Shocking video alleges atrocity in Syria
This is from a video that
is circulating on the Internet. The appalling footage has all the world
asking: What kind of people could do this?
We tell ourselves these
men must be monsters, people utterly unlike us, people we could never
understand. But we don't say this because it is true. We say this
because it is comforting to think so. The far more frightening
possibility we must face is that such evil is not diabolically inhuman
or beyond understanding. It is human -- very human.
James Dawes
How can ordinary men
commit such horrific acts? The war criminals I have met did not start
out by desecrating corpses, torturing villagers or murdering children.
They got there slowly. There are some men who are natural monsters, but
most monsters are made.
This is how you make them.
First, take a man (and
yes, it is most often a man) and isolate him. Separate him from his
family and friends and put him in an information bubble, an echo chamber
cut off from the outside world. Make him conform to the values of his
new group by exploiting his insecurity and need for approval. This is
the first step in any war.
Second, train him to
think that the world is painted in black and white, not shades of gray.
Train him in either-or, binary thinking. Either you are my friend or my
enemy. Either you are pure or impure. Either the people you love are
safe or they are in immediate peril. Either you are all right or you are
all wrong.
Inside Syria's intelligence headquarters
Third, physically exhaust
him. Break down his body and spirit -- through brutal training or
prolonged combat -- until he can't think straight. Subject him to a
system of harsh and arbitrary punishment and equally arbitrary rewards.
Condition him to feel helpless. A man who feels like he has lost control
over his life is a dangerous man, because hurting others feels like
control.
Fourth -- and this is the
most important part -- start small. Work up to atrocity step by step.
Put him into a strange and frightening environment with minimal
regulation. Let the aggression escalate. Each violent act he commits
while trying to survive will make the next act feel easier, more
natural.
The first time he kills a
villager, it is terrifying. The second time, it is hard. The third or
fourth time, it starts to feel almost easy. Eventually, he finds himself
competing with his fellow soldiers to see who can do it fastest, most
often, most creatively.
Watching videos like
this, and thinking thoughts like this, it is easy to lose hope. In war,
are we doomed always to descend into barbarism?
The answer is no. The
nightmare video from Syria is not inevitable. The very same steps used
for creating monsters can also be used to stop monstrosity -- you just
need to reverse the steps. Some people are born moral heroes, but most
are made. And this is how you make them.
First, take a young man
and start small. Work up to altruism and moral courage step by step.
Each small thing he does to attend to the suffering of another or stand
up against injustice will make the next act feel easier, more natural.
Second, give him a clear system of rules with predictable consequences.
Teach him he has the ability to make choices about his life, and that
these choices matter. Third, teach him that the world's problems aren't
as simple as us-versus-them, good-versus-evil. Teach him that there
aren't easy solutions to complex problems. Teach him to tolerate,
without fear and anxiety, life's difficult ambiguity and uncertainty.
And finally -- to those
of you, like me, who are parents of young boys -- teach him to seek out
"the other": Other clubs and groups, other sources of information, other
places to see, other kinds of people, other cultural values. Spoil him
with diversity, so that if there ever comes a time when he is called to
war, he will always remember to see the world through the other's eyes.
He will fight, but he will fight against an enemy that he sees as a
person, like him. He will see their humanity, and in so doing, he will
preserve his own.
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