War aims?
Let us note, first, that much depends on exactly what the U.S. intends to accomplish. A week ago, before the attack, President Trump warned that Tehran should be evacuated, called for Iran’s unconditional surrender, and stated that the U.S. would not kill Iran’s Supreme Leader “for now” – thereby insinuating that it may yet do so at some future time. Meanwhile, many prominent voices in the president’s party have been calling for regime change in Iran, and Trump himself this week has joined this chorus. If we take all of this at face value, it gives the impression that the U.S. intends or is at least open to an ambitious and open-ended military commitment comparable to the American intervention in Iraq under President Bush.
As I argued
in my previous essay, if this is what
is intended, U.S. action would not be morally justifiable by traditional just
war criteria. I focused on two points in
particular. First, the danger such intervention
would pose to civilian lives and infrastructure would violate the just war
condition that a war must be fought using
only morally acceptable means.
Second, given the chaos regime change would likely entail, and the
quagmire into which the U.S. would be drawn, such an ambitious intervention
would violate the just war condition that a
military action must not result in evils that are worse than the one being
redressed.
However, it
is likely that we should not take the
president’s words at face value. He has
a long-established tendency to engage in “trash talk” and to make off-the-cuff
remarks that reflect merely what has popped into his head at the moment rather
than any well thought out or settled policy decision. Furthermore, even when he does have in mind
some settled general policy goal, he appears prone to “making it up as he goes”
where the details are concerned (as evidenced, for example, by his erratic
moves during the tariff
controversy earlier this year). My best
guess is that he does not want an Iraq-style intervention but also does not
have a clear idea of exactly how far he is willing to go if Iran continues to
resist his will.
As I said in
my previous essay, this is itself a serious problem. An erratic and woolly-minded leader who does
not intend a wider war is liable nevertheless to be drawn into one by events, and can also cause other
harm, short of that, through reckless statements.
But so far,
at least, the U.S. has in fact only bombed the facilities in question. Suppose for the sake of argument that this limited
“one and done” intervention is all that is intended. Would this much be justifiable under just war
doctrine?
Preemptive versus preventive war
This brings
us to an issue which I only touched on in my earlier essay but which is obviously
no less important (indeed, even more important) than the two criteria I focused
on: the justice of the cause for
which the war is being fought, which is the first criterion of just war
doctrine. The reason I did not say more
about it is that the issue is more complex than meets the eye. I think Israel can make a strong case that its
attack on Iran’s nuclear program meets the just cause condition for a just war. But it is harder for the U.S. to meet that
condition, even on a “one and done” scenario.
To
understand why, we need to say something about a controversy that arose during
the Iraq war and is highly relevant to the current situation, but hasn’t
received the attention it ought to. I
refer to the debate over the morality of preventive
war, which ethicists often distinguish from preemptive war.
In both
preemptive war and preventive war, a country takes military action against
another country that has not attacked it.
And in both cases, the country initiating hostilities nevertheless
claims to be acting in self-defense. This
might seem like sophistry and a manifest violation of the just cause criterion
of just war doctrine. How can a country
that begins a war claim self-defense?
But there is
a crucial difference between the two cases.
In a preemptive war, country B is preparing
to attack country A but has not in fact yet done so. Country A simply preempts this coming attack by striking first, and can claim
self-defense insofar as country B was
indeed going to attack it. By
contrast, in a preventive war, country B was not preparing to attack country A.
But country A attacks country B anyway, claiming that country B likely would pose a threat to A at some point
in the future.
Now, it is
generally acknowledged among ethicists that preemptive
war can sometimes be morally justifiable.
But preventive war is much
more problematic and controversial. There
are two main traditions of thinking on this subject (a useful overview of which
can be found in chapter 9 of Gregory Reichberg’s book Thomas Aquinas on War and Peace). On the one hand, there is the natural law
tradition of thinking about just war criteria, associated with Scholastic
Catholic writers like Thomas Aquinas and Francisco de Vitoria, Protestants like
Hugo Grotius, and more recent Thomists like the nineteenth-century Catholic theologian
Luigi Taparelli. According to this
tradition, preventive war is flatly morally illegitimate. It violates the principle that a person or
country cannot be harmed merely for some wrong it might do, but only for some wrong that it has in fact done.
The other main
approach is the “realist” tradition associated with Protestant thinkers like
Alberico Gentili, Francis Bacon, and (with qualifications, since he also drew
on the natural law tradition) Emer de Vattel.
As Reichberg notes, whereas the natural law approach takes the
international order to be governed by the moral law just as relations between
individuals are, the tendency of the realist tradition is to look at the international
arena in something more like Hobbesian terms.
And the realist tradition is thus more favorable to preventive war as a
tool nations might deploy as they negotiate this Hobbesian state of
nature.
