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terrorists

Eye in the Sky – Ethical Dilemmas in Modern Warfare

?What you witnessed today with your coffee and biscuits was terrible. . ..?

Now that drones are an important part of warfare, does it make war a little more sterile? Is it just a video game with actual explosions and real blood? Is it too easy to set aside the morality involved in waging war when it is done from the safety of somewhere half a world away? In Eye in the Sky, we watch in near real time as what was a simple military mission moves to new levels and decisions must be made rapidly that could have serious consequences.

 Credit: Keith Bernstein / Bleecker Street
Credit: Keith Bernstein / Bleecker Street

Col. Katherine Powell (Helen Mirren) heads a mission to capture a British subject who is part of a terrorist plot in Kenya. From her bunker in London, she monitors video from an American drone piloted by Lt. Steve Watts (Aaron Paul) and A1C Carrie Gershon on her first day in the job. The plan is to make sure all the terrorists involved are in a house together and then send the Kenya military to arrest them. But when the meeting moves to an armed area, the capture can?t happen. When it is discovered that there are two suicide bombers being prepared in the house, the mission begins to creep into more deadly options. Meanwhile, General Frank Benson (Alan Rickman) is briefing a group of cabinet officials about the mission. As the mission changes, they are called on to expand the rules of engagement. When a girl selling bread sets up her table within the blast area of a possible missile attack, the question of collateral damage becomes a personal issue.

Because this involves different governments and nations, the responsibilities are never clearly marked. Often those who must make decisions want to ?refer up? to higher levels. But because the suicide bomber could leave at any time, there is little time to debate what is legal or moral. While the Christian Just War Theory is never explicitly brought up in the film, many of the issues in the film touch on the way society has come to judge the morality of war in a world of global terrorism.

EYE IN THE SKY

We watch all this, as do the people involved from a distance looking at the screens that they see. It is tempting to think that they are doing something very similar to what we do?look at a screen as something not quite real. But the little girl selling bread?an innocent bystander who we see clearly and understand the danger she faces?becomes a symbol for all the questions that war by drone brings up.

I have long been a fan of director Gavin Hood because of his ability to show moral ambiguity. (For example, see his earlier films Tsotsi or A Reasonable Man?or even X-Men Origins: Wolverine.) This is a film that creates a situation that morality must be judged within an ever changing situation. Is it just a numbers game? Does the possibility of killing a young girl outweigh the possibility of suicide bombers in a shopping mall? While for some of those involved (especially the politicians) this is something of a theoretical exercise, the closer one is to actually having to act (such as Lt. Watts and Airman Gershon) it becomes a very existential event. It will challenge who they understand themselves to be. It will be something that they will have to live with the consequences whatever they will be. Actually, it is something that all those involved hold responsibility for.

The film doesn?t expect us to judge for certain if what happens was the right thing to do. There are too many variables that come into play. Rather, in the end we are left wondering if the right choices were made at various points along the way. Does the debate over what should or shouldn?t be done actually make things worse? Is there a way to judge an ?acceptable? level of collateral damage? (The American government officials in the film seem to think so.) Should we mourn the loss of life that seems inevitable? Do we expect or want the military people involved to feel sorrow over this, or should they be hard hearted and stoic? Perhaps what I appreciate most about Eye in the Sky is that it is not a film that gives us answers, but gives us many worthwhile questions to ponder.

Photos courtesy of Bleeker Street

TV Screened: Quantico (1.1) – Who Are You… Really?

quantico

In the latest mysterious television show from ABC–which is shockingly?not?produced, directed, or written by Shonda Rhimes–a new class of recruits arrives at the famed FBI training ground, Quantico. Several months later, New York City’s Grand Central Station lies in ruins and recruit Alex Parrish (Priyanka Chopra) wakes up amidst them, completely unaware of how she got there. Taken into custody, Parrish is cross-examined about her classmates, but it’s clear that her interrogator believes she was responsible for the explosion.

While it’s unclear who exactly we’re rooting for – except for Parrish (I think?) – it’s very obvious that none of our newbie agents is completely truthful about why they are there. Parrish lies about how her father died and we find out why she was motivated to deceive her mother and join the federal agents. One of her peers will commit suicide by the end of the pilot episode; another fakes a gay relationship to build a back story; a third is actually both the third and fourth agents because Yasmine al Masri is playing?twins. Back stories? Everyone has more than one.

While we’re completely in the dark about who people really are, it’s clear that one of the greatest attacks on American soil is the predominant driving tension in the show. Who did it? Why did it happen? What was the motivation? This is the current realistic reality of our country, and?Quantico?is counting on our fear and uncertainty.

While the overarching mythos will be unpacking that bombing attack, I’m always most fascinated by people who are trying to figure out their identity. Is Parrish a reliable narrator? Can we trust that?she is a good guy? Why does she play centrally in the investigation?

It appears that to get to the bottom of the conspiracy, Parrish will have to figure out who she is and remember what happened on the days leading up to the attack. Either way, the show’s creators have guaranteed that I’ll be watching.

Quantico airs at 10 p.m. on Sunday nights on ABC.

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