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War Fallacies: Misleading nervous US to wrong conclusion

 
 
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 12:03 am
Fallacies and War
Misleading a nervous America to the wrong conclusion.
By Dave Koehler - Burlington County Times
phillyBurbs.com

I love America. I feel extremely lucky to have been born in this country into a middle-class family. I get very angry when my America gets abused and my way of life challenged by the actions of the politicians running the government. For this week's column, I'm turning serious to discuss some of the empty arguments given by the current administration as a pretext for war.

When facts are not available or convenient, there are many tricks one can use to present an argument. Here are a few examples of tactics the current administration is using to convince you and the world that invading Iraq is necessary.

One of the favorite methods of the current administration is a false dilemma. This is when only two choices are given when, in reality, there are more options. Right after 9/11 you heard, "You are either with us or against us," in the fight against terrorism. Actually, countries can be both against terrorism and not an ally of the U.S. More recently, many countries are showing that they are both against a pre-emptive war and against the current Iraqi regime.

We are also hearing we must attack Iraq or Saddam will develop weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and threaten the world if we do nothing. Other options of monitoring with inspectors and containment are just flatly discounted. Are we to believe that Saddam could develop nuclear weapons while the world has him under a microscope?

Just recently, the President suggested the U.N. should vote for war or face irrelevance. The U.N. will not disappear just because most of its member countries disagree with George W. Bush. If debate and disagreement spelled the end of deliberative bodies, the U.S. Congress would have vanished long ago.

Another arguing device is the argument from ignorance. This involves claiming that what hasn't been disproven must be true. We hear Iraq hasn't shown that they do not have WMD, therefore they do. The real burden of proof is on the party making the claim. The U.S. and/or U.N. must prove that Iraq has WMD. It is impossible for Iraq to prove that they don't.

An argument portraying a series of increasingly bad events is called a slippery slope. This is used effectively by gun-control opponents who suggest handgun registration will eventually lead to government confiscation of all guns. On Iraq, we hear how Saddam will develop WMDs and give them to terrorists who will then use them on America. While this is one possible chain of events, it hardly justifies a pre-emptive attack on a sovereign nation.

The response to this has been that the proof or smoking gun can't be in the form of a mushroom cloud over an American city. This is more slippery slope with a false dilemma and a whole lot of fear-mongering. There are effective ways to find proof of WMD and destroy them before it comes to such a dramatic conclusion.

Criticizing a person or group instead of an issue is called an ad hominem attack. The current talk about France by many Americans is a perfect example. It is not only childish, it distracts from the real issues. France is not obligated to go along with every American idea because we saved them from Nazi Germany 60 years ago.

President Bush also often calls Saddam Hussein a murderous, evil man who can't be trusted. While true, this name-calling does not prove that Saddam has any ability to threaten the world.

Another common device we are seeing is a fallacy of exclusion. Colin Powell and President Bush have both talked about aluminum tubes being used for uranium enrichment for use in nuclear weapons. They always fail to mention that according to U.N. nuclear inspectors the tubes were actually conventional rocket artillery casings. They also mention Iraq's use of chemical weapons against Iran in the 1980's. They again leave out that we supported Iraq at that time in their war against Iran, and basically ignored the use of WMDs at that time.

Colin Powell also claimed the most recent audio tape from Osama bin Laden showed a link between al Qaeda and Iraq. They have been suggesting this since 9/11, but still haven't provided any real evidence. Osama said that he stands with the Iraqi people while referring to Hussein as an "infidel." Also, as most people know, the majority of the perpetrators of 9/11 were from our "ally" Saudi Arabia.

Arguing a claim is true based on someone being an expert on the subject is known as an appeal to authority. In our case, the experts are defectors from Iraq. Powell claimed defectors reported there were 18 mobile biological weapons labs cruising around Iraq. First, these defector's stories are suspect due to their obvious dislike of Iraq. I'm sure they would be happy to tell the U.S. what they wanted to hear if it hastened the destruction of the Iraqi regime and they could return to their homeland. More to the point, chief weapons inspector Hans Blix said his men had examined some of the trucks and found them to be food-testing labs.

So, with out any real evidence, what's left? Saddam is bad?

Is that all? I realize war has become relatively easy for the US, especially when we are facing such a remarkably weak adversary and few American lives are at risk. But why war, and why now when there are still peaceful means for disarming Saddam Hussein?

Why is the Bush Administration using these deceptive techniques to rush us into a war with Iraq?

