Seismosaurus said:
No, actually I'm not.
Nor am I saying that we should do that kind of thing. I'm speculating that we might end up doing something like it eventually. It's not so farfetched that the western democracies might target civilians en masse, even with nuclear weapons - after all, it's nothing we haven't done before.
This is exactly the kind of war that is being waged against us - no rules and maximum carnage directed against the most innocent. My point is that the terrorists should be careful in going down this road, because we can do it too, and do it far bigger and nastier than they can. The terrorists rely on our own sense of morality to protect them and theirs from such retaliation; but I suspect our morality will only go so far.
Oh, ok. As long as you're not endorsing it.
However... I don't think the terrorists have much to worry about on this score. The international and political ramifications of conducting a nuclear attack against terrorist organizations would preclude any sane government from executing it.
[/get on soapbox]
Terrorist organizations are generally not centralized, and have a highly resilient cell-based structure; If you don't mind me using the much-dreaded and often-used tool of analogy, I'd compare them to an mestasisized cancer, spread throughout someone's body. (The body being the world.)
Any of the cancer cell clusters is capable of spreading itself all over again... so you have to kill them all to survive. When cancer is so widespread, irradiating all the areas of the body where the cells are found (the
known cells, that is) isn't a good answer. (The nuclear solution.) In fact, that's likely to kill the patient due to the kind of damage caused... plus irradiating numerous portions of the body on that kind of scale may even generate new cancers while killing off the old.
Instead, the cancerous clusters have to be identified and eradicated individually, one organ (government) at a time. And if a particular organ encourages or invites the growth of cancer, it needs to be removed. (Such as the Taliban.)
Now, granted - we don't have to operate in a linear fashion. More than one cluster can be dealt with at a time. But the point is that the effort must be highly specific; you can't just drop a bomb on a city of tens of thousands, or a town of thousands - or even a village of hundreds - just to kill off a handful of terrorists.
In my analogy, I suggested that massive irradiation to kill the cancer cells might actually backfire - similarly, using nukes would probably swell the ranks of the terrorists and even create new terrorist organizations.
[/slip and fall off soapbox]
While I'm at it, I've been meaning to post my sorrow and support for my cousin's in the UK over this horrible and utterly despicable attack on innocent civilians. It's an outrage, and I hope that all the victims involved can recover their lives as best as possible.
I also I hope that the animals involved in doing this are kicked out of the gene pool (as painfully as possible) before they have a chance to pollute it any more than they've already done.