bin Laden peacefully. Couple of weeks ago he probably had their main political opponent assasinated as an act of good will, hoping that would assure him their continuous protection. But I think he overstayed their welcome with this last insanity. They are recognized by three countries in the world and one of them - Saudi Arabia - wants Bin Laden dead. They border with countries of former Soviet Union, which depend on Russia for their survival, and Russia wants him dead, too - many mothers there grieve their sons that were killed by Bin Laden mujahedeen. They also border with Iran - that also wants Bin Laden dead, because he was supporting the faction in Afghanistan that fought against the Iran-sponsored mujahedeen. Escape to China is not an option, either, because the last thing China needs, regardless of its anti-U.S. rethoric, is an islamic fundamentalist zealot. And Pakistan values its friendship with the US more than its friendship with Bin Laden. So, it should be a no-brainer for Taliban. I've heard that a friend of Garry Adams died in the WTC crash, too. Killing fellow professionals is never a good way to stay in business. Bin Laden's problem is that he has no friends left - everybody is frightened and disgusted with the Sepetmeber 11 events. He reminds me of the evil characters from James Bond movies - like Spectra - the rich outsider who wants to blow up the world. I thought that characters like that are confined to movies, comic books and novels. Bin Laden, however, somehow crossed from the toon-world to our world. But increasingly his only option to escape is to launch himself into space like Dr. Evil. Date sent: Thu, 13 Sep 2001 14:48:01 EDT Send reply to: International Justice Watch Discussion List <JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU> From: Tom Moran <Tom6294@AOL.COM> Subject: Re: On Vengeance and the people of Afghanistan To: JUSTWATCH-L@LISTSERV.ACSU.BUFFALO.EDU In any war, there will be innocents who suffer. That, unfortunately, is the nature of war. During World War II, not all Germans were Nazis. Only a relatively few worked in concentration camps. A majority were not in the military (half of the population was female and some number of males were either too young or too old for the military or had other jobs). Some number of Germans were active opponents of the Nazis. Yet, would anyone argue that the Allies were somehow unjustified in waging war against Germany because some innocents would be killed, injured or suffer other effects of war? It is pretty clear that bin Laden is in Afghanistan. While there may be some doubt as to his connection with the events this week, he is under indictment in a United States court for bombing the embassies a couple of years ago. The United States has a legitimate interest in seeing that he is brought to justice and given a fair trial. Clearly, if bin Laden and his people are being harbored by the Afghanistan regime, the United States has a legitimate reason for delivering an ulitmatum to the Afgan government to turn over bin Laden and his people and prevent future acts of terrorism from Afghanistan against the United States. And, if the Afgan government does not comply with the demands in the ultimatum, Congress would be justified in declaring war. If the Afgan government is aiding and abetting terrorist attacks against the United States or other nations, those nations have a legitimate right to declare war. Furthermore, I suggest that if the Afgan government is incapable of controlling terrorists on its soil, the victim nations have a legitimate right of self defense to do what is reasonably necessary to prevent future terrorist attacks. Tom Moran _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold