But how does one translate these principles into concrete actions in the current circumstances?By "current circumstances" you may mean a few different things.
#1. How could the current situation have been handled different? I've addressed this by saying we should have provide the Taliban (and the world) with the "proof" we had of Osama's involvement. Unilateral action is BAD. If the Taliban didn't want to deal, then freeze all of their accounts and blockade them.
#2. How can we handle the situation we have right now? Move away from military force. Work to have the various governments share their anti-terrorist information and fund Interpol so they can turn this information into arrests. If a country is sheltering a terrorist that Interpol wants to arrest, then freeze their accounts and blockade them also.
#3. Clarify our definition of "terrorist" and then follow our own definition. That means that Yasser would be arrested by Interpol.
How would you marginalize the Wahabi version of Islam that fed OBL's hatred of the US?We'd have to re-evaluate our diplomatic relationship with Saudi Arabia.
[link|http://www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/irf/irf_rpt/1999/irf_saudiara99.html|Here]
Which also ties into our dependency upon their oil. We need to get off of it.
How would you improve the economy of countries with vocal groups that don't like US interference?We don't. We work with friendly countries. Over time, the friendly countries should become more prosperous and the unfriendly will have less of a reason to hate us. Also, the regular immigration from one country to the other will transfer the benefits, in theory.
What would you do, say, in Algeria?Isn't that a civil war? Unless they're exporting terrorists it should be handled under a different heading.
E.g. Afghanistan's border continues to be quite porous. It has a long border with a country the US doesn't have diplomatic relations with (Iran).And others. I didn't say it would be easy. But we can do it.
How does one implement an effective blockade in such a situation?Helicopter gunships, fighter jets, etc. Define the border and shoot anything approaching it. That way, the only people killed are people who travel into fire zones.
The Gulf War cease fire was put in place with a various trade restrictions on Iraq to prevent Saddam from gaining weapons of mass destructions and to force him to comply with the conditions of the cease fire. The blockade hasn't been terribly effective in gaining his cooperation on weapons inspections and the like.Like I said, it won't remove an established government. But Iraq has been, effectively, neutralized.
Perhaps I'm misreading you, but it seems to me your posts could be interpreted as saying that military action is only permissible when there is no possibility of civilian casualties.No. But I don't see the difference between them killing civilians and us killing civilians and both of us claiming that such killing "has" to be done or is "permissible" or "justified".
Dead civilians are dead civilians to me.
If so, what's to prevent the use of willing (or unwilling) "human shields" causing a veto on military action?It sounds like you're talking about hostages. Now, it is rather difficult to have hostages involved in military operations. They don't travel easy. I would question whether a group holding hostages (If they're willing shields, they're not "innocent". Only the unwilling are hostages.) would require military response. What happens when a bank robbery involves hostages?
If it is military action, then we have established precedents for burning how cities down to destroy strategic resources.
What I'm seeing with al Queda is a Mafia type organization. And we do NOT bomb cities to get thugs.
Giving them fair warning? Didn't the US try to do that in Afghanistan?Again, I see these as completely different situations. We were at war with Iraq over Kuwait. Bombing cities in Iraq to take out strategic resources is one thing.
We were not at war with Afghanistan. They hadn't invaded anyone. We were targeting a criminal organization that occupied some of their territory.
Bringing up the existence of terrorists in prisons around the world merely indicates that countries with functioning governments and legal systems have ways of identifying, arresting, and trying terrorist suspects within their borders. How does that apply to situations where that isn't the case - e.g. Afghanistan.That is when freezing the accounts of the rogue government and blockading it comes into play. But not unilaterally. That is why we need to organize the other governments to support this.
Would you consider this an example of what should have been done after the attacks on the Pentagon, World Trade Center and the hijacking of the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania?I'd do it a bit differently, but the structure would be the same. I'd recommend a more complete lockdown of their country. Look at the results.
What leverage could have been applied to the Taliban government in Afghanistan to enable a judicial action?Okay, I'll short hand it to fab (freeze their accounts and blockade their country).
If the actions had been done by agents of the Taliban government, would you regard them as an act of war?Yes. The Taliban is the government of Afghanistan. If one government orders an attack on another country, it is an act of war.
Would you change your mind if the reports of al Quaida and the Taliban being effectively the same organization (e.g. intermarriage of principals, etc.) were true?Expand on this, please. Are they any more similar than the governments of England and Canada? Or Germany and Austria?
I think al Quaida took an overt act of war against the US.I think it was a criminal act of terrorism. Not war.
Their actions weren't of the same character as Capone or a Mafia. E.g. The Mafia is a criminal organization that hasn't done tens of billions of dollars of economic damage to a country and killed nearly 3000 people in the span of an hour or so.I'll grant you the "in the span of an hour or so". But not the rest. They've killed people. They have done billions of dollars of economic damage. They just do it less publicly.
Military action against them and their supporters and protectors (the Taliban) in Afghanistan was and is appropriate, in my opinion.And you are welcome to your opinion. Now, if I could show that the Mafia had billions of dollars of adverse effect on our economy and had killed 3,000 people, would you recommend military action against them? And by military action I mean bombing cities.