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Hot Air Balloon

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Assassins


Should the United States employ CIA assassins?


This runs contrary to my personal ethics, but I know a lot of folks who think that such a thing is not only excusable but necessary.


Do you?


Is it worth the blood on our hands if we can shoot to kill a few key leaders who are deemed "brutal dictators and dissidents"?


To throw in a little LDS twist, what's the difference between CIA assassins and Teancum's tactics against Amalickiah?


--Ray


 



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Would you classify someone who enters a country through means of stealth and then kills its leader and "assassin"?


Was Nephi an assassin?


Is it better that one man die rather than a nation fall into inquity?


Would you have assassinated Hitler in the 1920's?


 



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Hot Air Balloon

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Um... yeah they all seem pretty assassiny to me... but hey! I'm the one asking the questions...


--Ray


 



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Understander of unimportant things

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rayb wrote:

Um... yeah they all seem pretty assassiny to me... but hey! I'm the one asking the questions...


--Ray


 




Ahem... no, you were the one setting bait for a debate and then got baited back by another debator...

I am so into recognizing baiting since this past Thursday and one of my 11 year old Scouts baited me good during the middle of Scout meeting! Told the boys dad today during priesthood opening exercises and he laughed saying that sounded like his son!

As to the Teancum thing, well, I wouldn't call what he did a unilateral assassination. He did a surgical strike against the ones responsible for the unwarranted aggression and hostilities. Both times were successful, but he lost his life in completing his self-appointed mission second time around.

The question I think that is more interesting to ask in this context is if the Book of Mormon and its contents were abridged for our benefit in our generation, what are we to learn from the story of Teancum? How does that apply to us? How do we liken it unto us?

Laban and Nephi? Not assasination. Laban was not the leader of the people at Jerusalem. He was a man of influence and had connections with the governing council, but it does not mean he was the leader. Wasn't Zedekiah the king? Laban had offended Nephi at least twice previous to being delivered into his hands, and the offenses were not just to the tune of "Yo momma wears combat boots". He had robbed them of the family fortune (which under Mosaic law was likely a capital offense) and he had threatened to kill them. I'm sure that under Mosaic law, Nephi's slaying of Laban would have been completely justified, even if we do not have the full details. The Lord always works within His own laws.

I do not subscribe to the idea of collective guilt for what the government does.

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Wise and Revered Master

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I say yes.  Let the government thugs do their job.  Bin Laden, Sadam, Hitler, Pol Pot, Milosevich, Chavez.  I'll sleep well at night knowing these fellows got lead poisoning.  Heck, put me in the window with the scope.  I could still sleep well at night.


Jason



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Hot Air Balloon

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Honestly I wasn't baiting anyone... I was positing a moral paradox.


--Ray


 



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Understander of unimportant things

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Hey Ma, he's usin' them fancy college learnin' words again! 


I don't see this sort of thing as a moral paradox, though.  I am not the decision maker, nor am I the one who carries out the order.  Any moral paradox only exists for them.


There is a distinct and discrete difference between being a party to something like that and simply being a citizen of a government that employs such tactics, whether they are right, wrong, or indifferent.


And, it is usually a guilt tactic used by those political entities and ideologies who themselves are far from above reproach...  'The war against terror / in Iraq is immoral / only about oil / ______ (fill in blank)' while at the same time proclaiming that there is absolutely nothing wrong with abortion at will.



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Hot Air Balloon

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It's a moral paradox because you're preemptively killing someone for killing (or the threat of killing) others.


Then again, the whole law of moses is a moral paradox, imo...


--Ray



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Profuse Pontificator

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Jason, don't forget Stalin, Mao, Castro, and Ahmadinejad.  

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Hot Air Balloon

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I'll sign up to assassinate Mao and Stalin, if you sign up to assassinate those other two...


--Ray


 



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Hot Air Balloon

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Btw, Jeffrey,  I really liked your challenge... especially the point about Nephi, but I would ask if you think the CIA is capable of having the same level of "Spirit of Prophecy" that Nephi had in order to "see into the future" of any place, in order to precog where it would be appropriate to justify killing another individual, no matter how repugnant...


Also, doesn't It always begs the question, What if someone worse comes along?


--Ray



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Wise and Revered Master

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rayb wrote:



I'll sign up to assassinate Mao and Stalin, if you sign up to assassinate those other two...


