dainthomas
Lifer
- Dec 7, 2004
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Originally posted by: JeffreyLebowski
No it's not. A prisoner of war is someone that is allied or fighting for a flagged nation. A terrorist/Enemy Combatant is someone that has no recognized nation that they are fighting for. They are fighting for a person or an moral/religious cause.
What if they said they were fighting to liberate Iraq, Afghanistan or wherever? Would that be different than the French resistance fighting Germany?
Here is an interesting link.
The French resistance fighters blew up bridges, derailed trains, directed the British in the bombing of German troop trains, kidnapped and killed German army officers, and ambushed German troops. They took no prisoners, but rather killed any German soldiers who surrendered to them, sometimes mutilating their bodies for good measure. The Nazis referred to them as "terrorists."
It's interesting how we think what's going on now is a "new" kind of war, when this type of stuff has always gone on. I wonder why we have such a problem dealing with it?
