Mainstream liberal politicians urge economic sanctions on Iran as a better strategic and moral option to a hot war.
Read this New York Times article, about a passenger plane crash in Iran that killed more than 70 people: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/10/world/middleeast/10iran.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
Note the final paragraphs:
"Iran's air industry has been plagued by safety concerns for years, at least in part because international sanctions have prevented the country from purchasing new American and European aircraft and spare parts for the ones it has.
Iran's American-built aircraft were purchased before Iran's 1979 revolution, when the two countries cut off relations. Airlines, including Iran's flagship carrier, Iran Air, have struggled to keep those planes, as well as aging and often unreliable aircraft bought from Russia and other former Soviet states, in service.
In July 2009, a Russian-built Tupolev passenger jet operated by Caspian Airlines of Iran crashed on its way to Yerevan, Armenia, killing all 168 passengers and crew members.
In December 2005, 108 people were killed when an Iranian military plane, a Lockheed C-130, crashed into a high-rise housing block outside Tehran. The following November, a military plane crashed on takeoff at Tehran's Mehrabad Airport, killing 38 people."
Those accounts alone give us almost 400 dead in five years. And who knows how many other such crashes aren't accounted for in the article, or are unknown to the US altogether.
That's a not-insignificant number of civilians.
So the quandary, or more like a vagary, is: are sanctions immoral? Is the US in some way morally culpable for these deaths? To what extent, if at all, are sanctions "better" than a hot war? Than terrorism?
Read this New York Times article, about a passenger plane crash in Iran that killed more than 70 people: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/10/world/middleeast/10iran.html?partner=rss&emc=rss
Note the final paragraphs:
"Iran's air industry has been plagued by safety concerns for years, at least in part because international sanctions have prevented the country from purchasing new American and European aircraft and spare parts for the ones it has.
Iran's American-built aircraft were purchased before Iran's 1979 revolution, when the two countries cut off relations. Airlines, including Iran's flagship carrier, Iran Air, have struggled to keep those planes, as well as aging and often unreliable aircraft bought from Russia and other former Soviet states, in service.
In July 2009, a Russian-built Tupolev passenger jet operated by Caspian Airlines of Iran crashed on its way to Yerevan, Armenia, killing all 168 passengers and crew members.
In December 2005, 108 people were killed when an Iranian military plane, a Lockheed C-130, crashed into a high-rise housing block outside Tehran. The following November, a military plane crashed on takeoff at Tehran's Mehrabad Airport, killing 38 people."
Those accounts alone give us almost 400 dead in five years. And who knows how many other such crashes aren't accounted for in the article, or are unknown to the US altogether.
That's a not-insignificant number of civilians.
So the quandary, or more like a vagary, is: are sanctions immoral? Is the US in some way morally culpable for these deaths? To what extent, if at all, are sanctions "better" than a hot war? Than terrorism?