Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 The terrorism–torture link: when evil begets evil
- 2 Torture, terrorism, and the moral prohibition on killing non-combatants
- 3 The equivalent logic of torture and terrorism: the legal regulation of moral monstrosity
- 4 War versus criminal justice in response to terrorism: the losing logic of torture
- 5 Reducing the opportunities for terrorism: applying the principles of situational crime prevention
- 6 From the terrorists' point of view: toward a better understanding of the staircase to terrorism
- 7 If they're not crazy, then what? The implications of social psychological approaches to terrorism for conflict management
- 8 The cycle of righteous destruction: a Terror Management Theory perspective on terrorist and counter-terrorist violence
- 9 Misinformation and the “War on Terror”: when memory turns fiction into fact
- 10 Icons of fear: terrorism, torture, and the media
- 11 What explains torture coverage during war-time? A search for realistic answers
- 12 Reversed negatives: how the news media respond to “our” atrocities
- 13 Terrorism and TV news coverage of the 2001 Australian election
- 14 Terrorism, anxiety, and war
- 15 I'm right, you're dead: speculations about the roots of fanaticism
- 16 Reducing terrorist risk: integrating jurisdictional and opportunity approaches
- Index
- References
12 - Reversed negatives: how the news media respond to “our” atrocities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 The terrorism–torture link: when evil begets evil
- 2 Torture, terrorism, and the moral prohibition on killing non-combatants
- 3 The equivalent logic of torture and terrorism: the legal regulation of moral monstrosity
- 4 War versus criminal justice in response to terrorism: the losing logic of torture
- 5 Reducing the opportunities for terrorism: applying the principles of situational crime prevention
- 6 From the terrorists' point of view: toward a better understanding of the staircase to terrorism
- 7 If they're not crazy, then what? The implications of social psychological approaches to terrorism for conflict management
- 8 The cycle of righteous destruction: a Terror Management Theory perspective on terrorist and counter-terrorist violence
- 9 Misinformation and the “War on Terror”: when memory turns fiction into fact
- 10 Icons of fear: terrorism, torture, and the media
- 11 What explains torture coverage during war-time? A search for realistic answers
- 12 Reversed negatives: how the news media respond to “our” atrocities
- 13 Terrorism and TV news coverage of the 2001 Australian election
- 14 Terrorism, anxiety, and war
- 15 I'm right, you're dead: speculations about the roots of fanaticism
- 16 Reducing terrorist risk: integrating jurisdictional and opportunity approaches
- Index
- References
Summary
“It never happened and besides they deserved it.” The title of Edward Opton's (1971) article on responses to the My Lai massacre succinctly captures the acute psychological discomfort that his respondents felt when presented with graphic evidence of the atrocities US soldiers had committed in that unfortunate Vietnamese village. Their simultaneous desire both to deny and justify what their own countrymen had done has no cognitive logic but does have an emotional constancy – the reluctance to believe that their own troops had committed such terrible acts.
War – despite the manifest immoralities it typically brings – is a moral commitment, and evidence of immorality by one's own side undermines that commitment. Public support for war is usually premised on the idea that the threat is so terrible and so imminent that waging war is a lesser evil than letting the enemy triumph, that the current loss of life will prevent larger tragedies later (see Bellamy, this volume, about a related point concerning torture). And yet, as the responses to My Lai show, this moral calculus does not rest on a dispassionate dissection of evidence. So we need to probe the dynamics of the emotions and perceptions that accompany the moral decision making.
The fusion of affective and cognitive dynamics in the support for war was insightfully explored in the work of a pioneering psychologist in this area, Ralph K. White.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Terrorism and TortureAn Interdisciplinary Perspective, pp. 246 - 264Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
References
- 1
- Cited by