--Ray


 






No fair, I already took care of those two!



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Jason



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rayb wrote:



 


Honestly I wasn't baiting anyone... I was positing a moral paradox.


--Ray


 




There is no moral paradox, there is simply the question of whether or not one abuses the idea of assassination (as Rome did internally) or uses the idea of assassination judiciously.

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rayb wrote:



Btw, Jeffrey,  I really liked your challenge... especially the point about Nephi, but I would ask if you think the CIA is capable of having the same level of "Spirit of Prophecy" that Nephi had in order to "see into the future" of any place, in order to precog where it would be appropriate to justify killing another individual, no matter how repugnant...


Also, doesn't It always begs the question, What if someone worse comes along?


--Ray





Do we depend on revelation to rule someone guilty under the death penalty?  In my view the ideal for its use is one in which it is carefully chosen, and used when it is deemed necessary to prevent a greater evil.


Did Kennedy have that in mind during his numerous attempts to kill Castro?  Or allowing the assassination of Ngo Din Dheim?  (In Vietnam the act weakened South Vietnam and increased the level of insurgency which in turn brought more soldiers to Vietnam, the rest is history).


When one looks at the question of assassination, one must also be prepared to see who is in the wings and more to the point, attempt to understand the unintentional consequences.


Consider Labans death.  Had Laban not been killed, how much more difficult would the odds have been that Lehi and his family would not have been followed by a band of Labans men with the intention of killing them?



-- Edited by Jeffery_LQ1W at 18:29, 2006-11-06

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Hot Air Balloon

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I have a hard time equating what Nephi did (under the direct and express command of God) with what JFK did, or attempted to do, or almost did...


I'm having difficulty defining moral equivalence to both... further there's something frightening about the idea that one could get behind such an idea in a bureaucratic sense...


Would you sign up to be an assassin for the government? What if that power is abused?


--Ray



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If I could kill Hitler before he came to power yes.  But an assassin able to work in hindsight isn't realistic.


Would I be an assassin for a democracy that tried to do the right thing in general?  Yes I would, knowing men are flawed, consider that the US would not have had to go into Iraq if one of the assassination attempts had worked (fired a missile into a restaurant he was attending).


Consider the fact that had Mao been killed by an assassin, you wouldn't have 12 - 20 million Chines that starved to death during his mandated purges.  That North Korea would not have ceased to exist and a unified Korea under a real democracy existed.


There are risks involved and yes it can be abused.  Just like the military itself can (see the history of the US against the American Indians), just like our justice system can be perverted for wrong choices, and so on....


There is always risk.


And what Nephi did is not different from other ordered assassinations, it is simply the level of surety, not the action itself.


But it raises an interesting note.  If the prophet told you to go to, say San Francisco and kill every man, woman, and child in it, would you?  How would that be different than Samuel telling Saul to do likewise?


Let us hope that we never live in such times again.



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Head Chef

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A sniper is only different in situation from an assassin. Would you say that, if a sniper had a good shot at the enemy general, he should take it? Is that any different just because there is a war going on around him? What if the sniper takes the shot at night, when no fighting is going on, and the general is just strolling outside his tent?

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A declaration of war or hostilities is fair warning that all key components of the enemy camp are targets.  Assassination, done for political (not military means) might distinct.


So, lets look at Nephi.  Was he killing for military or political reasons?  One could surmise both.  The non military reason would be to obtain the plate or legal documentation (ie political structure) of his tribe, the assumption is also that Laban would have taken a military stance and attacked the Lehi family once he recovered.


So would I kill Hitler or Mao prior to hostilities?  Or perhaps Stalin so that Trotsky could take over?  Perhaps.


Would I sanction such an organization to attack political leaders that are a danger to my country.  Yes.


Unfortunately Hobbes is mostly right.



-- Edited by Jeffery_LQ1W at 22:23, 2006-11-06

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Hot Air Balloon

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Yet, one could take the Spirit's advice to Nephi and apply it to horrific deeds if you were so inspired. Suppose I had a brother who chose not to raise his children in the Gospel. Under the rationalization the Spirit gives Nephi, I would be justified in killing him, and possibly his children...


