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Mostrando postagens com marcador Guerra. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Guerra. Mostrar todas as postagens

domingo, 29 de abril de 2012

Obama: um belicoso Premio Nobel da Paz - Peter Bergen (NYT)


The New York Times, April 28, 2012

Warrior in Chief

THE president who won the Nobel Peace Prize less than nine months after his inauguration has turned out to be one of the most militarily aggressive American leaders in decades.
Liberals helped to elect Barack Obama in part because of his opposition to the Iraq war, and probably don’t celebrate all of the president’s many military accomplishments. But they are sizable.
Mr. Obama decimated Al Qaeda’s leadership. He overthrew the Libyan dictator. He ramped up drone attacks in Pakistan, waged effective covert wars in Yemen and Somalia and authorized a threefold increase in the number of American troops in Afghanistan. He became the first president to authorize the assassination of a United States citizen, Anwar al-Awlaki, who was born in New Mexico and played an operational role in Al Qaeda, and was killed in an American drone strike in Yemen. And, of course, Mr. Obama ordered and oversaw the Navy SEAL raid that killed Osama bin Laden.
Ironically, the president used the Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech as an occasion to articulate his philosophy of war. He made it very clear that his opposition to the Iraq war didn’t mean that he embraced pacifism — not at all.
“I face the world as it is, and cannot stand idle in the face of threats to the American people,” the president told the Nobel committee — and the world. “For make no mistake: Evil does exist in the world. A nonviolent movement could not have halted Hitler’s armies. Negotiations cannot convince Al Qaeda’s leaders to lay down their arms. To say that force is sometimes necessary is not a call to cynicism — it is a recognition of history, the imperfections of man, and the limits of reason.”
If those on the left were listening, they didn’t seem to care. The left, which had loudly condemned George W. Bush for waterboarding and due process violations at Guantánamo, was relatively quiet when the Obama administration, acting as judge and executioner, ordered more than 250 drone strikes in Pakistan since 2009, during which at least 1,400 lives were lost.
Mr. Obama’s readiness to use force — and his military record — have won him little support from the right. Despite countervailing evidence, most conservatives view the president as some kind of peacenik. From both the right and left, there has been a continuing, dramatic cognitive disconnect between Mr. Obama’s record and the public perception of his leadership: despite his demonstrated willingness to use force, neither side regards him as the warrior president he is.
Mr. Obama had firsthand experience of military efficacy and precision early in his presidency. Three months after his inauguration, Somali pirates held Richard Phillips, the American captain of the Maersk Alabama, hostage in the Indian Ocean. Authorized to use deadly force if Captain Phillips’s life was in danger, Navy SEALs parachuted to a nearby warship, and three sharpshooters, firing at night from a distance of 100 feet, killed the pirates without harming Captain Phillips.
“GREAT job,” Mr. Obama told William H. McRaven, the then vice admiral who oversaw the daring rescue mission and later the Bin Laden operation in Abbottabad, Pakistan. The SEAL rescue was the president’s first high-stakes decision involving the secretive counterterrorism units. But he would rely increasingly upon their capacities in the coming years.
Soon after Mr. Obama took office he reframed the fight against terrorism. Liberals wanted to cast anti-terrorism efforts in terms of global law enforcement — rather than war. The president didn’t choose this path and instead declared “war against Al Qaeda and its allies.” In switching rhetorical gears, Mr. Obama abandoned Mr. Bush’s vague and open-ended fight against terrorism in favor of a war with particular, violent jihadists.
The rhetorical shift had dramatic — non-rhetorical — consequences. Compare Mr. Obama’s use of drone strikes with that of his predecessor. During the Bush administration, there was an American drone attack in Pakistan every 43 days; during the first two years of the Obama administration, there was a drone strike there every four days. And two years into his presidency, the Nobel Peace Prize-winning president was engaged in conflicts in six Muslim countries: Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen and Libya. The man who went to Washington as an “antiwar” president was more Teddy Roosevelt than Jimmy Carter.
Consider the comparative speed with which Mr. Obama and his Democratic predecessor, Bill Clinton, opted for military intervention in various conflicts. Hesitant, perhaps, because of the Black Hawk Down disaster in Somalia in 1993, Mr. Clinton did nothing to stop what, at least by 1994, was evidently a genocidal campaign in Rwanda. And Bosnia was on the verge of genocidal collapse before Mr. Clinton decided — after two years of dithering — to intervene in that troubled area in the mid-1990s. In contrast, it took Mr. Obama only a few weeks to act in Libya in the spring of 2011 when Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi threatened to massacre large portions of the Libyan population. Mr. Obama went to the United Nations and NATO and set in motion the military campaign — roundly criticized by the left and the right — that toppled the Libyan dictator.
None of this should have surprised anyone who had paid close attention to what Mr. Obama said about the use of force during his presidential campaign. In an August 2007 speech on national security, he put the nation — and the world — on alert: “If we have actionable intelligence about high-value terrorist targets and President Musharraf won’t act, we will,” he said, referring to Pervez Musharraf, then president of Pakistan. He added, “I will not hesitate to use military force to take out terrorists who pose a direct threat to America.”
