"Since you talk about ethics," a reader writes, "why haven't you written anything about the upcoming war?"
That's a good question. If ethics, and those who talk about ethics, don't concern themselves with matters of life and death,
what's the point? And this reader isn't alone. I've asked myself the same question.
It would be silly to assume that I don't have a viewpoint, but as far as presenting it in this space, I have a problem. As
I see it, my mandate in this column is to talk about ethics and technology, and to divert it into a pro-war or anti-war platform
would take advantage of the opportunity I've been given. I've complained in the past about people who are given a platform
for some secular reason and turn it into an opportunity to proselytize for their religious beliefs. So I should practice what
I preach.
Although I do tackle some political issues, I'm always conscious of presenting the "technological hook" to the issue, such
as when I discuss the government's current policies regarding the use of data mining to spy on its citizens. In discussing
whether or not a war should be waged, there is no such "hook."
Also, I think that the country is now so sufficiently polarized over the war that there is no point in adding my voice to
the cacophony arising from both of the poles. My experience has been that there are few, if any, people sitting on the fence.
Most have already dug in on one side or the other, and the screaming has begun. Rational-sounding discussion seems to take
place only among like-minded people on both sides of the issue.
But there is one technology "hook" that I will grab onto. I have serious ethical concerns about some of the technical weaponry
that may be used in a war with
Iraq
. My concerns center on the vaunted EMP (electromagnetic pulse) bombs that have gained some notoriety of late.
Among the newest gadgets in the war maker's toy box, these bombs don't explode -- according to all reports -- but send out
a massive electromagnetic pulse that fries all electronic circuits within their reach. Now, no such bomb has ever been tested
in battle, and there are still some questions as to whether the
United States
has them available for use in the near future. Yet the possibility of using EMP bombs has been rumored and reported in the
media.
The arguments in favor of such a bomb surround the fact that it doesn't -- as far as we know -- directly kill people, and
it leaves buildings intact. In theory, once the opposition forces have been rendered powerless,
U.S.
forces would be able to sweep in and quickly restore a "normal life."
Although such a device would certainly achieve its goal of rendering the opposition helpless to conduct any type of war other
than with sticks and stones, it could also have a tremendously devastating effect on civilians, depending on how it was used.
If such a device, having a very limited range, was used against solely military targets, its use would probably present no
grave ethical concerns -- accomplishing the goal of destroying military installations.
However, if the range were larger or if it were used in civilian areas, the damage would be almost incalculable. It's a bit
glib to claim that the bomb is humane because it doesn't physically take lives. Loss of life would certainly follow if hospitals
were unable to function or if water and sewage treatment plants were to fail as the result of an EMP detonation. There could
be no communications, no electricity, and possibly no clean water available to civilians. Transportation could come to a halt.
In a country whose population has already been devastated by 40 years of dictatorship, a decade of war, and a subsequent decade
of crippling sanctions, this could be the death blow.
It is disingenuous to assume that because use of these weapons doesn't kill someone directly, we aren't responsible for later
deaths that are directly or indirectly attributable to such actions.
The notion of sweeping in and restoring a "normal life" seems also to be a false promise. If our military forces completely
destroy a country's electronic infrastructure, we will have effectively made them completely dependent on us for even the
barest necessities of life, setting them up as a virtual vassal state. With computers, radios, televisions, automobiles, and
public transportation gone, the defeated population will be living in an electronic "stone age."
The ongoing problem of technology and ethics is that we continue to develop and use technologies because we can -- and not
necessarily because we've developed the ethical principles that should govern their use. Those who raise objections to such
technology are accused of being Luddites. Eventually, plowing ahead without doing the necessary ethical homework, we may find we've gone so far down the road that
we can't go back. Perhaps it's time to avoid this mistake with this particular technology.
The political fallout from using the EMP bombs would be tremendous as well. Because the
United States
positions itself as a world leader, our country's use of EMP bombs will in effect "give permission" to other countries to
use them also. And it doesn't take much imagination to predict countries such as
India
and
Pakistan
using them against the other as a pre-emptive strike -- following our example -- because they believed the other country
might attack them at some time in the future.
The causes of war and the technology of war are separate issues, but both are guided by the principles of a just war. The
most common distinction of a "just war" requires, among other things, that the war be a response to an attack or an imminent
attack, that a distinction be made between civilians and the military, and that the force used and damage done is proportionate
to the good being achieved.
It's that proportionality that is called into question in the potential use of EMP weapons.