I asked specifically about the CIA. It is not even based in truth or prophecy... and is a human institution... not sure though, which is scarier, someone using god's laws to justify targetted killing of leaders before they commit their attrocities, or a supposedly secular human institutition doing the same thing. What if someone like Ghandi were viewed as a "threat" and were killed? Or Martin Luther King Jr? (Oh wait...)


Would Mao's massacre be less so, had someone removed him? Or would he simply be replaced by another? Some believe that Hitler, while he started world war II, also was the reason why the allied forces won it... that had Hitler not been so insane, he would not have made nearly so many mistakes in the pursuit of the war...  


The more I think about it, perhaps war is the only honest answer to attrocity. God didn't send assassins to slay Satan, though he was clearly the ring-leader of leading 1/3rd of his children to their eternal damnation...


--Ray



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You make a strong case against the death penalty then.  After all, unless the spirit dictates then you should never say that "God wanted him dead".


And a strong case against ever going to war unless God himself tells us.


We are left to make certain decisions ourselves including life and death decsions.


I asked specifically about the CIA. It is not even based in truth or prophecy... and is a human institution... not sure though, which is scarier, someone using god's laws to justify targetted killing of leaders before they commit their attrocities, or a supposedly secular human institutition doing the same thing. What if someone like Ghandi were viewed as a "threat" and were killed? Or Martin Luther King Jr? (Oh wait...)


Sigh, conspiracy theories about as we seek to "slander" organizations and people with less evidence than applied to Jefferson.  The government did not kill Martin Luther King, and the CIA certainly had nothing to do with it, as opposed to the FBI which handles domestic affairs, the CIA tends toward the extra national isues.


CIA is not based on truth or prophecy?  You know this how?  How exactly is the CIA not based on truth?  Does it seek to know the real motivations of other groups?  Or are you stating that some things like "spying" shouldn't occur (I could direct you to several instances of spying in many books of scripture, as well as George Washington who himself was an excellent spy master).


To say we should not remove someone who is a clear and present danger to the US is utterly ridiculous.  Usama bin Ladin is a prime candidate and yes, we want him dead.


Would Mao's massacre be less so, had someone removed him? Or would he simply be replaced by another? Some believe that Hitler, while he started world war II, also was the reason why the allied forces won it... that had Hitler not been so insane, he would not have made nearly so many mistakes in the pursuit of the war...  


You really should study your history a bit more.  The Hitlers actions, the taking of the Sudetenland, the signing of a peace agreement with Stalin over the invasion and division of Poland.  When you state "some" you misinterpret.  I can say "some" people regarding just about any crazy belief system.  Better to be specific and logical about it.


Without Hitler, would the nationalist socialist movement have come about or would democracy have regained itself?  Hitler did stop communism in Germany, and he wasn't "crazy" as in illogical in his actions and reasoning.  Until later in the war that is.  So Hitler's reasoning took Europe in a month or so, drove the USSR to its knees, and also brought about the failure of Germany in the war at the end.  It is a mixed bag.  The war would have ended sooner if the second in command had been in charge.  That would be Hess, who actually tried to fly to England to craft some sort of agreement.  So the sodden "some" you speak of seem to miss the logic of the Deputy Chancellor Rudolph Hess and his overtures to peace had Hitler been assassinated.


The position presented is a poor one.


 


Would Mao's massacre be less so, had someone removed him? Or would he simply be replaced by another? Some believe that Hitler, while he started world war II, also was the reason why the allied forces won it... that had Hitler not been so insane, he would not have made nearly so many mistakes in the pursuit of the war...  


Mao was a driving force of personality, we can see how much China opened to the west 'after' his death.  Chinese people are finally having to deal with weight gain versus starvation under the personality cult of Mao.


 


The more I think about it, perhaps war is the only honest answer to attrocity. God didn't send assassins to slay Satan, though he was clearly the ring-leader of leading 1/3rd of his children to their eternal damnation...


Are you telling me you believe God can kill a spirit?  Or are you telling me that disagreement with God should have implied a death sentence for Satan?  Or is free agency not really the option in this?


In fact God has sent assassins to do his bidding.  I again point specifically to Nephi.  Who carried out a political assassination of obtain politically important material.


Assassination is an option and an important one that should be used carefully.  Why killing millions when killing one may well prevent it?


