I am
wondering about this international rush to punish Syria for its alleged use of
chemical weapons. I don’t like it. I fear that it is hypocritical and
self-serving.
But first a
caveat. I am sure—as sure as a twenty-first century guy who didn’t live through
the gas attacks on the front lines of some WWI battlefield like Ypres—I am sure
that the use of chemical weapons is a terrible evil. No one in his or her right
mind would condone such use.
Why? It is
a potentially painful way to die—perhaps like bleeding to death from shrapnel.
It is a weapon that can be used as easily against civilians as against
soldiers—like nuclear weapons or landmines. Chemical weapons are also a sort of
mirror on human depravity. The suffering that followed their use in WWI has sunk so deep in (most) nation’s psyches that it is a
place we just can’t go back to. But mostly, chemical warfare is thought of as
especially evil because it is a weapon of mass destruction. Their use cannot be
easily restricted to a front line or military installation. Noncombatants
suffer.
And that is
just how it is with war, especially modern war. The truth is, whereas several
hundred civilians died in the chemical weapons attack earlier this month,
a hundred thousand have already died in the larger Syrian civil war. By bullets.
Missiles. IEDs. Infection and disease. Bombs. And beyond Syria the toll rises
into the millions. Why don’t we pull together an international treaty to outlaw
bullets? Nuclear weapons? What is it about chemical weapons that move us more
than these other, arguable far more effective and destructive weapons?
I listened
carefully to what John Kerry and Prime Minister David Cameron had to say, and
while they were obviously outraged at the use of the chemical weapons, neither
explained why this form of warfare was particularly immoral compared to the
larger war or nuclear weapons or land mines It was almost as if their outrage made a more nuanced explanation
of the moral issues unnecessary. “Can’t you see how mad I am. Of course the use
of such weapons is evil beyond imagining!” They reminded me of the preacher who put in his notes "weak point; pound pulpit." This has happened before. Who can forget Colin Powell’s raising the spectre of chemical weapons before the start of the Iraq war?
I also believe
our outrage at Syria’s use of chemical weapons is a rallying cry for the West
right now because our cultural narcissism needs something to be outraged at to justify itself. We need to assuage a vague but collective sense of guilt we have that is occasioned by our pervasive lack of gravitas when it comes to almost everything we do or do not
do, from popular entertainments to climate change.
Of course,
cultural narcissism is only a partial explanation for the outrage. For others,
this moral outrage is a cover for our own reliance on even more deadly weapons
of mass destruction, such as nuclear weapons. This moral outrage justifies our
reliance on the military-industrial complex that Eisenhower warned us against.
This moral outrage at Syria justifies our sales of arms to just about every
nation that wants them. This moral outrage gives civil Christians the
opportunity to act like peacemakers when generally they love nothing better
than having their country build more chariots and rely on more horses. This
moral outrage is a deep magic that excuses our boredom with news from Egypt and
Syria and the Congo and so on. I mean, did you see Miley’s performance at the
VMA? Now that was shocking!
I do not
pretend to know what the answer is in Syria or Egypt or anywhere else in the
world. But that does not mean just a violent response is the best
one. It reeks of international “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.”
This approach has not made Middle East more prosperous or democratic or friendly to the West over the past fifty years or so. Remember how years before 9/11
Clinton was lobbing cruise missiles at Afghanistan’s terrorist training camps?
Why should another round fired at Damascus help bring peace and prosperity or
amity there? Why shouldn't it spark a wider war? Did shock and awe solve Iraq’s problems? Not knowing the right
answer to Syria’s convulsions doesn’t mean we should fall back on solutions
that have not worked before.
So tonight
I am sad. I’m tied up in knots, actually. Partly it is the swelling moral outrage that demands military action, now! And partly, it is the lack of similar outrage over the
first 100,000 to die there.