Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Unit 1012 Cover Photo

Thursday, April 24, 2014

TERRORISTS ARE NOT MARTYRS! LET US EXECUTE TERRORISTS TO SAVE LIVES FOR JUSTICE AND PROTECTION!


            On this date, April 24, 1996, The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 were signed into law. Unit 1012 will write a rebuttal essay to Jessica Stern’s article, ‘Execute Terrorists at Our Own Risk’.


Special Prosecutor Ujjwal Nikam holds up a document with a cover of Mohammad Ajmal Kasab at Arthur Road Jail, where Kasab's trial was held, in Mumbai May 6, 2010.
REUTERS/Arko Datta

February 28, 2001
Execute Terrorists at Our Own Risk
NEW YORK TIMES

By JESSICA STERN

OP-ED

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - As a nation, we have decided that terrorism that results in loss of life should face the possibility of the death penalty. But is this wise?

This question is worth asking, now that four men are being tried in New York for their alleged participation in the 1998 bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed 224 people and wounded thousands. Two defendants, Mohamed Rashed Daoud al-'Owhali and Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, who allegedly worked for Osama bin Laden, could face the death penalty if convicted.

Another terrorist, Timothy McVeigh, is scheduled for execution on May 16 for his role in the bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City. Mr. McVeigh has refused to appeal his death sentence, preferring, he now says, to have his execution broadcast live on television. Some of his victims worry that Mr. McVeigh will become a martyr, inciting further violence.

One can argue about the effectiveness of the death penalty generally. But when it comes to terrorism, national security concerns should be paramount. The execution of terrorists, especially minor operatives, has effects that go beyond retribution or justice. The executions play right into the hands of our adversaries. We turn criminals into martyrs, invite retaliatory strikes and enhance the public relations and fund-raising strategies of our enemies.

Moreover, dead terrorists don't talk, while a live terrorist can become an intelligence asset, doling out much- needed information.

Of course, imprisoning, rather than executing, terrorists is not risk-free. Supporters could try to kidnap Americans, and refuse to release them until their colleagues are released. Still, other countries with far more experience in counterterrorism have concluded that imprisoning terrorists is the better option in the long run.

For instance, the United Kingdom in 1973 debated whether to repeal the death penalty in Northern Ireland. By a margin of nearly three to one, the House of Commons decided that executing terrorists, whose goal is often to martyr themselves, only increased violence and put soldiers and police at greater risk. In a highly charged political situation, it was argued, the threat of death does not deter terrorism. On the contrary, executing terrorists, the House of Commons decided, has the opposite effect: It increases the incidence of terrorism.

The Israeli government unwisely creates martyrs with what it calls preventive attacks, in which military or intelligence operatives kill those suspected of terrorism. By contrast, judges in Israel have never sentenced terrorists to death; capital punishment would be dangerous and counterproductive.

Terrorism's greatest weapon is popular support. We've already seen this dynamic at work. After Mr. bin Laden's 1998 embassy bombings, the United States retaliated by striking a purported chemical weapons facility in Sudan and a few crude camps in Afghanistan. The result? In the extremist religious schools I visited in Pakistan after the attack, Mr. bin Laden had become a hero. Parents named their children after him. Schools and businesses were renamed in his honor.

Does anyone believe that executing his minions will deter Mr. bin Laden from future terrorist attacks? The opposite is far more likely: the United States could become more frequently targeted.

Our most powerful weapon against terrorists is our commitment to the rule of law. We must use the courts to make clear that terrorism is a criminal act, not jihad, not heroism, not holy war. And then, we must not make martyrs out of murderers.

Jessica Stern, a lecturer at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, served on the National Security Council from 1994 to 1995.


            This article was written on February 28, 2001, before the September 11 Attacks that year.

As a nation, we have decided that terrorism that results in loss of life should face the possibility of the death penalty. But is this wise?

This question is worth asking, now that four men are being tried in New York for their alleged participation in the 1998 bombings of American embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, which killed 224 people and wounded thousands. Two defendants, Mohamed Rashed Daoud al-'Owhali and Khalfan Khamis Mohamed, who allegedly worked for Osama bin Laden, could face the death penalty if convicted.

Another terrorist, Timothy McVeigh, is scheduled for execution on May 16 for his role in the bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City. Mr. McVeigh has refused to appeal his death sentence, preferring, he now says, to have his execution broadcast live on television. Some of his victims worry that Mr. McVeigh will become a martyr, inciting further violence.

REBUTTAL: Of course, it is a wise thing to do. No executed or dead terrorists had ever came back to reoffend again. There is no way Timothy McVeigh will be a martyr, he is a mass murderer and an evil person! The vast majority of Americans want him dead. He is now dead with the THE EIGHT EXECUTED TERRORISTS’!