 


 



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Wise and Revered Master

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God has historically used assasins.  The last plague of egypt, Sodom and Gomorah, the angel with the flaming sword that only the donkey could see.  Of course he is perfect.  Are men going to make mistakes.  Of course.  In every war there are mistakes.  Of course that's why I use www.askaninja.com to get all my assasination questions answered right the first time!

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Hot Air Balloon

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I recognize the fact that we should defend our country's interests, and defend our families even unto bloodshed. Heck, that's been the focus of much of my scripture study lately, but what I still think is unclear is how to reconcile the idea of preemptive violence.


The book of mormon states:


(Alma 43:46 - And they were doing that which they felt was the duty which they owed to their God; for the Lord had said unto them, and also unto their fathers, that: Inasmuch as ye are not guilty of the first offense, neither the second, ye shall not suffer yourselves to be slain by the hands of your enemies.)


This implies two direct offenses against you. What exactly is an offense, I don't know. We are certainly entitled to defend ourselves.


You claim my arguments are weak, but the only reason your arguments are "strong" is because you have the benefit of history to look back on very specific examples. What if the early Christians had used this assassination justification on Alma the Younger, or on Saul of Tarsus?


What if the Anti-Nephi-Lehites didn't lay down their lives, what of those whose hearts were changed by the very act of their own laying down their life?


Further I am wary of using any Old Testament justification for any sort of action we will be called upon to perform in these days, for we have the benefit of the Master who implored we "Turn the other Cheek" and "Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that spitefully use you and persecute you." and that we forgive our brother "seven times seventy"...


This is where I perceive a paradox or contradictory commands.


Then again, maybe you can make a case for loving your enemy by killing him... ...I certainly don't withhold that possibility... it's like excommunication... from life... you're doing him a favor by taking him out... but then, when are men to make that judgement and what controls would one place upon the application of such "mercy".


--Ray


 


 


 


 



-- Edited by rayb at 15:41, 2006-11-07

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Hot Air Balloon

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Btw, it's really not my intent to make anyone feel bad if you're a CIA assassin, I just haven't quite figured out how to justify such things morally due to all these other scriptures which as an active member of the LDS church, I find myself facing certain doubts... not that there's anything wrong with their life choices--heaven knows I'm not their judge, so I hope that you CIA assassins won't think I'm judging you... I'm just thinking it may not be for me.


--Ray



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Head Chef

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I don't know that I can address your question properly, Ray. I do know that Joseph Smith was told by the Lord at one point that the Lord would "call home" anyone that Joseph asked him to. He never did. If I were given that power, in his situation, I don't know that I would have been a strong enough person to resist. But the fact that he didn't use it says something, I think. He surely could have saved the lives of many Saints by selective use of that power.

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rayb wrote:



I recognize the fact that we should defend our country's interests, and defend our families even unto bloodshed. Heck, that's been the focus of much of my scripture study lately, but what I still think is unclear is how to reconcile the idea of preemptive violence.


The book of mormon states:


(Alma 43:46 - And they were doing that which they felt was the duty which they owed to their God; for the Lord had said unto them, and also unto their fathers, that: Inasmuch as ye are not guilty of the first offense, neither the second, ye shall not suffer yourselves to be slain by the hands of your enemies.)


This implies two direct offenses against you. What exactly is an offense, I don't know. We are certainly entitled to defend ourselves.


You claim my arguments are weak, but the only reason your arguments are "strong" is because you have the benefit of history to look back on very specific examples. What if the early Christians had used this assassination justification on Alma the Younger, or on Saul of Tarsus?


What if the Anti-Nephi-Lehites didn't lay down their lives, what of those whose hearts were changed by the very act of their own laying down their life?


Further I am wary of using any Old Testament justification for any sort of action we will be called upon to perform in these days, for we have the benefit of the Master who implored we "Turn the other Cheek" and "Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that spitefully use you and persecute you." and that we forgive our brother "seven times seventy"...


This is where I perceive a paradox or contradictory commands.


Then again, maybe you can make a case for loving your enemy by killing him... ...I certainly don't withhold that possibility... it's like excommunication... from life... you're doing him a favor by taking him out... but then, when are men to make that judgement and what controls would one place upon the application of such "mercy".


