Why
Do They Want to Kill Us? *
October 2001
Ever since the
September 11 attacks, it has almost been taboo, within both the
Suppose someone has told me that he intends to kill
me. Even though I intend to defend myself by meeting force with force, I'm
going to ask him an important question: "Why do you want to kill me?"
Suppose the answer is, "Because I hate you for
believing that Jesus Christ is Lord." My response will be to defend myself
because I'm not about to give up that belief even if it might cost me my life.
But suppose my enemy says, "I want to kill you
because you are having an affair with my wife." The affair would not
justify his murder of me, either legally or morally, but it certainly might
explain why he's so angry and why he wants to kill me. It would behoove me to
have this information because I might decide that continuing the affair is no
longer worth it and because altering my conduct might cause my enemy to alter
his.
But the only way I can get to that point is by asking,
"Why do you want to kill me?"
Osama bin Laden and his coterie of terrorists have
given three reasons for their terrorist acts: (1) The stationing of U.S.
military personnel in Saudi Arabia, which they say encompasses the Islamic holy
cities of Mecca and Medina; (2) The 10-year embargo against Iraq, which, it is
reported, has caused the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children; and
(3) U.S. economic and military aid to Israel.
One response might be: "We shouldn't care about
their motives for killing -- all that matters is that our government officials
kill them before they kill us." But that position is problematic for two
big reasons: (1) Even if current terrorists are killed first, wouldn't new ones,
driven by the same motives, surface to take their place? and (2) Isn't it
possible that the terrorists might kill many of us before our government
officials find and kill all of them?
A second possible response is: "The terrorists
hate us so much that it doesn't matter what our government's foreign policy is
and therefore there's no sense in reexamining it." Even if it is true that
the terrorists are motivated by blind hatred, however, is it not always a good
idea to periodically reexamine government policies, especially with the thought
of terminating those that are not achieving their goals and that are actually
producing perverse consequences?
What would be wrong with a reevaluation of the
(1) Why are
(2) Has the embargo against
(3) Why should the
Some might suggest that a reevaluation of our
government's
Some might say that it's not patriotic to question the
policies of one's own government during wartime. I say that genuine patriotism
involves not a blind allegiance to one's government even in war but rather a
love of country that sometimes entails trying to move one's government in a
more positive, constructive direction.
* Published by The Future of Freedom Foundation,
Cuestiones
de América Nš 6, Noviembre de 2001
Regresar a la Página
Principal...
![]()