RE: Breaking News: US Missile Strikes Against Military Targets Inside Syria
April 8, 2017 at 10:21 am
(April 7, 2017 at 2:55 pm)Isis Wrote:(April 7, 2017 at 2:52 pm)Faith No More Wrote: Use of chemical weapons is banned by the Geneva Convention.
I am aware, but there was hardly any outrage from your average person when conventional weapons were being used to massacre children, or when the regime was preventing food aid from entering a city. It's just stupid to start moaning now that chemical weapons were used, which is obviously terrible, but ignore the other shit.
Since WWI, gas has been viewed differently than other weapons. As a kid in the 60s, I was aware of an 'old man' we frequently saw sitting outside his apartment as we went to the grocery store. He was disabled, and had been since being gassed in WWI. The lasting effects of gassing upon the survivors, and the indiscriminately lethal effects of it put it in a special category of armaments.
Additionally, in a theoretical orbit, restrictions on how warfare is conducted, if observed by both sides, will not affect the outcome. WWII didn't see use of 'gas', but it was deployed. There were even strong advocates for it's use. US forces were injured by mustard gas in Italy, but the gas wasn't deployed by Germans or Italian forces, it was leaking from stores the US had sent to Italy, 'just in case'.
Also, President Roosevelt was under enormous pressure to approve the use of gas on at least one Japanese held island in the Pacific (IIRC, Iwo Jima), and it's hard to imagine a more 'perfect' situation for it's use (Japanese forces were dug in, and were definitely prepared to fight to the last man). Still, Roosevelt, mindful of what happened in WWI would not approve it's use, 'even on Japanese soldiers' and subsequently suffered 20,000 marine fatalities in securing that island.
I would think any future use of gas by the US would irretrievably sully what those marines sacrificed in lieu of a 'cheap and easy' battlefield win with gas.
So gas is different.
The granting of a pardon is an imputation of guilt, and the acceptance a confession of it.