News Bush stacked news media with military anlysists

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The Pentagon's influence over military analysts appearing on news programs has raised concerns about biased reporting, as many analysts have ties to defense contractors benefiting from military policies. The Bush administration allegedly used these analysts to promote pro-war narratives, leading to accusations of state propaganda. Critics argue that the media's failure to disclose these conflicts of interest undermines journalistic integrity and misleads the public. The discussion highlights the need for transparency in media reporting, particularly regarding the affiliations of military experts. Overall, the manipulation of news by the administration and the complicity of the media have serious implications for public trust in journalism.
  • #91
drankin said:
This guy was responsible for a number of specific killings a few years ago. And he was an Al Qaeda leader as well. He wasn't killed just because he was Al Qaeda.
Oh so it was a punishment assassination and not a clear and present danger? And that justifies the killing of innocent civilians to you?

btw did you actually even read the BBC article?
The US has said al-Shabab is part of the al-Qaeda network, although analysts say it is impossible to accurately establish those links. Al-Shabab's leaders insist it is a purely Somali movement.
So he might have had tenuous links to the al-Qaeda network and that's assuming the US gov't didn't simply invent the association as they have done in the past.
 
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  • #92
Art said:
They don't 'hide out' in civilian populations. They are insurrectionists, they don't have military bases to work from although I can see why such emotive terms with all of it's negative connotations appeals to you as a propaganda tool.

True, they don't have a military base. Is this a requirement in order to kill them? They hide out in their own house. That, in essence, is their military base.

Art said:
In the specific example the target was involved in a civil war in Somalia. This hardly presents a threat of clear and present danger to US lives and so your scenario of an imminent attack on US troops and/or civilians is nonsense.

There you go again, Art. Where did I make a scenerio of imminent attack? Why don't you pay attention to what I say and quit making up arguments against statements that I didn't make? We are officially taking proactive action against the enemy all over the world.

Art said:
I have already told you my solution. If the target is considered valuable enough to risk loss of life then those lives risked should be the attackers not innocent bystanders.

So, we shouldn't have gone after Hitler? He wasn't killing Americans. This is complete pacifist bologne that solves nothing.

Art said:
The test is would US forces behave this way if the collateral damage was American civilians. I suspect rather strongly they would not and if they did there would be uproar which brings us back to my starting point. It is time the media began to shine a light on some of these ops if for no other reason that Americans understand that the victims of their oppression do not hate them for anything as mundane as their freedoms as Bush likes to say but rather for much more concrete reasons.

If we were in the middle of a civil war/revolution/war in our own borders, you can expect to have numorous friendly casualties. Your "test" is not applicable to this situation.
 
  • #93
drankin said:
There you go again, Art. Where did I make a scenerio of imminent attack? Why don't you pay attention to what I say and quit making up arguments against statements that I didn't make? We are officially taking proactive action against the enemy all over the world.
...
So, we shouldn't have gone after Hitler? He wasn't killing Americans. This is complete pacifist bologne that solves nothing.
If you wish to draw parallels like this then you are inviting the question of whether or not we are at war with this person and whether or not he is an imminent threat.
Hitler: yes/yes
al-Shabab: maybe/not that we know of
So how do you make the justification for this "proactive" action?


If we were in the middle of a civil war/revolution/war in our own borders, you can expect to have numorous friendly casualties. Your "test" is not applicable to this situation.

Do you think there would not be several americans who would decry the killing of fellow americans, civilian or otherwise, even if we were in a civil war?
 
  • #94
Art said:
Oh so it was a punishment assassination and not a clear and present danger? And that justifies the killing of innocent civilians to you?

He was a jihadist, and a danger to peace efforts and stability in the area. If we had targeted civilians I would certainly agree with you.

Art said:
btw did you actually even read the BBC article?
Yes.
 
  • #95
TheStatutoryApe said:
And we probably haven't any statistics about the number of people from that community in which he lived may now join a terrorist group in order to get revenge on the americans who dropped a missile in their neighborhood or killed one of their relatives.

Indeed, the list of factors relevant to the moral calculus that we do not have is very long. Which renders any opinion on it specious, a reiteration of preexisting political biases.

TheStatutoryApe said:
So how many terrorists do you think may have been created by the sloppy job of getting rid of one?

How in the heck would I (or anyone else) know? How many civilians was this guy responsible for killing? How many more would he have been responsible for killing if left alive? What would the effects on Somalia as a polity have been? Given that there are so many crucial factors that we don't (and, often, can't) know, what exactly are we trying to talk about here?
 
  • #96
quadraphonics said:
Indeed, the list of factors relevant to the moral calculus that we do not have is very long. Which renders any opinion on it specious, a reiteration of preexisting political biases.



How in the heck would I (or anyone else) know? How many civilians was this guy responsible for killing? How many more would he have been responsible for killing if left alive? What would the effects on Somalia as a polity have been? Given that there are so many crucial factors that we don't (and, often, can't) know, what exactly are we trying to talk about here?

Not the OP which means that this will likely be locked soon.
Ah to be able to have mentor powers and split threads.

That we don't know is the point. Launching a MISSILE into a civilian neighborhood to take out ONE guy who may or may not be a threat is sloppy and irresponsible. If you want to justify it based on POSSIBILITIES then there are all sorts of possibilities to discuss, the creation of terrorists and terrorist sympatizers by launching missiles into peoples naighborhoods being prime among them. Is this guy so important that the potential fuel given to the supposed enemy due to this action is inconsequencial? This is the sort of thing that we can't say just can't be known, that military analysts ought to be considering and speaking about in an unbiased fashion. (ha! brought it back to the OP even)
 
  • #97
TheStatutoryApe said:
That we don't know is the point. Launching a MISSILE into a civilian neighborhood to take out ONE guy who may or may not be a threat is sloppy and irresponsible.

And that would be a good point if we were the ones deciding to launch the missile. However, the guys tasked with that decision have access to considerably more knowledge on this stuff than we do. That's not to say that it was or was not justified, or to assume that their knowledge is complete, but that our lack of knowledge is not in and of itself grounds for passing legitimate judgements on this act.

TheStatutoryApe said:
If you want to justify it based on POSSIBILITIES then there are all sorts of possibilities to discuss, the creation of terrorists and terrorist sympatizers by launching missiles into peoples naighborhoods being prime among them.

I haven't tried to justify anything. I've simply pointed out that all of the justifications, and counter-justifications, presented here are specious.

TheStatutoryApe said:
Is this guy so important that the potential fuel given to the supposed enemy due to this action is inconsequencial? This is the sort of thing that we can't say just can't be known, that military analysts ought to be considering and speaking about in an unbiased fashion. (ha! brought it back to the OP even)

I'm all for more candor from the military/intel/policy community on this stuff, as the basic issue is one of trusting them to do this job without our receiving all of the pertinent information. But there is a very necessary, firm limit to the level of disclosure that can be achieved, which will still be far short of what's required to really pass definitive judgement on this stuff, at least, without requiring decades of delay. That more pertinent commentary does not seem to have been politically necessary is, I'd say, a sign that people by-and-large do have confidence in the judgements of the pertinent people in these matters. Perhaps that confidence is misplaced, but it is real. Which is to say that I don't expect to see demands for increased scrutiny and explanation any time soon.

But, more generally, there really are pertinent variables that really can't be known, at least at the time when decisions must be made. And yet, the reality of war dictates that decisions be taken regardless. While I'm not against a rational, just approach to war and security policy, we must keep in mind that it is very much an ideal, and a highly unattainable one at that.
 

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