That’s about as clear a statement as can be. But Republicans and Democrats blasted Mr. Obama with equal intensity for suggesting that he would authorize unilateral military action in Pakistan to kill Bin Laden or other Al Qaeda leaders.
Hillary Rodham Clinton, then a Democratic rival for the presidential nomination, said, “I think it is a very big mistake to telegraph that.” Mitt Romney, vying for the Republican nomination, accused Mr. Obama of being a “Dr. Strangelove” who is “going to bomb our allies.” John McCain piled on: “Will we risk the confused leadership of an inexperienced candidate who once suggested bombing our ally, Pakistan?”
Once in office, Mr. Obama signed off on a large increase in the number of C.I.A. officers on the ground in Pakistan and an intensified campaign of drone warfare there; he also embraced the use of drones or covert military units in places like Syria and Yemen, where the United States was not engaged in traditional land warfare. (Mr. Bush, who first deployed C.I.A.-directed drones, did not do so on the scale that Mr. Obama did; and Mr. Obama, of course, had the benefit of significantly improved, more precise, drone technology.)
Nothing dramatizes Mr. Obama’s willingness to use hard power so well as his decision to send Navy SEAL Team 6 to Abbottabad, to take out Bin Laden. Had this risky operation failed, it would most likely have severely damaged Mr. Obama’s presidency — and legacy.
Mr. Obama’s advisers worried that a botched raid would disturb — or destroy — the United States-Pakistan relationship, which would make the war in Afghanistan more difficult to wage since so much American matériel had to travel through Pakistani airspace or ground routes.
The risks were enormous. A helicopter-borne assault could easily turn into a replay of the debacle in the Iranian desert in 1980, when Mr. Carter authorized a mission to release the American hostages in Tehran that ended with eight American servicemen dead and zero hostages freed.
SOME of Mr. Obama’s top advisers worried that the intelligence suggesting that Bin Laden was in the Abbottabad compound was circumstantial and much too flimsy to justify the risks involved. The deputy C.I.A. director, Michael J. Morell, had told the president that in terms of available data points, “the circumstantial evidence of Iraq having W.M.D. was actually stronger than evidence that Bin Laden was living in the Abbottabad compound.”
At the final National Security Council meeting to consider options connected to Bin Laden’s possible presence in the Abbottabad compound, Mr. Obama gave each of his advisers an opportunity to speak. When the president asked, “Where are you on this? What do you think?” so many officials prefaced their views by saying, “Mr. President, this is a very hard call,” that laughter erupted, providing a few moments of levity in the otherwise tense, two-hour meeting.
Asked his view, Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. said, “Mr. President, my suggestion is, don’t go.”
For the president, however, the potential rewards clearly outweighed all risk involved. “Even though I thought it was only 50-50 that Bin Laden was there, I thought it was worth us taking a shot,” he said. “And I said to myself that if we have a good chance of not completely defeating but badly disabling Al Qaeda, then it was worth both the political risks as well as the risks to our men.”
The following morning, on Friday, April 29, at 8:20 a.m. in the White House Diplomatic Reception Room, Mr. Obama gathered his key national security advisers in a semicircle around him and told them simply, “It’s a go.”
Three days later Bin Laden was dead.
The Bin Laden mission will surely resurface in the coming election; the campaign has already produced a 17-minute documentary that showcases the raid. This, combined with Mr. Obama’s record of military accomplishment, will make it hard for Mitt Romney to convince voters that Mr. Obama is a typical, weak-on-national-security Democrat. And, if Mr. Romney tries to portray Mr. Obama this way, he will very likely trap himself into calling for a war with Iran, which many Americans oppose.
Mr. Obama plans to be in Chicago for the NATO summit meeting in late May, just as the election campaign heats up. He’ll arrive knowing that the United States and Afghanistan have already agreed to a long-term strategic partnership that is likely to involve thousands of American soldiers in Afghanistan, in advisory roles, after combat operations end in 2014. (The details of the agreement are still being negotiated.) This should inoculate the president from would-be Romney charges that he is “abandoning” Afghanistan.
None of this suggests that Mr. Obama is trigger-happy or that, when considering the use of force, he is more likely to trust his gut than counsel provided during structured, often lengthy, deliberations with his National Security Council and other advisers. In instances in which the risks seem too great (military action against Iran) or the payoff too murky (some form of military intervention in Syria), Mr. Obama has repeatedly held America’s fire.
This said, it is clear that he has completely shaken the “Vietnam syndrome” that provided a lens through which a generation of Democratic leaders viewed military action. Still, the American public and chattering classes continue to regard the president as a thinker, not an actor; a negotiator, not a fighter.
What accounts for the strange, persistent cognitive dissonance about this president and his relation to military force? Does it stem from the campaign in which Mrs. Clinton repeatedly critiqued Mr. Obama for his stated willingness to negotiate with Iran and Cuba? Or is it because he can never quite shake the deliberative tone and mien of the constitutional law professor that he once was? Or because of his early opposition to the Iraq war? Whatever the causes, the president has embraced SEAL Team 6 rather than Code Pink, yet many continue to see him as the negotiator in chief rather than the warrior in chief that he actually is.
Peter L. Bergen is the director of the New America Foundation and the author of the forthcoming book “Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for Bin Laden — From 9/11 to Abbottabad.”