--Ray


 


 


 


 



-- Edited by rayb at 15:41, 2006-11-07




Well an "interesting" interpretation of the scriptures.  But hardly singular in its accuracy.  You will forgive if I state you go way way out on the limb when looking at the history of biblical scripture and how often it political assassination was used.


Note in the first instance, they "felt it was their duty" and they owed it to their god.  Most soliders feel the same way.  Why wouldn't an assassin feel the same way?  There is no implication of direct offense either.


I think it is silly to state that you cannot kill your enemy and must at the cost of all else not kill them.  It is the height of ignorance to assume that and we know that is not the case and has never been the case.  Of course you could take more scripture out of context, but then what would that prove?  That scripture is open to just about any interpretation we care to make?


Lets open up the view and see the context more clearly:


 


45 Nevertheless, the Nephites were inspired by a better cause, for they were not fighting for monarchy nor power but they were fighting for their homes and their liberties, their wives and their children, and their all, yea, for their rites of worship and their church.

  46 And they were doing that which they felt was the duty which they owed to their God; for the Lord had said unto them, and also unto their fathers, that: Inasmuch as ye are not guilty of the first offense, neither the second, ye shall not suffer yourselves to be slain by the hands of your enemies.   47 And again, the Lord has said that: Ye shall defend your families even unto bloodshed. Therefore for this cause were the Nephites contending with the Lamanites, to defend themselves, and their families, and their lands, their country, and their rights, and their religion.

Sounds like assassination is certainly not off the table there.


Now lets look more carefully at how this meets the passage of Teancums actions:


And it came to pass that when the night had come, Teancum and his servant stole forth and went out by night, and went into the camp of Amalickiah; and behold, sleep had overpowered them because of their much fatigue, which was caused by the labors and heat of the day.


And it came to pass that Teancum stole privily into the tent of the king, and put a javelin to his heart; and he did cause the death of the king immediately that he did not awake his servants.


 


This was so obviously a political assassination, and without the consent of God, but instead with the foresight to assume that many more would die without the assassination.  I certainly did not see Moroni berating Teancum's actions.


So do we defend our families against bloodshed, or wait until thousands die and then defend our families against bloodshed?


If your family were in the line of fire, would you advocate waiting until some of them were dead or would you be pro active in attempting to stop it? 


It is very very silly to assume that you can only "love" someone whom you have every reason to believe will try to kill you or your family or those in your home shortly.  As you can see, it is not the narrow and unnatural view of only loving your enemy, but apparently also protecting and loving your family.  But maybe you can't see that context?


There is a difference between forgiveness, loving your enemy, and also knowing you must kill them because they will destroy those things you love.  Again, its about the context and not taking something out of context.  Based on your view we should all disarm and love our enemies.  Strange how Moses didn't quite see it that way, or Joshua or others who recieved commandments from the Lord.  The Nauvoo Legion itself must have been some sort of aberration too


I see no moral delimma here.



-- Edited by Jeffery_LQ1W at 22:29, 2006-11-07

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Hot Air Balloon

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Your explanation does nothing for me. I was aware of these particular scriptures, but Amalickiah had his two or three chances. Teancums actions while clearly a very surgical attack, only occurred after he had taken his army into Nephite land.


Further, Moroni (the second) felt that the Lord withdrew his protection from the Nephites as soon as they turned to preemption... There's a continuum here...


--Ray


 



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Coming in late on this topic...


One of the differences between a sniper and an assasin is this:  A sniper (as all people in the military) is authorized by law to wage war on behalf of his country.  As such, a sniper may only wage war upon lawful combatants--those taking a direct part in the hostilities of armed conflict.


An assassin is not authorized by law to wage war and has as his targets political figures rather than other lawful combatants.  Because an assassination is illegal under the Geneva conventions and the Law of Armed Conflict (to which both we are a signatory) and by EO 12333, assassination can be described and prosecuted as murder.



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So, legally, there is a clear distinction.


Just like legally, there is a clear distinction between killing and murder.


Just like in the gospel, there is a clear distinction between taking a life and murder.


On the lighter side... what then is 007, Bond, James Bond?  When he kills, even though he is licensed to kill, is it considered an assasination (murder) or a surgically precise military strike upon lawful combatants (or unlawful bad guys )?



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rayb wrote:



Your explanation does nothing for me. I was aware of these particular scriptures, but Amalickiah had his two or three chances. Teancums actions while clearly a very surgical attack, only occurred after he had taken his army into Nephite land.


