Paul Mirengoff on the notion, adumbrated in the
Washington Post, that, before retaliating for attacks on U.S. forces by Iranian proxies, the United States “must identify precisely which Iranian proxy launched the deadly drone (that killed three Americans) and determine whether it did so on orders from Tehran”:
The Brooklyn Dodgers had a black pitcher named Joe Black. He debuted in 1952, when black players were still taunted with racial epithets by opposing players.
One day when Black was warming up, some players on the Cincinnati Reds bench serenaded him with a chorus of “Old Black Joe.” Black, who had one of the best fastballs in the game, responded by knocking down all nine Reds starters the first time he faced them.
Asked why he threw at the lineup so indiscriminately, Black responded, “I figured there must be some crooners among them.”. . .
Various militias have been attacking U.S. forces for months. Any of these attacks could have killed Americans.
The standard for striking Iranian backed militias should be a reasonable suspicion that they have attacked our forces. There is no need to “identify precisely” which one sent the deadly drone. Nor is there any need for certainty about who launched previous attacks.
Any Iranian backed militia is an enemy of the U.S. Hit the suspect ones and, to paraphrase Joe Black, there will some attackers of Americans among them.
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