domingo, 5 de fevereiro de 2012

Las Malvinas son... British (for a while..., or forever...)


O biombo do Atlântico Sul
Mac Margolis
O Estado de S. Paulo, 4/02/2012

A Ilha de Iwo Jima era a antessala do Japão continental na 2ª Guerra. Socotra e Masirah são ilhas estratégicas para defender o Golfo Pérsico, enquanto as Seychelles, Maldivas e Maurício são bases cruciais no plano de expansão da pax chinesa. E as Ilhas Malvinas? Para que servem?

Com 3.300 mil habitantes em meio ao Atlântico Sul, as Ilhas Malvinas não constam dos manuais de geopolítica. A constelação de ilhotas já foi entreposto para caçadores de baleias e focas. Hoje é um império de cordeiros e kelp, as algas gigantes que os nativos colhem para alimentar os rebanhos. Sim, há lulas e pesca e fartos relatos de vastas reservas de petróleo. Mas até agora nenhum barril de óleo foi extraído das suas águas geladas. Seu PIB não passa de US$ 120 milhões. Mas não há metro quadrado mais explosivo no Hemisfério Ocidental.

Nas próximas semanas, o HMS Dauntless, poderoso destróier britânico, zarpa para o Atlântico Sul. O príncipe William, piloto da Força Aérea Real e segundo na linha sucessora para a coroa britânica, já está em Port Stanley, onde ficará para um tour de seis semanas. Londres garante que a viagem não é uma provocação, mas se engana quem acha que a querela entre Grã-Bretanha e Argentina, uma disputa que matou quase mil pessoas, em 1982, e deflagrou uma crise diplomática hemisférica, já tenha terminado. As Malvinas - ou Falkland, para os britânicos - despertam paixões que a razão não explica. Hoje são o maior biombo do mundo.

Nascidos e criados britânicos, mas com uma pitada de gauchismo, e governados pela coroa britânica desde 1830, os kelpers - os habitantes do arquipélago - são herdeiros de uma espólio mal resolvido. Durante quase dois séculos, as ilhas foram território ecumênico, com franceses, uruguaios, escoceses, ingleses e argentinos trabalhando lado a lado e em paz. Mas os governantes argentinos jamais engoliram a ideia da Union Jack - a bandeira britânica - ondeando nas mesmas latitudes que a bandeira azul celeste.

