General Schatten wrote:Tiriol wrote:And there is debate from time to time whether those decisions were moral or right. And the closest analogy of the Death Star blowing up Alderaan would be for the United States to exterminate the entire Japanese population and to destroy the nation as a whole by nuking the entire isle chain to the ground.
In order for your analogy to be correct the entirety of Japan's population and industry would have to exist in an underground bunker, invulnerable to any and all conventional attacks.
That is also incorrect: the Clone Wars pitted two major powers, both which had planets with planetary shields against each other, and still worlds were being conquered and besieged. Cato Neimoidia, an important planet for the Trade Federation and Viceroy Gunray in particular, fell to the Republic and I'm pretty sure that a major world like that did have a working planetary shield. The Clone Wars prove that you can conquer worlds without superweapons like the Death Star or even a torpedo sphere, but it takes more time and effort (Pellaeon remarked as much in
The Last Command during the Battle of Ukio).
We KNOW that the Empire is evil from the films themselves: even in ANH they ignore diplomatic immunity (Leia's consular ship),
Would you accept an argument for diplomatic immunity if Bjarne Kallis was caught running plans to a Christian terrorist group to plan an attack on the Finnish Naval Academy?
blow an entire planet with billions living on it (Alderaan)
An entire planet that was acting as a training and supply center for what the Empire felt was a terrorist organization and were protected by heavy defenses that could hold off everything the Empire could throw at it for months or years and even after that's down it's a pretty safe bet Alderaan could have some pretty extensive deep underground bunkers, so even once you get through you need to BDZ the place anyhow.
In case of Kallis, he actually doesn't have a diplomatic immunity when Finnish affairs are concerned; the fact that Princess Leia enjoyed diplomatic immunity is more a concern of the Empire's state of affairs which was still, apparenly, more like a confederation than an US-style government. Violating diplomatic immunity isn't evil, per se, as you noted, but it does show a somewhat cavalier attitude about international (or interstellar) law.
And we only know for certain that the House of Organa was politically involved with the Rebellion along with several invidual Alderaanians (Leia's aide, Winter, for example). And Tycho Celchu was an Imperial pilot loyal to his government, as was his parents and family, and they got blown up along with other Alderaanians. To claim that the entire planet was full of terrorist cells and sympathizers is a pretty big leap of faith.
I'm not arguing that the Rebellion weren't right to fight the Empire or that it was totally cool for the Empire to act like evil dicks, but your analogy is flawed and those three things you wish to condemn them for are hardly without justification. I understand you're trying to use only the movies, but if you really want to show the full malevolence of the Empire don't use a planet that was complicit in terrorist acts and turned itself into a valid target, especially when you have a
perfectly good example of an actually pacifist planet.
Edit: Oh and I forgot to add that you left out torturing a prisoner of war.
We can indeed wage a war of words about justification behind Alderaan's destruction and Vader's callous attitude towards Leia's diplomatic status, so I'm willing to leave it at that, if you so wish. It's more about nit-picking than anything else, really.
bz249 wrote:Tiriol wrote:Just saying "war is hell" doesn't justify anything. In fact, if you tried to use that justification in a trial you would be laughed at and then sentenced for war crimes and left to rot. I could say "war is hell" and rape just about every woman I could set my sights on if there was a war going on, but that would just prove that I am a disgusting piece of human filth that needs something to justify his brutal and sociopathic nature to the rest of the world. "War is hell" is indeed a statement of fact, but just as saying "gravity is a bitch"doesn't justify someone pushing people down the stairs, it also doesn't justify war crimes or crimes against humanity (or against sentience, as they call them in SW universe).
We KNOW that the Empire is evil from the films themselves: even in ANH they ignore diplomatic immunity (Leia's consular ship), kill innocent people (Jawas, the Lars family), blow an entire planet with billions living on it (Alderaan) and generally act like assholes. In later films they decide that this off-hands approach to evil isn't enough so they move to personal evil by strangling people to death or electrocuting and torturing them because they can.
Okay, does raping every women offer a path which shorten the war/grants victory to you? Because in the ROTJ it is stated:
When completed, this ultimate
weapon will spell certain doom
for the small band of rebels
struggling to restore freedom
to the galaxy...
Thus operational Death Star means automatic Imperial victory. The destruction of Alderaan was an attack against a high profile strategic target*, supposedly break the will of the Rebellion and make any further insurgency impossible (indeed the whole second half of Episode IV is about the absolute neccesity to destroy the Death Star). They did it not because they were evil, but because that was the easiest way to achieve victory.
*Dantooine is too remote to make an effective demonstration
I could justify the raping by simply saying it proves to the enemy that unless they surrender, everyone will get the same treatment - basically it's a weapon of terror. Just like the Death Star... Only that the Death Star wipes out its target completely. And guess what? Neither practice - raping everyone with a pulse and a vagina and blowing up planets - accomplished what they tried to do: history has shown that despite armies raping their enemies' womenfolk, the enemies didn't surrender; and the destruction of Alderaan actually galvanized the resistance and convinced many to become Rebels, entire worlds in fact. The importance of the Death Star's destruction is indeed without any doubt, but it still failed to impose Tarkin's doctrine as it was intended.
And guess what? The military doesn't, at least a civilized one, always choose the easiest way. Otherwise there wouldn't be anything left of Iraq, Afghanistan, Korea, Vietnam etc. It's called having some ethics and other considerations aside from totally destroying everything. And judging by their previous actions, the Empire would have used the Death Star again and again even after any actual resistance was gone.
Tiriol wrote:And there is debate from time to time whether those decisions were moral or right. And the closest analogy of the Death Star blowing up Alderaan would be for the United States to exterminate the entire Japanese population and to destroy the nation as a whole by nuking the entire isle chain to the ground.
Nope the closest analogy would be to use nuclear weapons during the invasion of Grenada. Alderaan represented a very tiny fraction of the Galactic population.
Is that all you can say? You try to defend the mass murder of billions by saying that it didn't actually affect THAT many beings on galactic scale. You love your Stalin quotes, don't you?