As Reichberg
also notes, Vattel put the following conditions on the justifiability of some country
A’s initiating a preventive war against another country B. First, country B must actually pose a potential threat to country A. Second, country B must threaten the very existence of country A. Third, it must intend to pose such a threat.
And fourth, it must somehow have actually shown signs of evildoing in
the past. Vattel adds the condition that
country A must first have tried and failed to secure guarantees from country B
that it will not attack A.
Much of the
controversy over the Iraq war had to do with whether a preventive war is
morally justifiable, and the Bush administration did sometimes say things that
implied that the war was preventive in nature.
But as I argued at the time, this particular aspect of the debate was a
red herring. The main rationale for the
war was that Saddam had not complied with the terms of the ceasefire of the
Gulf War, so that the U.S. and her allies were justified in re-starting
hostilities in order to force compliance.
Whatever one thinks of this as a rationale, it is not an appeal to
preventive war. Hence any criticism of
the Iraq war should, in my view, focus on other aspects of it (such as the
intelligence failure vis-à-vis WMD and the folly of the nation-building
enterprise the war led to).
The case of Iran
What matters
for present purposes, though, is the relevance of all this to the war with
Iran. Now, it was Israel rather than
Iran that initiated the current hostilities.
Was this morally justifiable?
It seems
clear to me that it was justifiable by Vattel’s criteria for preventive
war. But as a natural law theorist, I don’t
think preventive war can be justified, so that that particular point is
moot. However, that does not entail that
it was wrong for Israel to attack Iran’s nuclear program. For it can plausibly be seen as a justifiable
preemptive rather than preventive attack. To be sure, Iran was not preparing a specific
nuclear attack operation, since it does not actually have nuclear weapons. But Israel can make the following argument: Iran
has already been in a state of war with Israel for years; its leadership has
repeatedly threatened Israel’s destruction; if it acquired nuclear weapons, it
would actually be capable of carrying out this threat; and it has for years
been trying to acquire them. Destroying
its nuclear program is therefore not merely a preventive action, but in the relevant sense an act of preempting an attack (in its very earliest
stages, as it were) that Israel has good reason to think Iran actually intends.
This seems
to me a strong argument, so that I think that Israel can indeed make the case
that it has a just cause, at least insofar as its aim is simply to destroy Iran’s
nuclear program. (A more ambitious goal
of regime change would be much harder to justify, for the same reason that, as
I said in my earlier article, it would not be justifiable for the U.S. to
attempt regime change. But here I am
just addressing the more limited aim of destroying Iran’s nuclear capability.)
However,
this does not entail that the U.S. is
justified in attacking Iran. Note first
that the recent U.S. bombing was not carried out in response to any act of war
on Iran’s part against the United States.
True, some have pointed out that U.S. and Iranian-backed forces have
been involved in various skirmishes in recent decades. But it would be dishonest to pretend that that
had anything to do with the recent U.S. action.
If Iran’s nuclear program had not been in the picture, Trump would not
have ordered the bombing. Hence, if the
U.S. is claiming to be acting in justifiable self-defense, it could plausibly
do so only by the criteria governing preemptive war or preventive war.
But in fact,
it cannot plausibly do so. Note first that the U.S. action does not meet
even Vattel’s criteria for preventive war.
For even if Iran already had nuclear weapons, it would not pose a threat
to the very existence of the United States (the way it would pose a threat to the very existence of Israel). For one thing, Iran lacks any plausible means
of getting a nuclear device into the United States; for another, even if it
could do so, it would hardly be able to destroy the country as a whole. Hence, any “preventive war” case for U.S. self-defense is fanciful. And if that is true, then it is even more
obvious that the U.S. cannot plausibly meet the more stringent criteria for a preemptive war case. Iran simply cannot plausibly be said to have
been in the process of planning a nuclear attack on the U.S., even in the
looser sense in which it might be said to have been planning such an attack on
Israel.
I conclude
that no serious case can be made that the U.S. attack on Iran was a justifiable
act of self-defense. However, there is
one further way the attack might seem to be justified. Couldn’t the U.S. argue that, even though it
couldn’t plausibly hold that it was defending itself, it was justifiably helping its ally Israel to defend itself?
Certainly it
can be justifiable to help an ally to defend itself. But whether it ought to do so in any
particular case depends on various circumstances. For example, suppose Iran actually had a nuclear
weapon and it was known that it was about to deploy it against Israel and that
only the U.S. could stop the attack. I
would say that in that sort of scenario, the U.S. not only could intervene to stop such an attack but would be morally obligated to do so. And it would also be morally justifiable for
the U.S. to intervene in order to help Israel in other, less dire scenarios.
