Knight said:
Of course!
That's what war is all about! Why do you think wars are rarely won anymore? If you really want to win a war and it's imperative you take no chances of losing, you might need to do whatever is necessary to win. You might need to bomb your enemy into submission in an effort to saves the lives of your own countrymen.
Knight, i don't want to be a one note band with my Sun Tzu veneration, but don't you see the quality of waging a war with the intention of causing the least amount of damage and blood shed possible? do you think victory cannot be acheived unless the most damage is done? how do you know that "whatever is necessary to win" is causing your enemy and his populous the most harm possible? don't you think there's any value to Sun Tzu's stragey of defeating the enemy with the least amount of damage possible?
Todays modern clinical warfare is only effective if you have complete dominance over your enemy like we do in Iraq. If Iraq were a real threat we wouldn't be able to fight as "nice" as we are now.
dominance can be asserted any number of ways, and according to Sun Tzu the highest and best moral and humane strategy is to assert dominance with the least amount of blood shed. do you not find value in that?
A suicide bomber is normally not part of the military. He is acting on his own killing targets that are not part of the war effort but instead in acts of terrorism. When countries are at war with each other they may in fact drop bombs on each other, that is the distinction (in your example). War effort verses individual terrorism effort.
i'm not convinced that any of us are qualified to judge the status of an insurgent or his motivation. their definition of "war effort" is obviously vastly different from ours, but that has to do with the culture they've been brought up in, and the position they have been forced into. it's easy for us to sit back and judge the insurgents, but we really have no clue as to the world they must face on a day to day basis and how they perceive us.
i'd still like to know a few things:
in the Jericho genocide, was the city already taken at the point when the massacre began? was victory contingent upon the slaughter of the non-combatants? if it was, why? if it wasn't, why? why did they have to die? what was the tactical advantage? what was the economic or political advantage?