Personally, I'm not shedding any tears about the "targeted killing" of Sheik Ahmed Yassin. Terrorists can't complain if they find their ass being blown off one day - even if that ass is 80 years old and permanently residing in a wheelchair. Impractical the killing may have been - I'm hard pressed to see what it will accomplish in the long run - but I'm not convinced it was unjust.
My question concerns the kind of conflict in which this killing took place. I can accept that, in a state of war, you don't necessarily have the time to question the relative guilt of your enemies - so in that sense Israel has a right to kill whoever it wants without benefit of arrest and trial, and long as they can say that such actions will increase the security of their populace. But then, isn't that right reciprocal - in a state of war, wouldn't the Palestinians be justified in taking the same kinds of actions?
If this isn't a state of war, then what rules apply? If it is a state of war, a civil war in fact, then why doesn't the US or the UN apply a solution which has worked (with admittedly sporadic success) in the past - occupation and peace-keeping? Wouldn't the world be better off if, rather than see this hopeless conflict continue, which is firmly in the control of extremists on both sides, peace was "enforced," as it has been in, say, Crete and Kosovo?
I pose this question as a bit of devil's advocacy - I'm well aware there are massive logistical and political concerns which make such a solution impossible - on top of the repugnancy I feel in suggesting any Western power take it upon themselves to "occupy" a Jewish state. My real question is - what kind of conflict is this? If it is a war, then arn't most actions justified - even the targeted killing of civilians, as both sides did in WWII? If it isn't a war, then don't different rules - like due legal process - apply?
These kinds of questions may seem specious while people are dying - but before we can even begin to solve a conflict, hadn't we better decide what kind of conflict it is?
My question concerns the kind of conflict in which this killing took place. I can accept that, in a state of war, you don't necessarily have the time to question the relative guilt of your enemies - so in that sense Israel has a right to kill whoever it wants without benefit of arrest and trial, and long as they can say that such actions will increase the security of their populace. But then, isn't that right reciprocal - in a state of war, wouldn't the Palestinians be justified in taking the same kinds of actions?
If this isn't a state of war, then what rules apply? If it is a state of war, a civil war in fact, then why doesn't the US or the UN apply a solution which has worked (with admittedly sporadic success) in the past - occupation and peace-keeping? Wouldn't the world be better off if, rather than see this hopeless conflict continue, which is firmly in the control of extremists on both sides, peace was "enforced," as it has been in, say, Crete and Kosovo?
I pose this question as a bit of devil's advocacy - I'm well aware there are massive logistical and political concerns which make such a solution impossible - on top of the repugnancy I feel in suggesting any Western power take it upon themselves to "occupy" a Jewish state. My real question is - what kind of conflict is this? If it is a war, then arn't most actions justified - even the targeted killing of civilians, as both sides did in WWII? If it isn't a war, then don't different rules - like due legal process - apply?
These kinds of questions may seem specious while people are dying - but before we can even begin to solve a conflict, hadn't we better decide what kind of conflict it is?