But we are
not now in a situation remotely close to such scenarios. There
are various ways Israel could stop Iran’s nuclear program by itself – as,
it appears, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has acknowledged. Meanwhile, there are serious potential
downsides to U.S. involvement. American
troops could be killed by Iranian retaliatory strikes, the U.S. economy could
be hit hard if Iran closes off the Strait of Hormuz, and if the Iranian regime
were to collapse the U.S. could be drawn into a quagmire in attempting to
mitigate the resulting chaos. Yes, such
things might not in fact happen, but
they plausibly could happen, and
keeping one’s fingers crossed is not a serious way to approach the application
of just war criteria. If Israel doesn’t
strictly need the U.S. to intervene
and intervention poses such potential risks to U.S. interests, then the U.S.
should not intervene.
Hence I am inclined to conclude the following about the U.S. attack, even if (as we can hope) it does indeed turn out to be a “one and done” operation. Was American bombing of Iranian nuclear facilities intrinsically wrong? No. But did it meet all the conditions of just war doctrine, all things considered? No.
Is it really wrong to protect an ally even if the ally can do it itself? Usually alliances are one-sided, but NATO is predicated on *mutual* defense. In 1991, Kuwait couldn't protect itself, but Egypt, UK, and Australia weren't really needed once the US got involved; was it therefore wrong for them to help?
ReplyDeleteIs it really wrong to protect an ally even if the ally can do it itself?
DeleteNo, but again, whether it is a good idea depends on circumstances
A week ago, before the attack, President Trump warned that Tehran should be evacuated, called for Iran’s unconditional surrender, and stated that the U.S. would not kill Iran’s Supreme Leader “for now” – thereby insinuating that it may yet do so at some future time. Meanwhile, many prominent voices in the president’s party have been calling for regime change in Iran, and Trump himself this week has joined this chorus. If we take all of this at face value, it gives the impression that the U.S. intends or is at least open to an ambitious and open-ended military commitment comparable to the American intervention in Iraq under President Bush.
ReplyDeleteI don't find this conclusion very plausible. The "regime change" envisioned need not entail a large-scale war, and it is far more probable that Trump would turn to other means to bring it about, e.g. special forces, or politically destabilizing moves that cause the Iranians themselves to change the regime. Trump is very unlikely to side with neocons over his more America First base to favor a Bush-style protracted war.
As Reichberg also notes, Vattel put the following conditions on the justifiability of some country A’s initiating a preventive war against another country B. First, country B must actually pose a potential threat to country A. Second, country B must threaten the very existence of country A. Third, it must intend to pose such a threat.
The second of these is an irrational superposition of some extraneous theory, and doesn't arise in normal just war theory. It is enough for the just cause of war be on account of some grave harm, not solely that of total destruction. Just war theory allows for "grave harm" to be various and multi-faceted in principle, and not relegated to just one item, sheer existence. Loss of your religion is actually a graver harm than loss of existence.
And while the modern phrasing of the criteria of just war entails that the grave harm be "certain", this term is understood in a relative sense: certain in the way concrete determinations are made in real life, not the mathematical certainty of fundamental principles of arithmetic. The harm anticipated is to be combined with the certainty of the future attack to arrive at a reasonable "expected value" of the harm projected to be grave: the more grave the harm, the less definitively certain you need to be - which is exactly the same KIND of risk analysis you use in daily life to consider risks and dealing with them (like buying insurance) - you play out the expected value of the harm together with its probability of occurring, and act accordingly. If you're under attack right now, you are already adequately certain and you don't have to decide in detail just how much harm is going to be suffered; if your enemy has amassed 12 divisions of heavy mechanized cavalry at one point of your border, it's highly likely that an attack is going to happen, and the DEGREE of harm likely to occur is quite grave. If your neighbor is building a nuke, the degree of harm possible is graver still than that, so you need slightly less certainty that it's going to be used to act on it.
This is NOT intended to get us out of demanding that Trump come forward with the evidence of both the work designed to produce nukes and the detailed assessment of Iran's intent to use them - more than merely shouted slogans against America in Tehran rallies. It does not have to have to be a threat directly against America in order to justify American force, as a nation is entitled to protect other nations and the world from grave threats to peace. But to the extent that the threat to America was not high, to that extent the degree or certainty of danger to others must be very high indeed.
Hi Tony,
DeleteYes, there are various imaginable ways regime change could be brought about, but the point is that bringing it about by way of Israeli or U.S. intervention about has a high likelihood of leaving Iran in an unacceptably chaotic state, and then possibly drawing the U.S. in to try to clean up the mess on “you break it, you bought it” grounds.
As to your comment on what I said about Vattel, sure, you could tinker with his approach to make an application to the current situation more plausible, but I did not get into all that since I think the “preventive war” rationale is just wrongheaded in the first place.
As to “certainty,” I didn’t say anything about that in this post in the first place, and am certainly not committed to a “mathematical certainty” requirement or the like.