One can argue about the effectiveness of the death penalty generally. But when it comes to terrorism, national security concerns should be paramount. The execution of terrorists, especially minor operatives, has effects that go beyond retribution or justice. The executions play right into the hands of our adversaries. We turn criminals into martyrs, invite retaliatory strikes and enhance the public relations and fund-raising strategies of our enemies.

REBUTTAL: We, the comrades of Unit 1012, never view terrorists as martyrs. Letting them live will cost more innocent lives. To let those terrorists keep their lives, is equivalent to letting foreign invaders invade our country without declaring a defensive war. Was the D.C Sniper, John Allen Muhammad made a martyr? No way, he was executed 7 years after the murders he committed.


As one of our Seven Good Judges, Sir James Fitzjames Stephen:

“There is as much moral cowardice in shrinking from the execution of a murderer as there is in hesitating to blow out the brains of a foreign invader.”


The murdered victims, war heroes and Christian Martyrs are the types of people we, the comrades of Unit 1012, turn into martyrs. We do not agree with the ACLU types who made criminals martyrs.

Bishop Gorazd of Prague, given name Matěj Pavlík (May 26, 1879 – September 4, 1942), was the hierarch of the revived Orthodox Church in Moravia, the Church of Czechoslovakia, after World War I. During World War II, having provided refuge for the assassins of SS-Obergruppenfuhrer Reinhard Heydrich, called The Hangman of Prague, in the cathedral of Saints Cyril and Methodius in Prague, Gorazd took full responsibility for protecting the patriots after the Schutzstaffel found them in the crypt of the cathedral. This act guaranteed his execution, thus his martyrdom, during the reprisals that followed. His feast day is celebrated on August 22 (OC) or September 4 (NC).

 

Bishop Gorazd of Prague
Bishop Gorazd is a GREAT EXAMPLE of one that is a true martyr who saved lives and sacrificed himself for his countrymen. It is more worthwhile remembering people like him than Dead Terrorists.

Moreover, dead terrorists don't talk, while a live terrorist can become an intelligence asset, doling out much- needed information.

REBUTTAL: What a great excuse to keep terrorists alive! The intelligence can interrogate them before the courts sentence them to death, no use keeping them alive.

Of course, imprisoning, rather than executing, terrorists is not risk-free. Supporters could try to kidnap Americans, and refuse to release them until their colleagues are released. Still, other countries with far more experience in counterterrorism have concluded that imprisoning terrorists is the better option in the long run.

For instance, the United Kingdom in 1973 debated whether to repeal the death penalty in Northern Ireland. By a margin of nearly three to one, the House of Commons decided that executing terrorists, whose goal is often to martyr themselves, only increased violence and put soldiers and police at greater risk. In a highly charged political situation, it was argued, the threat of death does not deter terrorism. On the contrary, executing terrorists, the House of Commons decided, has the opposite effect: It increases the incidence of terrorism.

REBUTTAL: If you learn about Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi the Jordanian Terrorist, who was responsible for executing foreign hostages, he was killed in a targeted killing by bombing from the Air Force. After his death, there were no more hostages taking, before he was no longer alive to command or perform any more hostage executions.

Abu Musab al-Zarqawi


American hostage Nick Berg seated, with five men standing over him. The man directly behind him, alleged to be Zarqawi, is the one who beheaded Berg.
Before the death penalty was abolished in the United Kingdom, the IRA was not so active but they became even more vicious when the ultimate punishment was ended in the 1960s. One of the reasons was because of the Joint Enterprise Law, where the law finds all guilty of murder even if one of the gang members committed homicide. This law made it harder for terrorism, as they all knew that they will go to the gallows one by one.

The Israeli government unwisely creates martyrs with what it calls preventive attacks, in which military or intelligence operatives kill those suspected of terrorism. By contrast, judges in Israel have never sentenced terrorists to death; capital punishment would be dangerous and counterproductive.

REBUTTAL: Do not forget that Adolf Eichmann the Exterminator who caused the death of millions of Jews during World War II, was the last man sentenced to death and executed in Israel on May 31, 1962. Nobody treated or honored him as a martyr. Unit 1012, demands Justice and Protection. 


Many Israelis want to bring the death penalty back to their country to execute terrorists. Please remember the Fogel Family murdered on March 11, 2011.


Terrorism's greatest weapon is popular support. We've already seen this dynamic at work. After Mr. bin Laden's 1998 embassy bombings, the United States retaliated by striking a purported chemical weapons facility in Sudan and a few crude camps in Afghanistan. The result? In the extremist religious schools I visited in Pakistan after the attack, Mr. bin Laden had become a hero. Parents named their children after him. Schools and businesses were renamed in his honor.

REBUTTAL: Even if the US does not do anything to retaliate, Osama Bin Laden would have been made a martyr, in the eyes of his people. Osama Bin Laden has long since been dead after being assassinated by the SEAL Team Six on May 2, 2011. Many Americans celebrated in the street that an evil man was terminated.  

Americans celebrating after the death of Osama bin Laden in front of The White House.
Does anyone believe that executing his minions will deter Mr. bin Laden from future terrorist attacks? The opposite is far more likely: the United States could become more frequently targeted.