Further, Moroni (the second) felt that the Lord withdrew his protection from the Nephites as soon as they turned to preemption... There's a continuum here...


--Ray


 





It does establish context.  You took the scripture out of context.


Moroni did not withdraw his protection when they went on pre-emption, that has never been the case.  He did it when they became unrighteous, there is a huge difference.  Pre-emption does not mean being unrighteous.


You also assume that assassination is the first option rather than the last.  Your logic is faulty.


 


 



-- Edited by bokbadok at 18:37, 2006-11-08

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Another perspective:


Sun Tzu in "The Art of War" (recommended reading for military officers) advocated assassinations.  So did Machiavelli.


Which makes more sense:  Spending the lives of our sons and daughters and our nation's resources to wage a conventional war that will, despite our best efforts, result in civilian casualties, and that will destroy our enemy's economic, political, and cultural systems--leaving a collosal mess for us to clean up?  Or sending in a small elite group of assassins to take out a few key leaders and avoid all the death and destruction?  Which is more ethical in the final analysis?



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Roper wrote:



Coming in late on this topic...


One of the differences between a sniper and an assasin is this:  A sniper (as all people in the military) is authorized by law to wage war on behalf of his country.  As such, a sniper may only wage war upon lawful combatants--those taking a direct part in the hostilities of armed conflict.


An assassin is not authorized by law to wage war and has as his targets political figures rather than other lawful combatants.  Because an assassination is illegal under the Geneva conventions and the Law of Armed Conflict (to which both we are a signatory) and by EO 12333, assassination can be described and prosecuted as murder.





The word assassination is not a legal term in international law, nor will you find it in the Geneva Conventions or the Hague Conventions for that matter.


In fact the 4th Geneva Convention actually implies the allowable  use of assassination:


  Part 3, Article 1, Section 28. reads: "The presence of a protected person may not be used to render certain points or areas immune from military operations."


Protected persons are civilians.


EO12333 was amended and allows the use of lethal force as of September 1 2001 by George Bush (which raises the interesting question of how Clinton can claim he tried to have Usama bin Ladin killed prior to that time without rescinding the order).


Apparently neither the congress (minority or majority leaders), which approves treaties, nor President Bush's legal team feel there is any legal violation to the conventions.


Perhaps you can show me the citation for the "Law of Armed Conflict"?


To legs of your stool are already missing.


 


I agree snipers are soldiers, but they are also used to kill or assassinate civilian leaders and can be used as a pre-emptive force.



-- Edited by Jeffery_LQ1W at 16:11, 2006-11-08

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EO12333 was amended and allows the use of lethal force as of September 1 2001 by George Bush (which raises the interesting question of how Clinton can claim he tried to have Usama bin Ladin killed prior to that time without rescinding the order).

I may be wrong, not having studied the subject, but didn't that executive order apply to heads of state? Osama isn't a head of state. He's the head of a terrorist organization. OF course, Clinton is a liar, but maybe not in this particular.

-- Edited by arbilad at 16:42, 2006-11-08

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arbilad wrote:


...OF course, Clinton is a lier...



Yeah, he was impeached because he said he didn't lie with you know who...


He's a liar too! 



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This is the one case when Mormon  (I mispoke and said Moroni the 2nd, but it was Mormon that I was referring to... in which the Nephites engaged in a sort of "preemption" and were driven back...).
 
Further you are ignoring the nature of the Law God gave to the men (in as much as you are not guilty of the first offense, neither the second), which is in direct contradiction to the doctrine of preemption.
 
Mormon 4:4-5 -
 
  4 And it was because the armies of the Nephites went up unto the Lamanites that they began to be smitten; for were it not for that, the Lamanites could have had no power over them.

  5 But, behold, the judgments of God will overtake the wicked; and it is by the wicked that the wicked are punished; for it is the wicked that stir up the hearts of the children of men unto bloodshed.
 
---
 
Also I note that Jeff's language seeks to blur the line when assassination is appropriate. So I'd like to hear exactly when HE thinks it is appropriate to use assassinations.
 
I am fairly certain that murder for profit is immoral, so is this a good place to draw the line?
 