A briga já foi mais civilizada. Nos anos 90, Guido di Tella, o saudoso chanceler argentino, tentou seduzir os kelpers com cartões de natal e presentes a cada família. Agora, às vésperas do 30º aniversário da guerra, o governo de Cristina Hirchner desenterra a causa de forma menos belicosa que os militares da ditadura de 1976 a 1983, mas não por isso menos agressiva. Turbinada pela reeleição e "recuperada" de um câncer que não existia, Cristina empolgou ao chamar a Grã-Bretanha de "poder colonialista decadente". Mais importante, montou uma bem-sucedia ofensiva diplomática para levar a questão da posse das ilhas aos foros internacionais.

Recentemente, todos os países latino-americanos reiteraram seu apoio ao objetivo argentina. E para a revolta de Londres, até os EUA tiraram o corpo fora, afirmando que não tomarão “posição nenhuma a respeito da soberania” das ilhas. 

Ninguém em sã consciência imagina uma reprise do sangrento e custoso conflito de três décadas atrás. Mas para ambas as partes, a causa pode valer mais do que a vitória. Para a Grã-Bratenha, à mercê da crise econômica européia e ameaçada pela rebelião escocesa, o resgate dos kelpers no outro lado do oceano ainda é ponto de orgulho nacional. (Ao menos a julgar pelos aplausos nos cinemas britânicos quando Meryl Streep, encarnando Margaret Thatcher no flime A dama  de ferro, manda afundar o navio argentino Belgrano.)

Para a Argentina, nada como reviver um causa perdida para abafar as agruras em casa. Sua economia também esta em desaceleração, a reboque dos mercados globais. Sua inflação é a segunda mais alta do continente. E pior é o esforço do governo para escondê-la, maquiando dados e intimidando jornalistas e economistas independentes que ousam divergir dos números oficiais.

O Fundo Monetário Internacional (FMI), que não toma partido nos oceanos, acaba de intimidar o governo argentino a "melhorar" a qualidade de seus dados. Se Buenos Aires reparou, é outra história. Atrás do biombo da guerra, mesmo uma guerra de palavras, todo o resto é chiado distante. Haja kelp.

sexta-feira, 3 de fevereiro de 2012

Delenda Israel, Iran dixit (o tema mais quente de 2012)

Raras vezes nas relações internacionais, líderes de um Estado são tão explícitos nas ameaças de destruição de uma outra nação, um outro povo, um outro Estado.
Israel poderia até invocar o capítulo da autodefesa da Carta da ONU e golpear as instalações militares do Irã, mas não vai ser fácil, pois o Irã de hoje está superarmado, e não parece ter medo de incorrer em perdas humanas ou materiais.
Este ano de 2012 vai ser movimentado, podem apostar...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Khamenei: Iran will back ‘any nations, any groups’ fighting Israel
The Washington Post, February 3 2012 

TEHRAN — A fiery anti-Israel speech by Iranian leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Friday, and a successful satellite launch by his country, added to growing global tensions, as Israel warned it might make a preemptive strive against Iran’s nuclear facilities despite U.S. objections.
“From now onwards, we will support and help any nations, any groups fighting against the Zionist regime across the world, and we are not afraid of declaring this,” Khamenei said during a rare Friday prayer lecture at Tehran University.

