- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
-
1 The Case for Regime Change -
2 Liberal Legacies, Europe’s Totalitarian Era, and the Iraq War -
3 “Regime Change” -
4 In the Murk of It -
5 National Interest and International Law -
6 Just War against an “Outlaw” Region -
7 Moral Arguments -
8 A Friendly Drink in a Time of War -
9 Wielding the Moral Club -
10 Peace, Human Rights, and the Moral Choices of the Churches -
11 Ethical Correctness and the Decline of the Left -
12 Pages from a Daily Journal of Argument -
13 Liberal Realism or Liberal Idealism -
14 Iraq and the European Left -
15 Guilt’s End -
16 The Iraq War and the French Left -
17 Tempting Illusions, Scary Realities, or the Emperor’s New Clothes II -
18 Antitotalitarianism as a Vocation -
19 Sometimes, a War Saves People -
20 Gulf War Syndrome Mark II -
21 “They Don’t Know One Little Thing” -
22 “Why Did It Take You So Long to Get Here?” -
23 Full Statement to the House of Commons, 18 March 2003 -
24 The Threat of Global Terrorism - Contributors
- Index
Pages from a Daily Journal of Argument
Pages from a Daily Journal of Argument
- Chapter:
- (p.191) 12 Pages from a Daily Journal of Argument
- Source:
- A Matter of Principle
- Author(s):
Norman Geras
- Publisher:
- University of California Press
This chapter consists of edited extracts from normblog—The Weblog of Norman Geras. It contains his personal views on Iraq as well as his feelings on September 11, 2001, which he claims to be an act of gross criminality. He described that the left's response to the incident was more an excuse and apologia. The chapter also describes the dimensions on the issue on the war in Iraq. Gregas believes that if a government treats its own people with terrible brutality, massacring them and such, there is a right of humanitarian intervention by outside powers. The overriding of the principle of national sovereignty was then justified, if it was, not because Saddam Hussein was a dictator but because his regime fell on the wrong side of a moral threshold of extreme inhumanity. That should have delegitimized it as an acceptable member of the community of nations.
Keywords: Iraq war, Norman Geras, Weblog, Saddam Hussein, humanitarian intervention, brutality, inhumanity
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
-
1 The Case for Regime Change -
2 Liberal Legacies, Europe’s Totalitarian Era, and the Iraq War -
3 “Regime Change” -
4 In the Murk of It -
5 National Interest and International Law -
6 Just War against an “Outlaw” Region -
7 Moral Arguments -
8 A Friendly Drink in a Time of War -
9 Wielding the Moral Club -
10 Peace, Human Rights, and the Moral Choices of the Churches -
11 Ethical Correctness and the Decline of the Left -
12 Pages from a Daily Journal of Argument -
13 Liberal Realism or Liberal Idealism -
14 Iraq and the European Left -
15 Guilt’s End -
16 The Iraq War and the French Left -
17 Tempting Illusions, Scary Realities, or the Emperor’s New Clothes II -
18 Antitotalitarianism as a Vocation -
19 Sometimes, a War Saves People -
20 Gulf War Syndrome Mark II -
21 “They Don’t Know One Little Thing” -
22 “Why Did It Take You So Long to Get Here?” -
23 Full Statement to the House of Commons, 18 March 2003 -
24 The Threat of Global Terrorism - Contributors
- Index