--Ray
 

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A detailed legal examination can be found here:


http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/awc-law.htm


The link to "Assassination - prohibition" is partway down the page and includes further links to a report by the Congressional Research Center about EO 12333 and amendments. 


As far as I know, none of the amendments struck this from EO1233:


2.11 Prohibition on Assassination. No person employed by or acting on behalf of the United States Government shall engage in, or conspire to engage in, assassination.


At least one principle of the Law of Armed Conflict, applies to assassinations. "Distinction" requires combatants to distinguish between combatants and non-combatants. If the target is a non-combatant, in other words, a head of state or other political leader, then he or she is not a lawful target under the law of armed conflict.  Therefore, assassination would be illegal.


You can find a link to the LOAC on the page referenced above.


 



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rayb wrote:



  This is the one case when Mormon  (I mispoke and said Moroni the 2nd, but it was Mormon that I was referring to... in which the Nephites engaged in a sort of "preemption" and were driven back...).   Further you are ignoring the nature of the Law God gave to the men (in as much as you are not guilty of the first offense, neither the second), which is in direct contradiction to the doctrine of preemption.   Mormon 4:4-5 -     4 And it was because the armies of the Nephites went up unto the Lamanites that they began to be smitten; for were it not for that, the Lamanites could have had no power over them.   5 But, behold, the judgments of God will overtake the wicked; and it is by the wicked that the wicked are punished; for it is the wicked that stir up the hearts of the children of men unto bloodshed.   ---   Also I note that Jeff's language seeks to blur the line when assassination is appropriate. So I'd like to hear exactly when HE thinks it is appropriate to use assassinations.   I am fairly certain that murder for profit is immoral, so is this a good place to draw the line?   --Ray  



You know, this was a bit of a quandry I was in initially with the whole going to war to begin with after 9-11.  I was hearing people saying things that really shocked me (as far as retribution type stuff and from people I would never have expected it from).  And it did trouble me until I received a sort of calming feeling that we were not going up to war simply to seek the blood of our enemies, and that we weren't going up to war without just provocation according to the law of God.  I realized that the terrorist organizations and the states that support them had not only struck once against us in the form of 9-11.  They had struck against us in the form of the attack on the USS Cole.  They had struck against us in the form of the attacks on the embassy bombings in Tanzania and Kenya.  They had sought to strike against us several times prior to 9-11 by downing US airliners and were thwarted by various means.  They had struck against us in Somalia.


There was perhaps in each case, a limited response to each of those.  But, there was no "pre-emption" to any of the current war on terror (and the modern gadiantans behind it... make no mistake, they are gadiantans) where we were guilty of the first or second offenses that would preclude the strength of The Lord in our behalf when we went forth in full force against the aggressors.  Even in the case of the Baathists in Iraq.  It didn't matter if no WMD were found after hitting the ground.  Those gadiantans in power there had caused numerous offenses to the people within the country and outside the country within the region.  They had had well over 10 years to become compliant with the treaties ending the first war and failed to do so.


So, as to assassination, semantics aside, I would venture to guess that taking out a head of state as part of the command and control infrastructure should be fine, as long as it is not preemptive to the point of not being in response to at least the second offense.  Sending in a death squad or a hit team is not the same thing as getting caught in a bombing or rocket raid... or is it?



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Btw, Jeff... are you doing okay? Recently, though, I've noted your comments have been a bit short-tempered... You're usually pretty well reasoned and fun to read, (though I readily admit I'm not big on the really really long posts from anyone... (cat )),  but this type of comment (as was pointed out to me by a concerned lurker, who wondered about the moderating standards on the board) is a veiled personal attack.
 
"It doesn't do much for a brick wall either, but it does establish context. It doesn't do much for a brick wall either, but it does establish context."
 
Honestly, I don't see any need to use personal attacks to bolster an argument. When I say I don't follow your reasoning it is because I don't follow it. It doesn't ring true to me. That's not an attack on you, it means that there's a gap in our communication, and I want to consider the WHOLE discussion...
 
It may be we simply disagree on the level of aggression, preemption, etc... I admit I employ ad absurdum perhaps more than most here, and quite honestly, personal attacks really don't bother me, but they do bother others who want to participate here... I know I have occasional "bad" moments...so I hope you're feeling okay, and all. 
 
Best regards,
 
--Ray
 

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If you will note, I edited the "brick wall" portion of that comment out of Jeffrey's post yesterday.



