The Lesser Evil - Political Ethics in an Age of Terror
by Michael Ignatieff ISBN: 0143017357
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: The Lesser Evil: Political Ethics in an Age of Terror by Martin LoneyMichael Ignatieff is one of the distressingly few progressive
intellectuals who have been prepared to take the threat of terror
seriously; too many have preferred to share with Canada's former
Prime Minister, Jean Chretien, the comforting fallacy that at root
the problem lies in poverty, its redress in "equity".
Ignatieff has the courage to recognize that what motivates terrorists
is nihilism. Al Qaeda does not want what we have, it wants to punish
the West and others who fail to share its myopic vision. The purpose
of terrorism "is to strike a blow that asserts the dignity of
Muslim believers while inflicting horror and death upon their
enemies." In the face of such attacks Ignatieff suggests it
is difficult to conceive a political response: "Such an attack
cannot be met by politics but only by war."
Ignatieff is conscious of the threat terrorism poses to the
institutions and values of liberal democracies. The question he
seeks to answer is what lesser evils a democratic society might
commit in defending against the greater evil of terrorism. Civil
liberty absolutists resist any dilution of traditional legal
protections but as Ignatieff succinctly observes, "A constitution
is not a suicide pact," and an emphasis on rights cannot be
so great as to undermine the ability of government to take effective
action.
Historically the goal of terror has been to force governments into
increasingly authoritarian and brutal responses, in the hope (usually
unfulfilled) that the population will rally to the terrorists'
cause. Ignatieff's summary of this history is provocative and
insightful. It will be uncomfortable reading for those arm chair
radicals who have sympathised with Basque militants, Irish republican
bombers or Tamil insurgents. Ignatieff's description of the Tamil
Tigers should be compulsory reading for Canadian politicians:
"For twenty years, the Tamil Tigers used suicide bombings to
crack the will of the Sinhalese majority to force it to concede a
separate Tamil state. Moderate Tamils willing to negotiate with the
government were a particular target of attack. These attacks were
intended to coerce the Tamil majority into obeying the terrorist
group, and to prevent the emergence of a negotiated settlement."
Ignatieff accepts that fighting terrorism will require some sacrifice
of traditional civil liberties. What he seeks is a middle way, which
will protect against a slide into arbitrary injustices and ensure
that the system of checks and balances which characterize effective
democracies is deployed to full effect. Legislatures must be
aggressive in scrutinizing the activities of the administration.
Ignatieff wants a continual balancing of the argument of necessity
and the claims of morality, insisting that "a constitutional
state must remain answerable to the higher law, a set of standards
that protect foundational commitments to the dignity of every
person." Western democracies must be relentlessly conscious
of the importance of the values they seek to defend and of their
universal application.
The mounting evidence of ill-treatment at Abu Ghraib and the
consequent attempts within the U.S. military and the Bush administration
to deflect blame illustrate the ease with which the kind of vigorous
interrogation of suspected terrorists, approved by Ignatieff, can
descend into abuse. The outrage provoked in the Arab world at the
deliberate humiliation of prisoners provides eloquent evidence of
the political consequences of the retreat from democratic values.
For Ignatieff "rights-based commitments to individual dignity
are intrinsic to the definition of what a democracy is."
Ignatieff is alert to the temptation of turning a blind eye to
abusive practices: "A culture of silent complicity may develop
between civilian political leaders and their security chiefs, in
which both sides know that extralegal means are being used but each
has an interest in keeping quiet about it. In this way, the clear
constitutional duty of civilian leaders to maintain executive control
over security services can be subverted." Ignatieff suggests
this provides some understanding of how a democratic France could
sanction torture in Algeria, even as its politicians denied it was
occurring. Reports coming out of Iraq raise questions as to how far
the Americans succumbed to a similar temptation. Leaked reports
from the International Committee of the Red Cross, and reports from
other human rights groups, published in Harper's, suggest that
prisoners at Gauntanamo Bay also experienced abuse.
This is a timely contribution which might be usefully read by those
in the American administration who appear to believe that expedience
provides the best moral compass-providing, of course, you are not
found out.
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