“The Zionist regime is a true cancer tumor on this region that should be cut off,” Khamenei said. “And it definitely will be cut off.”
Most of Khamenei’s rhetoric was not new. But the timing and setting of his speech ratcheted up a standoff that, some analysts say, has the potential to spark military action that would disrupt the international coalition that has emerged to confront Iran over its nuclear program and jeopardize oil markets and fragile world economies.
Khamenei’s statements could poison the atmosphere ahead of upcoming nuclear talks between Iran and world powers. His speech illustrated his conviction that Iran is the flagbearer in battles against the “arrogant powers,” a term used in Iranian political discourse to describe the United States and its allies.
Khamenei said Israel has become “weakened and isolated” in the Middle East due to the revolutions — he called them “Islamic awakenings” — that have spread through the region.
He suggested that Iran’s support for the Palestinian militant group Hamas and Lebanon’s Hezbollah helped lead to victory in their battles with “the Zionist state,” as Israel is officially called here.
“We got involved in the anti-Israeli issues, which resulted in the victory in the 33-day and 22-day wars,” Khamenei said, referring to Israel’s 2006 war with Lebanon and its incursion into Gaza Strip in late 2008.
Khamenei’s speech came hours after Iran’s state-run media reported that the country had launched a small satellite into space, carried by a homemade rocket.
The launch, which had been planned and announced months ago, is part of a series of festivities celebrating the 33rd anniversary of Iran’s Islamic Revolution, which culminated in the collapse of the monarchy on Feb. 11, 1979.
State-run television reported that the satellite Navid Elm o Sanat (“Good message of science and industry”) carries camera and telecommunication devices and was designed and produced inside Iran.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad joined the launch remotely via video conference and said he was hopeful the launch “will send a signal of more friendship among all human beings,” wire services reported.
Iran’s space program is controversial, as Western nations fear the rockets can be used for regional attacks and — if the country were to produce a nuclear weapon — be fitted with a nuclear warhead. Iran had repeatedly stated that its missile program is for defensive purposes only.
The Navid microsatellite, which weighs 110 pounds, will orbit the earth at an altitude of up to 234 miles, the Associated Press reported, citing the Islamic Republic News Agency.
Navid is the third small indigenously built satellite Iran has launched during the past few years and the first of three to be launched in early 2012. Iran launched Omid in 2009 and Rasad in 2011. Both lasted less than three months in space. Iran’s first satellite, Sina-1, was built and launched by Russia in 2005.
The country’s space agency and defense ministry are jointly planning to set up a launch site in the southeastern region of the country, Iranian officials have said.

segunda-feira, 26 de dezembro de 2011

Lei das consequencias involuntarias...

Tem gente que detesta que eu coloque notícias desabonadoras do ponto de vista dos responsáveis políticos, sobretudo quando o foco das más notícias se situa mesmo nos últimos anos. 
Mas, como já disse alguém, fatos são fatos, por mais que não se goste deles.
E o fato é que houve um progresso fantástico da criminalidade no Brasil. 
E a mais danosa para a nacionalidade, para a cidadania, se refere mesmo à criminalidade de alto coturno, aquela que se situa nas altas esferas do poder, e que envolvem gatunos profissionais, alguns até homenageados por certo partido, que não se dá conta que o gatuno em questão se utiliza dos aparelhos partidários para enriquecer, continuando a corromper com cobertura política, entronizando a imoralidade como prática normal.
Pois é, tem gente que acha a corrupção uma coisa normal, assim tão bem distribuída entre todos que se torna algo aceitável... Eu não acho e acredito que a maioria dos meus leitores tampouco.
Só os patrulheiros a soldo, os mercenários partidários, os adesistas profissionais, ou os muito ingênuos a ponto de serem estúpidos é que aceitam esse tipo de tese podre...
Para desespero desses coniventes e tolerantes com a corrupção, a criminalidade diminuiu justamente ali onde ele não PODERIA diminuir, e aumentou lá onde eles não gostariam que ela aumentasse. Tristes fatos, não é?
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 