-- Edited by bokbadok at 23:31, 2006-11-09

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rayb wrote:


  This is the one case when Mormon  (I mispoke and said Moroni the 2nd, but it was Mormon that I was referring to... in which the Nephites engaged in a sort of "preemption" and were driven back...).   Further you are ignoring the nature of the Law God gave to the men (in as much as you are not guilty of the first offense, neither the second), which is in direct contradiction to the doctrine of preemption.   Mormon 4:4-5 -     4 And it was because the armies of the Nephites went up unto the Lamanites that they began to be smitten; for were it not for that, the Lamanites could have had no power over them.   5 But, behold, the judgments of God will overtake the wicked; and it is by the wicked that the wicked are punished; for it is the wicked that stir up the hearts of the children of men unto bloodshed.   ---   Also I note that Jeff's language seeks to blur the line when assassination is appropriate. So I'd like to hear exactly when HE thinks it is appropriate to use assassinations.   I am fairly certain that murder for profit is immoral, so is this a good place to draw the line?   --Ray  



I appreciate your unique blend of interpretation by assuming attacks and robbery are automatically pre emptive strikes.  Perhaps the language of the Book of Mormon is overly "nuanced"?  Attacking someone does not mean it is a pre-emptive strike.  The Book of Mormon makes no such judgement or statement.


 


You use assassination if you feel there is a direct threat against your nation and you weigh the decision against the potential consequences that exist.


 


Murder for profit is immoral?  Define profit?  To obtain a country?  You mean as Samuel ordered Saul to do?  Murder for profit depends on how you define profit.  I don't blur language, but it seems to me you may to see clearly what is written.


 


 



-- Edited by bokbadok at 08:22, 2006-11-09

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rayb wrote:


  Btw, Jeff... are you doing okay? Recently, though, I've noted your comments have been a bit short-tempered... You're usually pretty well reasoned and fun to read, (though I readily admit I'm not big on the really really long posts from anyone... (cat )),  but this type of comment (as was pointed out to me by a concerned lurker, who wondered about the moderating standards on the board) is a veiled personal attack.   "It doesn't do much for a brick wall either, but it does establish context. It doesn't do much for a brick wall either, but it does establish context."   Honestly, I don't see any need to use personal attacks to bolster an argument. When I say I don't follow your reasoning it is because I don't follow it. It doesn't ring true to me. That's not an attack on you, it means that there's a gap in our communication, and I want to consider the WHOLE discussion...   It may be we simply disagree on the level of aggression, preemption, etc... I admit I employ ad absurdum perhaps more than most here, and quite honestly, personal attacks really don't bother me, but they do bother others who want to participate here... I know I have occasional "bad" moments...so I hope you're feeling okay, and all.    Best regards,   --Ray  



I am just fine, I was just wondering at how unreasoning some of the responses were.


Whether its a passive aggressive statement implicating the nature of the other poster, or a direct snide remark, I do respond in a straight forward manner.


I am fine, I just don't fiddle faddle and play wounded deer. 



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Perhaps you don't "play wounded deer", Jeff, but you ARE wounding some of the deer. If you are not able to discern how other, more sensitive people will perceive your statements, then I will help you edit them.

Please, for the sake of civil discussion, refrain from using "urim and thummim" type comments as excuses for your overly abrasive communication skills. Ad hominem attacks will not be tolerated.

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Well apparently I might just be too abrasive.

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I guess this slope is too slick for me... to suggest a government body (CIA) could retain a body of legitimacy through the employment of murder is bothersome... to say the least. This was the very foundation upon which "secret combinations" were built.


And let's not forget Moses 5...


  31 And Cain said: Truly I am Mahan, the master of this great asecret, that I may bmurder and get cgain. Wherefore Cain was called Master dMahan, and he gloried in his wickedness.
 
and
 


  49 For aLamech having entered into a covenant with Satan, after the manner of Cain, wherein he became Master Mahan, master of that great secret which was administered unto Cain by Satan; and Irad, the son of Enoch, having known their secret, began to reveal it unto the sons of Adam;

  50 Wherefore Lamech, being angry, slew him, not like unto Cain, his brother Abel, for the sake of getting gain, but he slew him for the aoath’s sake.
 
--Ray
 

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