But this
sort of argument badly misunderstands the “just cause” condition, and the misunderstanding
is a frustratingly common one. The implicit
assumption is that the just cause condition requires merely that a war be
fought for some aim that is morally good in
the abstract. But that is not the
case. As I have emphasized in previous
writing on this subject, what the tradition requires is that the aim be a morally
good one all things considered, and given
the actual concrete circumstances
under which the war would be fought.
This should
be clear when we realize that almost any war would meet the “just cause”
condition if we conceive of its aims in an abstract enough way. For example, during World War II, the
Japanese empire could claim that its aim was to achieve the “co-prosperity” of the
countries of East Asia, and the Germans could claim that their aim was to acquire
Lebensraum or “living space” for
their people. And who could object to
co-prosperity or living space? But
obviously, it would be absurd to pretend that either country had actually met
the just cause condition of just war doctrine.
For when we get into the details of exactly how co-prosperity and living space were to be realized (namely, via
conquest) we see that the causes were not
morally good.
The reality
is that many of the conditions that too many people commenting on the Iran war
assume are distinct from the “just
cause” condition are in fact treated by the just war tradition as part of that condition. For example, consider the eminent
twentieth-century Catholic natural law theorist Heinrich Rommen (pictured
above). In his 1945 book The State in Catholic Thought he
addresses just war doctrine, and devotes a section to the just cause condition
(at pp. 660-65). Naturally, he addresses
the issue of whether the aims being pursued are morally legitimate. But he also says that for a cause to be just,
going to war must be a “last resort” to realizing those aims; that the proposed
war really is in fact “capable of attaining its purpose”; and that “the damages
caused by intervention are not greater than the damage to the common good,
national and international” caused by the disorder the war aims to remedy (p.
662). He also adds that “right intention
is a necessary part of the just cause” (p. 665).
In short,
whereas some commenters suppose that having
a right intention, being a last resort, having serious prospects of success, and not causing greater evils than those being remedied are additional conditions
of just war doctrine, over and above the just cause condition, Rommen treats
them as components of the just cause condition. Hence, when he says that “the justice of the
cause must be certain” and not have “only a probability” in its favor in order
for a war to be legitimate (pp. 664-65), he means that it needs to be morally
certain that all of these criteria
are met.
By no means
is this position unique to Rommen. One
finds it in standard Catholic manuals of ethics and moral theology in the
pre-Vatican II period. For example, the
discussion of the just cause criterion in Austin Fagothey’s Right and Reason (at pp. 563-65) includes
“sufficient proportion between the good to be accomplished and the accompanying
evil,” “last resort,” and “fair hope of success,” as parts of the just cause condition.
Hence when Fagothey goes on to say that the cause must not only be just
but must be “known to be just” and that we “must be sure of a just cause before
fighting” (pp. 564-65), he means that we must be sure that all of these criteria are met.
We find
something similar in the treatment of the just cause condition in volume I of
Fr. John McHugh and Fr. Charles Callan’s Moral
Theology: A Complete Course (at pp. 560-66). They argue that for a cause to be just, war
must be a “last resort”; the disorder war is intended to remedy must be “so
grave that it outweighs the risks and
losses of war”; that when determining these potential risks and losses, a
nation must factor in “the losses oneself will suffer, but also the losses that
will be suffered by others” as well as harm to “the world in general or
posterity”; and that in light of such considerations, “it could happen that a
nation with justice on its side… would nevertheless not be justified in waging
war.” Hence when McHugh and Callan go on
to say that “the government may not declare war, unless it is morally certain
that right is on its side” and that “one should refrain from hostilities as
long as one’s moral right is uncertain,” they mean that it must be morally
certain that a proposed war meets all
of these criteria.
Now, in an earlier article at my blog and a follow-up article at Public Discourse, I have argued that the war with Iran clearly does not meet all of the criteria cited above. Accordingly, it does not meet the just cause condition of just war (let alone other conditions such as the “lawful authority” condition, which I have argued it also does not meet). As I noted in the First Things article, even some Catholic defenders of the war admit that the war only arguably meets the criteria cited above, rather than meeting them with moral certainty. But as I argue in that article, the absence of moral certainty is enough to show that the war is unjust, at least if we are looking at it through the lens of the Catholic just war tradition.


Dr. Feser,
ReplyDeleteThank you for bringing a rigorous defense of just war theory to our current situation. I was taught just war theory in its basics in high school about 15 years ago (we were going through some Aquinas and apologetics, I believe), but had largely forgotten the details to the point where I had stopped thinking about warfare with the light of this traditional Catholic view. Instead, I was caught up in the realpolitik paradigm many were taking with Iran until I read your commentary. I deeply appreciate your work!
Thank you!
Delete