Brasil ha registrado más de un millón de homicidios en los últimos 30 años

El País, 15/12/2011.
Cadáver en el Complejo do Alemao, en Río de Janeiro. / EFE
Podría apellidarse “la guerra de Brasil”. Los números son estremecedores. En los últimos 30 años, los índices de violencia en el país han aumentado de 11,7 asesinatos por cada 100.000 habitantes a 26,2. En total, las muertes violentas en el país fueron 1.100.000, con una media de 137 por día y cuatro por hora. Salvo en São Paulo, Río de Janeiro y Santa Catarina, en casi todos los demás Estados del país, el índice de asesinatos ha ido creciendo año por año en los tres últimos decenios. Según Julio Jacobo Waiselfisz, responsable de la mayor investigación sobre la violencia brasileña registrada hasta hoy y llevada a cabo por el Instituto Sangari de São Paulo, por lo menos en 67 municipios con población superior a 10.000 habitantes se han registrado proporcionalmente más homicidios entre 2008 y 2010 que en todo el conflicto de Irak.
El Instituto Sangari ha utilizado para esta investigación cifras del Ministerio de Sanidad. “A pesar de no registrar conflictos étnicos, religiosos o políticos, la violencia homicida en Brasil es una de las mayores del mundo”, afirma Weilsfisz. El estudio revela datos interesantes y sorprendentes. Por ejemplo, los dos mayores Estados del país, como São Paulo y Río de Janeiro han sido los únicos que han registrado una disminución drástica de la violencia, mientras que las ciudades y municipios menores, sobre todo del noreste de Brasil, como los Estados de Bahía o Pará, han sido los que más asesinatos han sufrido. Por otro lado, los Estados pobres del noreste, que han recibido durante estos 10 últimos años las mayores inversiones económicas y donde se han volcado las políticas sociales, han sido los más golpeados por la violencia.
Mientras en São Paulo, en efecto, el número de homicidios por cada 100.000 habitantes ha descendido de 42,2 a 13,9, y en Río de Janeiro, de 51 a 26,2, en el noreste, el crecimiento ha sido astronómico. En Bahía, el aumento del índice de homicidios ha crecido un 303% y en Pará, el crecimiento ha sido de 252%. Los responsables del estudio apuntan tres posibles motivos para explicar la disminución de los homicidios en São Paulo y Río: las campañas de desarme de la población que llevó a entregar voluntariamente cientos de miles de armas; las inversiones en seguridad pública y las políticas estatales contra la violencia.
Según explica José María Nóbrega, catedrático de la Universidad Federal de Campo Grande y autor de Los homicidios en el noreste brasileño, el aumento de la criminalidad en esta región, pese a su avance en desarrollo, se debe precisamente al crecimiento económico. La mayor riqueza, según Nóbrega, ha atraído a la criminalidad organizada al aumentar el consumo de drogas pesadas. Al mismo tiempo, las políticas duras de represión en las grandes ciudades como São Paulo y Río, han hecho que muchos narcotraficantes hayan emigrado.
Por último, el informe pone de relieve el descuido de los políticos locales en los territorios más pobres del país en promover campañas eficientes contra el aumento de la violencia.
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domingo, 28 de fevereiro de 2010

1726) Assassinatos políticos: uma arte pouco fina...

Um leitor deste blog escreveu-me a propósito deste post:

sábado, 27 de fevereiro de 2010
1724) Maquiavel sempre atual: da tradicional arte do assassinato politico


Ele escreveu-me o seguinte:
"Prezado PRA,
Interessantíssimo artigo do George Friedman. A STRATFOR tem análises realmente muito boas. Mas faltou talvez seu comentário aprofundado sobre a questão do assassinato político. Você concorda com o autor?"

Sem tempo para elaborar a respeito, respondi o que segue:
Democracias não assassinam líderes políticos de outros países, mesmo achando que eles são detestáveis ou perversos, seja para si mesmas, seja para o próprio povo daqueles países.
A menos de uma situação de guerra declarada, o assassinato político não é um instrumento aceitável.
Diferente é a situação de entidades não estatais que já se engajaram em atividades clandestinas contra uma democracia qualquer. Acredito que neste caso, como medida de autodefesa, essas democracias têm o direito, e provavelmente o dever (isto é, proteger o seu próprio povo de ataques terroristas com armas de destruição em massa, por exemplo) de atacar não apenas os operativos (que são substituíveis), mas também os líderes políticos por trás dessas ações, mesmo antecipadamente.
Situações de guerra desse tipo são muito difusas, e acredito que não vale a pena esperar pelo pior.
Portanto, eu me pronuncio claramente pelo assassinato político nessas circunstâncias, posto que o "assassinato" nada mais é do que uma medida legítima de autodefesa.
Eliminar Bin Laden pode não afastar todas as ameaças terroristas contra os EUA e a Europa, mas certamente vai eliminar uma das fontes de ataques.
Não tenho nenhuma dúvida de que esses terroristas e seus líderes não hesitariam e não hesitarão um só segundo, se puderem lançar um ataque devastador -- por meios biológicos, radiológicos ou químicos -- contra as democracias ocidentais.
É direito delas afastar esse tipo de ameaça, eliminando essas pessoas que estão engajadas nessa guerra.
São as leis da guerra, desde Sun Tzu, aliás...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida