Preamble
There has been too much misunderstanding in debates regarding the Syrian crisis. We need to understand what we're actually discussing, not argue in circles. If you don't believe the US intel is true, then I'm wasting my time, and potentially even insulting you, if I try to explain the importance of saving lives because I believe the intel to be true. You already get that, we agree on saving lives, so we actually need to debate the veracity of the intel. Or perhaps we both agree on the intel, but you don't believe intervention will save lives, whereas I do.
This should help direct the discussion in a much better way.
Poll
The concept of the poll is to choose any and every option that on its own removes the justification or validity for intervention (i.e. a deal-breaker). That does mean you have to imagine a magical land where all the other issues are already resolved. Obviously that's a bit hard to imagine when put in perspective, but we can do our best regardless so that we can figure out what's important.
For our purposes, intervention is defined to be a no-fly zone against the Asaad regime specifically. It can include ground invasion as well, but I feel just no-fly zone would simplify things somewhat.
Example 1 - "The US has no intention to intervene for humanitarian reasons (i.e. strategic interests)"
We live in a magical land where we know for certainty that Asaad did order that chemical attack, intervention will actually save lives, and the UN is with us. However, we also know that the United States government is only interested in intervening in Syria because of some strategic interest. Is this a deal-breaker? Should we not invade then?
How it helps debates
If it's not a deal-breaker, then whenever you bring up the idea that "US only cares about its strategic interest", explain the implication that "therefore, it is unlikely that lives will be saved, and because lives will not be saved, I am opposed to the intervention". It's not the US intention that bothers you, it's the result of that lack of intention, it's the civilian lives. (Although the US intention is also worrisome)
Example 2 - "There exist uncertainties in the outcomes"
We know the Asaad regime used chemical weapons. We know intervention will save lives. So and so forth. But we can't know for sure. We have a high degree of confidence that the intervention will on an overall basis save lives. But we can't be certain of any of these. Sure, the intel is "high confidence", but that doesn't guarantee it to be true. Our military commanders might have done calculations that more lives will be saved, but those calculations may be incorrect, or it could just not turn out that way. Is this a deal-breaker?
How it helps debates
If it's not a deal-breaker, then you don't need to say "yeah, but we don't know for sure that more lives won't be lost" or anything of that sort. It's not the uncertainty that bothers you, that's fine. It's that you feel that the likelihood of actually saving lives is pretty low. That is, you only care about lives being saved, and based on your assessment, that won't happen. That's why you're opposed.
Example 3 - "Intervention will result in the loss of American lives"
Again we live in a magical land where we know Asaad used chemical weapons, we know intervention will save lives, and everyone's with us. But they expect us to do the heavy lifting. We have to send our own sons and daughters to fight a war that they have no business getting involved in. None of our assets have been threatened. Is this a deal-breaker?
How it helps debates
If it is a deal-breaker, then I'd be wasting my time explaining how many lives would be saved if we intervened, or how solid the intel is that Asaad used chemical weapons. I'm better off discussing what the risk is to our American soldiers, and whether the risk truly is worth it.
Example 4 - "Other areas would be better suited for our interventions."
Intervening in Syria will indeed save lives, yadda yadda yadda. But it wouldn't be the best use of our resources and political efforts - i.e. it would be easier to drum up support and perhaps even save more lives by intervening somewhere else. Should we not intervene in Syria then?
How it helps debates
The concept behind this is that I am making the assertion "based on the lives saved, the resources expended, and the political difficulties of enacting intervention, I think we should proceed with Syria". But you disagree. You're against intervention because there are other places that need our help, not because we shouldn't be helping in the first place.
So we can have a discussion of exactly how much of a political effort and resource expenditure is needed to proceed with an intervention in a few key areas, and how much good would be served for each one, and then debate which one is best. Maybe I think Syria is still best, or maybe you're persuaded me that with the exact efforts we'd put in Syria, we could achieve an even greater good in the Congo.
Discussion
So evidently, we can have a more to-the-point discussion that actually addresses each person's issues. What are your deal-breakers, and why? What things would need to be the exact opposite before you would support an intervention? I could go on forever with these examples and how they impact the debate, but I feel it's better to open it up to the floor at this point.
And yes, I know that it might be that one thing on its own might not be enough, but in conjunction with other issues might be a problem. That's just a limitation we'll have to accept, and hope that this type of poll will help better guide the discussion regardless.