Hey Prof!
ReplyDeleteIntriguing post!
Although it seems like other natural law theorists may have taken a different position.
https://www.undergroundthomist.org/rules-based-international-order
This post by the esteemed Dr J Budziszewski.
It isn't as comprehensive as yours.
But overall approach seems to be from a different perspective.
Would be really great if some day the Thomistic Institute could organise some kind of conference on just war theory.
Thanks, Norm, I'll check out what J. has said
DeleteHey Prof
DeleteThanks for the response.
I forgot to mention that I am in complete agreement with your position.
Regardless of just war theoretical concerns, it seems that no one was killed in the bombing raid because Iran was explicitly told to clear out and no one was killed in Iran's retaliation since they explicitly told Qatar (and us) when and where it was going to happen. Now a ceasefire has been agreed upon and everyone's honor is satisfied almost as if all sides agreed this was the way it was going to go down.
ReplyDeleteDid just war theorists see this coming? Or do they think it's immoral for combatants to deceive their hardliners into ending conflict?
Part of the problem here is that we have to respond to what is actually said or proposed, and the things Trump says or proposes are not always what he actually does. For example, from what he said last week, any reasonable person would think an attack on Tehran was likely.
DeleteWhat happens then is critics will explain why such an attack would be bad, and then when Trump doesn't actually carry out such an attack, his defenders say "Ah see, you were wrong!" No, the critics were still perfectly correct about what would be wrong with an attack on Tehran. The fact that he didn't do it doesn't magically make their criticisms mistaken. And of course, had he carried out such an attack, the critics would say "Oh he had to do that, because reasons." There's a constant "Heads I win, tails you lose" shtick that makes serious engagement with certain of his defenders impossible.
Hi Ed:
ReplyDeleteI've been wavering between skeptical and cautiously optimistic regarding Trump's actions in Iran these past couple of weeks, but at this point, I think we need to give the man serious credit.
According to the Iranians themselves, Trump's bombings of the nuclear enrichment sites left ZERO human casualties, and I'm inclined to believe this, because their incentive would be to claim that he missed his military targets but needlessly killed thousands of civilians instead, in order to gain international sympathy (as the Palestinians routinely do, for instance).
A nuclear-armed Iran would be a serious threat to multiple of our allies in the region, not just Israel, and really to us as well. We've also dealt with Iranian-sponsored terrorist attacks on our people and assets nonstop since 1979, so I think we do have a legitimate preemptive basis for destroying their nuclear enrichment ability. If that could actually be accomplished with minimal or even no loss of life and without further escalation, I have a hard time seeing how just war criteria would not be satisfied by any reasonable accounting.
Finally, it's too early to say for certain, but it looks like Trump has DEESCALATED the war, and has in fact persuaded Israel to walk back their regime change plans and agree to a truce.
Like you, it's long been my view that Trump's penchant for trash talk is just him shooting off the cuff and making things up as he goes, but I think we need to seriously consider that it's likely quite a bit more strategic, measured, and temperate that it seems. His foreign policy seems to work out far better and more consistently than you would expect for someone behaving recklessly. Furthermore, the months of meticulous operational security that it turns out made these targeted bombings possible would not be possible under a disorderly and chaotic regime.
I think we need to strongly consider that Trump's rhetoric and saber-rattling really was strategically designed to scare Iran into backing down and mollify Israel into accepting a ceasefire, and that he correctly judged the best course of action to minimize bloodshed while neutralizing threats. Notice how in his announcement of a ceasefire, he's praising both countries for fighting bravely, allowing Iran to save face in defeat.
Hi Deuce,
DeleteIt's way too early to say anything for certain about the ceasefire one way or the other. As to the trash talk, I think that has nothing to do with it. In other contexts, it has clearly done nothing but harm -- for example, in the case of the idiotic "51st state" talk vis-a-vis Canada, which has greatly damaged our alliance and led to the victory of the left-wing party there (which would otherwise have gone down to defeat). In the current situation, if things turn out OK it will not have been because of the trash talk but because of the massive bombing.
So, you GUESS that Trump doesn't have a clear idea of how far he's willing to go.
ReplyDeleteThat's the DUMBEST comment I've seen since the war began.
Do you SERIOUSLY THINK that Trump hasn't EXTENSIVELY war-gamed out his plan with his cabinet and all the military brass?
Yeah, right.
He ain't playin' 4D chess.
He's playin' Tic Tac Toe.
Really? The "Tehran should be evacuated immediately" tweet was "extensively war-gamed out with his cabinet and all the military brass"?
DeleteThe real question is: Why is the US so pro-Israel?
ReplyDeleteThe US should let Israel be Israel and Iran be Iran, and let them settle their differences themselves.
I would like to see Edward Feser's take on the morality of the US's inordinate pro-Israel stance.