Lippert attack — condemn violence, note both sides' restraint, connect to democratic expression norms
The 2015 attack on Ambassador Lippert was clearly wrong. No political grievance justifies physical violence, and the attacker's opposition to joint military drills did not make the act defensible. What I found meaningful was how both governments chose restraint afterward — Ambassador Lippert's measured response kept the incident from straining the bilateral relationship further. My view is that political dissent belongs in legal channels: demonstrations, journalism, civic discourse.
When those channels are abandoned for violence, the message is discredited regardless of its original intent. The incident reminded me that democratic societies are tested most by how they respond to provocation — and in this case, restraint was the right answer.