There has been too much misunderstanding in debates regarding the Syrian crisis. We need to understand what we're actually discussing, not argue in circles. If you don't believe the US intel is true, then I'm wasting my time, and potentially even insulting you, if I try to explain the importance of saving lives because I believe the intel to be true. You already get that, we agree on saving lives, so we actually need to debate the veracity of the intel. Or perhaps we both agree on the intel, but you don't believe intervention will save lives, whereas I do.
This should help direct the discussion in a much better way.
Poll
The concept of the poll is to choose any and every option that on its own removes the justification or validity for intervention (i.e. a deal-breaker). That does mean you have to imagine a magical land where all the other issues are already resolved. Obviously that's a bit hard to imagine when put in perspective, but we can do our best regardless so that we can figure out what's important.
For our purposes, intervention is defined to be a no-fly zone against the Asaad regime specifically. It can include ground invasion as well, but I feel just no-fly zone would simplify things somewhat.
Example 1 - "The US has no intention to intervene for humanitarian reasons (i.e. strategic interests)"
We live in a magical land where we know for certainty that Asaad did order that chemical attack, intervention will actually save lives, and the UN is with us. However, we also know that the United States government is only interested in intervening in Syria because of some strategic interest. Is this a deal-breaker? Should we not invade then?
How it helps debates
If it's not a deal-breaker, then whenever you bring up the idea that "US only cares about its strategic interest", explain the implication that "therefore, it is unlikely that lives will be saved, and because lives will not be saved, I am opposed to the intervention". It's not the US intention that bothers you, it's the result of that lack of intention, it's the civilian lives. (Although the US intention is also worrisome)
Example 2 - "There exist uncertainties in the outcomes"
We know the Asaad regime used chemical weapons. We know intervention will save lives. So and so forth. But we can't know for sure. We have a high degree of confidence that the intervention will on an overall basis save lives. But we can't be certain of any of these. Sure, the intel is "high confidence", but that doesn't guarantee it to be true. Our military commanders might have done calculations that more lives will be saved, but those calculations may be incorrect, or it could just not turn out that way. Is this a deal-breaker?
How it helps debates
If it's not a deal-breaker, then you don't need to say "yeah, but we don't know for sure that more lives won't be lost" or anything of that sort. It's not the uncertainty that bothers you, that's fine. It's that you feel that the likelihood of actually saving lives is pretty low. That is, you only care about lives being saved, and based on your assessment, that won't happen. That's why you're opposed.
Example 3 - "Intervention will result in the loss of American lives"
Again we live in a magical land where we know Asaad used chemical weapons, we know intervention will save lives, and everyone's with us. But they expect us to do the heavy lifting. We have to send our own sons and daughters to fight a war that they have no business getting involved in. None of our assets have been threatened. Is this a deal-breaker?
How it helps debates
If it is a deal-breaker, then I'd be wasting my time explaining how many lives would be saved if we intervened, or how solid the intel is that Asaad used chemical weapons. I'm better off discussing what the risk is to our American soldiers, and whether the risk truly is worth it.
Example 4 - "Other areas would be better suited for our interventions."
Intervening in Syria will indeed save lives, yadda yadda yadda. But it wouldn't be the best use of our resources and political efforts - i.e. it would be easier to drum up support and perhaps even save more lives by intervening somewhere else. Should we not intervene in Syria then?
How it helps debates
The concept behind this is that I am making the assertion "based on the lives saved, the resources expended, and the political difficulties of enacting intervention, I think we should proceed with Syria". But you disagree. You're against intervention because there are other places that need our help, not because we shouldn't be helping in the first place.
So we can have a discussion of exactly how much of a political effort and resource expenditure is needed to proceed with an intervention in a few key areas, and how much good would be served for each one, and then debate which one is best. Maybe I think Syria is still best, or maybe you're persuaded me that with the exact efforts we'd put in Syria, we could achieve an even greater good in the Congo.
Discussion
So evidently, we can have a more to-the-point discussion that actually addresses each person's issues. What are your deal-breakers, and why? What things would need to be the exact opposite before you would support an intervention? I could go on forever with these examples and how they impact the debate, but I feel it's better to open it up to the floor at this point.
And yes, I know that it might be that one thing on its own might not be enough, but in conjunction with other issues might be a problem. That's just a limitation we'll have to accept, and hope that this type of poll will help better guide the discussion regardless.