Our most powerful weapon against terrorists is our commitment to the rule of law. We must use the courts to make clear that terrorism is a criminal act, not jihad, not heroism, not holy war. And then, we must not make martyrs out of murderers.

REBUTTAL: We agree with one point here, crimes of passion and terrorism are crimes that are extremely hard to deter. That is why we, the comrades of Unit 1012, supports the death penalty for justice and protection, deterrence is our last reason for being Pro-Death Penalty. Immanuel Kant and Saint Thomas Aquinas will explain why for justice and protection:






"Our most powerful weapon against terrorists is our commitment to the rule of law. We must use the courts to make clear that terrorism is a criminal act, not jihad, not heroism, not holy war. And then, we must not make martyrs out of murderers."

Of course, the death penalty is the rule of law and it makes clear that terrorism is a criminal act. Keeping them alive in prison is a mockery of justice.

These three examples will teach us why:

In 2005, Germany freed Mohammed Ali Hamadi after the terrorist had served 18 years for murdering Navy diver Robert Dean Stethem. Press reports said that "a life sentence in Germany ranges between 20 and 25 years, with the possibility of parole after 15 years." [Do We Need the Death Penalty? Yes, It's Ethical and Effective Sunday, April 29, 2007 by Eric L. Rozenman]


Salute: For the second day in a row, killer Breivik clenched his his fist in front of him as he entered the Oslo courtroom (SOURCE: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2130881/Anders-Behring-Breivik-trial-Norway-killer-boasts-spectacular-attack-Europe-WWII.html)
On this date, 22 July 2011, a Lone Wolf Terrorist, Anders Behring Breivik, committed a mass murder claiming 77 lives in Oslo, Norway. Showing this terrorist to any abolitionists will keep them silent for sure. He would only be given 20 years imprisonment in a ‘Five Star Hotel’, 20 years later, he will re-offend for sure, causing more innocent lives. We wish he was an addition to The Eight Executed Terrorists.

Bali bombing mastermind Umar Patek of Indonesia attends a police reconstruction at the crime scene in Jakarta on November 2, 2011. Patek, a suspected member of the Al-Qaida-linked Southeast Asian terror network Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), has been cooperating with police interrogators since his extradition from Pakistan, where he was arrested in January in the town where Osama bin Laden was subsequently killed by US commandos. While on the run Patek was one of Asia's most wanted terror suspects and had a 1 million USD bounty on his head under the US rewards for justice programme. AFP PHOTO / ADEK BERRY
On this date, 21 June 2012, an Indonesian court sentenced Umar Patek to 20 years in jail for murder and bomb-making. He was found guilty of all six charges, which included involvement in attacks against churches on Christmas Eve 2000. Prosecutors did not seek the death penalty. During the trial Patek apologized to families of victims and maintained that he did nothing more than mix chemicals for the explosives.
            The Smiling Assassin, Amrozi, who was involved in the 2002 Bali Bombings, did not die a martyr but a coward when he faced the firing squad.

Amrozi the Smiling Assassin being escorted by police officers.
 As Professor Steven Plaut was quoted in his article on 22 July 2004, Judaism's Pro-Death Penalty Tradition: Actually, the death penalty should be implemented against terrorists even if it doesn’t deter terrorism. It should be implemented because it represents a great moral statement. It is the moral and ethical thing to do. Executing terrorists makes a statement that they are scum with no claim a right to life. Capital punishment represents a moral and just vengeance. It represents a declaration of good and evil.”

Please learn about the THE LEGION OF DOOM: THE 13 DEAD TERRORISTS’. These terrorists were either executed or killed in military action, no good citizens will honor them as martyrs, we want them permanently terminated from society.

Even people from countries like India, will burnt the photos and effigies of executed terrorists to mean business that they do not want terrorists to be martyrs but scums!


Relatives of victims of the July 26, 2008 bomb blasts in Ahmedabad burn a picture of Ajmal Amir Kasab during a demonstration welcoming his death sentence.


Relatives of victims of the July 26, 2008 bomb blasts in Ahmedabad burn a picture of Ajmal Amir Kasab during a demonstration welcoming his death sentence.
  

People hold a placard and pictures of Mohammad Ajmal Kasab, as they celebrate in Ahmedabad November 21, 2012.
REUTERS/Amit Dave  


Bajrang Dal activists burn portraits of Kashmiri Mohammed Afzal Guru as they celebrate his execution in New Delhi. |AP (PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.newindianexpress.com/photos/nation/article1457835.ece#)




All India Anti Terrorist Front activists shout slogans as they celebrate the execution of Mohammed Afzal Guru. Fire works were also set off in the busiest intersection. (PHOTO SOURCE: http://www.demotix.com/news/1782361/anti-terrorist-front-celebrates-afzal-gurus-execution-amritsar/all-media)


No comments:

Post a Comment