Is there any solid evidence that Iraq still processes weapons of mass destruction and has ties with terrorist groups? A few audio tapes and fuzzy satellite photos are not proof. All we hear is the same anecdotal evidence repeated over and over again.

President Bush has said that if Saddam and his generals "take innocent life, if they destroy infrastructure, they will be held accountable as war criminals." Isn't the United States about to take innocent life and destroy infrastructure?

There was immense goodwill for America after 9/11, with even a French newspaper proclaiming "We are all Americans!" Now America is viewed with suspicion, fear and anger. When millions of the world's citizens protest American aggression, why does our president just shrug?

Despite what you have been told by this administration, the ends do not justify the means. While the goals of disarming Saddam and helping Iraq become free and democratic are certainly good, war is not the right way to make that happen. There is no imminent threat and no need to throw away international law and diplomacy. We should not risk the lives of our troops and kill thousands and thousands of Iraqi men, women and children because of one man.

Sometimes war is a horrible necessity.

This is not one of those times.
--------------------------------

Hague Appeal for Peace - International network of peace and justice organizations

The United Nations - 191 countries working for common goals.

Win Without War - Advocating alternatives to pre-emptive war in Iraq
-----------------------------

Dave Koehler is the Web designer for phillyBurbs.com. His Web column Quirked appears on Fridays. Send comments to [email protected].

February 27, 2003 10:20 PM

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cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 02:23 pm
BBB, The divide is too great between the hawks and the doves for this issue to resolve in a peaceful way. In fact, very few or nobody is going to change their minds about this issue - no matter what arguments are brought forward for either side. It's a lost cause for change. This administration will not change their charge to war with Iraq. c.i.
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 02:39 pm
the first ruled learned in gun safty is how to unload the gun, George never took that course.
0 Replies
 
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 03:05 pm
dys, He never learned how to use it either. Wink c.i.
0 Replies
 
Tantor
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 06:24 pm
Re: War Fallacies: Misleading nervous US to wrong conclusion
BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

We are also hearing we must attack Iraq or Saddam will develop weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and threaten the world if we do nothing. Other options of monitoring with inspectors and containment are just flatly discounted. Are we to believe that Saddam could develop nuclear weapons while the world has him under a microscope?


During the 1930s, while the world had Germany under a microscope to ensure that it complied with the disarmament mandated by the Versailles Treaty, Germany developed an entire air force in secret by equipping and training them in the Soviet Union. If you can create an air force in secret, you can create an atom bomb in secret. The Iraqis could simply cut a deal to develop nukes jointly with North Korea.

BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

Just recently, the President suggested the U.N. should vote for war or face irrelevance. The U.N. will not disappear just because most of its member countries disagree with George W. Bush. If debate and disagreement spelled the end of deliberative bodies, the U.S. Congress would have vanished long ago.


You have your facts mixed up. The UN has already voted for war. The issue now is whether they will enforce the resolution to enforce Iraqi disarmament with force, as they said they would. If the resolutions the UN makes are not enforced, they become meaningless. If so, the UN will wither away.

BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

Another arguing device is the argument from ignorance. This involves claiming that what hasn't been disproven must be true. We hear Iraq hasn't shown that they do not have WMD, therefore they do. The real burden of proof is on the party making the claim. The U.S. and/or U.N. must prove that Iraq has WMD. It is impossible for Iraq to prove that they don't.


I have not heard this argument from anyone, anywhere. It appears to be concocted to make your point. Please produce an example of this to back up your assertion. One will do.

We already know from defector reports that Iraq has WMD. We also have massive discrepancies in the accounts that the Iraqis provide of chemical and biological weapons which the Iraqis admitted they had and cannot account for now.

BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

On Iraq, we hear how Saddam will develop WMDs and give them to terrorists who will then use them on America. While this is one possible chain of events, it hardly justifies a pre-emptive attack on a sovereign nation.


Actually, yes it does. The Israelis made a preemptive attack on Iraq's nuclear reactor at Osirak to stop Saddam from making the fuel to build atom bombs. This is a justified preemptive attack.

Ramzi Yousef, the mastermind of the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, received his false identity from Iraqi intelligence. His uncle, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, played money man for that operation and mastermind of the later successful Sep 11 attack on the same target. That tends to indicate an Iraqi-Al Qaeda link. It seems beyond doubt that had Al Qaeda received greater support from Iraq, it would do greater damage to America. Currently, there are reports that Iraq is approaching Al Qaeda cells in Asia to attack American assets in support of Iraq.

BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

The response to this has been that the proof or smoking gun can't be in the form of a mushroom cloud over an American city. This is more slippery slope with a false dilemma and a whole lot of fear-mongering. There are effective ways to find proof of WMD and destroy them before it comes to such a dramatic conclusion.


No, actually there aren't better ways. The world was surprised at far the Iraqi nuke program had progessed when we invaded Iraq in 1991. Likewise, the UN weapons inspectors declared Iraq free of WMD in the mid-1990s. Then Saddam's son-in-law defected and identified locations of WMDs in Iraq, where they had been successfully hidden from the weapons inspectors.

BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

Criticizing a person or group instead of an issue is called an ad hominem attack. The current talk about France by many Americans is a perfect example. It is not only childish, it distracts from the real issues. France is not obligated to go along with every American idea because we saved them from Nazi Germany 60 years ago.


The real issue is France's amoral foreign policy. France does not want Saddam's evil regime disturbed because they have $60 billion worth of oil contracts with Iraq. Hussein skims the profits off the top to finance his regime. France also sold a nuclear reactor to Saddam, knowing he wanted it to build nukes. America is perfectly correct to reject French irresponsibility in world affairs.

BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

President Bush also often calls Saddam Hussein a murderous, evil man who can't be trusted. While true, this name-calling does not prove that Saddam has any ability to threaten the world.


Was that Bush's intent? Or are you demonstrating with your faulty argument the logical fallacy of non sequitur, ie a conclusion unrelated to the premise?


Tantor
0 Replies
 
BumbleBeeBoogie
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 06:37 pm
Read the artical again, Tantor
Tantor, perhaps you should direct your questions to author Dave Koehler of the Burlington County Times instead of implying that I wrote the piece.
0 Replies
 
sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 06:42 pm
Re: War Fallacies: Misleading nervous US to wrong conclusion
Tantor wrote:


BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

Another arguing device is the argument from ignorance. This involves claiming that what hasn't been disproven must be true. We hear Iraq hasn't shown that they do not have WMD, therefore they do. The real burden of proof is on the party making the claim. The U.S. and/or U.N. must prove that Iraq has WMD. It is impossible for Iraq to prove that they don't.


I have not heard this argument from anyone, anywhere. It appears to be concocted to make your point. Please produce an example of this to back up your assertion. One will do.


Quote:
For example, consider the burden of proof. According to 1441, Iraq was and is current in material violation of 687, and it is up to them to prove otherwise. So the Iraqis have to prove a negative, that is, that they do not have the weapons the U.N. and others say they have.


http://www.nationalreview.com/robbins/robbins121002.asp

This from a very quick Google search.
0 Replies
 
Tantor
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 07:27 pm
Re: Read the artical again, Tantor
BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:
Tantor, perhaps you should direct your questions to author Dave Koehler of the Burlington County Times instead of implying that I wrote the piece.


Bumblebee,

Perhaps you should defend the arguments that you posted here instead of running away from them when challenged on their merit. If you do not support them anymore, I invite you to say so plainly.

Tantor
0 Replies
 
Tantor
 
  1  
Reply Sat 1 Mar, 2003 07:35 pm
Re: War Fallacies: Misleading nervous US to wrong conclusion
sozobe wrote:
Tantor wrote:


BumbleBeeBoogie wrote:

Another arguing device is the argument from ignorance. This involves claiming that what hasn't been disproven must be true. We hear Iraq hasn't shown that they do not have WMD, therefore they do. The real burden of proof is on the party making the claim. The U.S. and/or U.N. must prove that Iraq has WMD. It is impossible for Iraq to prove that they don't.


I have not heard this argument from anyone, anywhere. It appears to be concocted to make your point. Please produce an example of this to back up your assertion. One will do.


Quote:
For example, consider the burden of proof. According to 1441, Iraq was and is current in material violation of 687, and it is up to them to prove otherwise. So the Iraqis have to prove a negative, that is, that they do not have the weapons the U.N. and others say they have.


http://www.nationalreview.com/robbins/robbins121002.asp

This from a very quick Google search.


Too quick, it appears. Iraq has admitted to possessing tons of chem and bio weapons but now claims to not have them anymore. In this case, "proving a negative" means showing evidence or documentation of what became of these weapons. It is entirely possible. It is a reasonable demand.

By contrast, the demand to prove a negative is unprovable. You could probably never prove that you are not a Martian. However, the Iraqis can prove that they disposed of their WMDs. They choose to not do so.

Tantor
0 Replies
 
 

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