“No sir. I’m sorry we cannot do that. It
would be immoral,” the words hung there in the air, generating a scowl on the
General’s face and a rapid beating of my heart. I’d run into one of the great
challenges of armed conflict; deciding that a plan, though likely to succeed,
was morally unacceptable. In Western thought we bin wars as “Just” or “Un-Just”
based on centuries of thought both secular and theological. Using the term
“just” raises significant challenges for Christian military leaders and planners
as they seek to serve God and the state in desperate circumstances. Commanders
agonize over the words that comprise their orders. Subordinates read orders and
transform print into actions. Actions they undertake in circumstances often
filled with uncertainty, violence and chaos. In moments of intense pressure and
rushing pandemonium subordinate leaders must somehow divine the right decision.
The term “just war,” one chosen to bring
clarity and support for armed conflict developed over centuries with key input
from such luminaries as Thomas Aquinas and Augustine. The combative nature of
monarchs and the chaos released by the darker impulses of soldiers during war
shocked theologians. Thinkers sought to limit bellicose monarchs of the Middle
Ages and keep the carnage of armed conflict in check; both admirable goals. Part
of the designed framework included justifiable reasons for going to war; hence
the term “just war.” As a monarch, if your reasons aligned with those in the doctrine
then your war was considered just and those who participated incurred no guilt through
participation or support. This did not mean that you could not sin while in
war, just that if you waged war within the developed boundaries you were
considered just. All of this seems reasonable. After all we ought to limit the occurrence
of war and its inherent brutality. I grapple with the term just and its effect
on the disposition and decision making of participants.
Contrary to what we may believe, humans
seem to have a built-in (by God I believe) resistance to taking the life of
other humans. For example, during my first tour in Iraq an entire unit drove
through an ambush without returning fire; something senior leadership did not
appreciate. In fact, the entire chain of command stood in front of the CJTF-7
commander explaining their soldiers lack of action. Once ignited and stoked the
fires of anger required to kill others are not easily quenched. The more
inhuman the enemy, the easier it is to slay them. And in this fundamental truth
lies my problem with the term “just war.”
If I am just in my cause, my enemy must be
somehow unjust. If they are unjust or iniquitous, then I do the country, the
world, and perhaps the Lord a favor by extinguishing them. And if I’m doing the
Lord a favor, then killing more at once is acceptable. Additionally, if we
employ questionable tactics to prosecute an unjust war then perhaps they are
acceptable given the dire circumstances of war. You see the idea of a “just war”
leads to many problems in execution. The chaos and confusion of war is fraught
with difficulty enough without adding moral murkiness through the label of a “just
war.” Perhaps we need to revisit our terminology.
The generally agreed upon principles of a
just war are; having just cause, being a last resort, being declared by a
proper authority, possessing right intention, having a reasonable chance of
success, and the end being proportional to the means used. It is the first
principle that creates problems, a just cause. Humans have spilled copious
amounts of ink trying to delineate a just cause, so I’ll add a bit more. I do
not find comfort in the term “just cause.” Perhaps we ought to explore a phrase
such as an “unavoidable war”. Some wars erupt due to forces neither side is
able or willing to contain. There are times when social and political forces in
nations or a region drive conflicts. The U.S. Civil War might be considered an “unavoidable
war.” Of course this phrase contains various pitfalls, as do all such phrases.
Another phrase we might consider, “a war thrust upon us.” This phrase seeks to
describe a war of aggression; WW II for example. In WW II Japan and Germany adopted
aggressive political systems that resulted in years of conflict. We might use a
phrase employed by the United Nations, “peace enforcement.” This describes
actions taken to bring hostilities between waring nations to a close, normally
against either belligerents will. Peace enforcement is a more aggressive
version of peace keeping and frequently includes hostile actions where peace
keeping normally does not. It seems to me that these three phrases might help
us navigate the turbid and turbulent waters of armed conflict without stumbling
into the pitfall of making one side just over another.
When we as a nation elect to send our
armed forces into combat we must seek to not only equip them with the best arms
and armaments available, we must also see to equip them mentally and morally.
Often moral failure on the field of battle stems from a lack of preparation and
practice. It is true that you will execute in war the same way you execute in
practice. We need to carefully think through how we talk about and prepare for
the moral component of war. When we label ourselves as just and the enemy as
unjust, we open the door for decisions which civilized nations would find
abhorrent, even in the manifestly uncivilized business of waging war. I think
it is time for us to reconsider our phraseology, seeking to improve on the “just
war” theory without discarding its better components.
A very thoughtful post on a difficult subject.
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