Friday, March 20, 2026

Just war doctrine and the duties of soldiers

The main point of just war doctrine is to guide public authorities in determining whether a military action they are considering is morally defensible.  In a democratic society, it also assists citizens in carrying out their own duties as voters, opinion makers, and so on.  But what of the servicemen who have to fight in the wars their governments decide to wage?  Do they have an obligation to make a moral judgement about these wars in light of just war criteria?  Must they refuse to fight in an unjust war?

Naturally, the just war tradition has addressed these questions.  What follows is an explanation of the basic principles.  The first thing to say is that the tradition draws a distinction between two main sets of questions: jus ad bellum questions, which have to do with the conditions under which a war may justly be entered into; and jus in bello questions, which have to do with how a war is to be conducted once it has started.

Where the first set of questions is concerned, the tradition holds that public authorities are to be held to a stricter standard of certainty about the justice of a war than soldiers are.  They are, after all, the ones with the authority to go to war, and thus the ones with the primary responsibility to come to a sound judgment about the matter.  The prevailing view in the tradition is that public authorities have to be morally certain of the justice of a war before initiating it.  This is a degree of certainty lower than metaphysical certainty but higher than mere probability.  Suppose a hunter considers firing into some bushes.  Naturally, it would be immoral to do so if he weren’t certain that another person is not standing behind the bushes.  That doesn’t mean that he has to have the degree of certainty attaching to mathematical propositions like 1 + 1 = 2.  But he has to have a degree of confidence stronger than a bare likelihood that no one is there.  He would be guilty of recklessness otherwise.  Since war is, of course, even more dangerous than firing a gun into bushes, governments need to have a similar degree of certainty that a proposed war meets all of the criteria of just war doctrine (just cause, reasonable hope for success, lawful authority, and so on).

Soldiers, however, are not ordinarily obligated to make such a determination.  For one thing, most of them would not have expert knowledge of the details of just war doctrine.  For another, usually they would not be privy to all the relevant concrete facts to which just war doctrine must be applied when deciding upon the justice of some proposed war.  Furthermore, they have a general obligation to obey their superiors, and without a strong presumption that they will in fact obey, no military organization would be workable.  Hence, soldiers can and should presume that a war they are sent to fight is just, even if they have doubts.  Moreover, even if it is unjust, once a war starts, their country and fellow soldiers are in danger, and it is legitimate to defend them.  (Here’s an analogy.  Suppose your father foolishly and unjustly picks a fight with another man, who proceeds to start beating him up.  You can and should defend your father from this harm even though he is in the wrong.)

To be sure, the presumption that a war is just can be overridden.  As the Scholastic just war theorist Francisco de Vitoria writes, “if the war seems patently unjust to the subject, he must not fight, even if he is ordered to do so by the prince” (On the Law of War, Question 2, Article 2).  But what would make a war “patently” unjust?  Here I would argue that the standard has to be a high one.  Again, a military organization would simply be unworkable if soldiers could opt out of any war they personally judged to be unjust.

When addressing the issue of what degree of certitude public authorities and soldiers must possess, another Scholastic, Francisco Suárez, emphasizes the just cause condition of just war doctrine (The Three Theological Virtues: On Charity, Disputation 13, On War, Section VI).  This seems to me correct.  A soldier is not in the best position to make a certain judgment about whether a war meets criteria such as likelihood of success, or right intention on the part of public authorities.  But the justice of a cause can in some cases be easier to judge.

Consider two concrete examples: driving Iraq out of Kuwait in the 1990-91 Gulf War; and taking Greenland by military force, which President Trump at first declined to rule out.  I would say that the first was plausibly a just cause for war, whereas the second was manifestly unjust.  Of course, some would dispute the overall wisdom or even justice of the Gulf War, but the narrow aim of helping our ally Kuwait to drive the Iraqis out of its unjustly conquered territory was, considered by itself, certainly legitimate.  Hence a U.S. soldier could and should have obeyed his superiors in that conflict, even if he personally had doubts about it.  By contrast, seizing our ally Denmark’s territory by force simply because Trump thinks the U.S. needs it would straightforwardly amount to theft, and any killing that would have been done in the process would have been murder.  Hence, had the U.S. actually decided to carry out such an attack, soldiers could legitimately have disobeyed their orders.  This was the judgment of Timothy Broglio, the Archbishop for U.S. Military Services, and I think he was right.

However, except in clear cases like this, where the cause for which a war is fought is patently immoral, soldiers can act on the presumption that a war is just.  If that presumption turns out to be mistaken, the moral guilt for the unjust war attaches to the public authorities who initiated it, not the soldiers who fight in it. 

All of this has to do with jus ad bellum questions.  Jus in bello questions are more straightforward.  Even when jus ad bellum conditions are all clearly met so that a war is manifestly just, by no means is an “anything goes” approach legitimate in fighting it.  Regardless of the justice of the cause, certain methods of warfare are intrinsically gravely evil and may never be resorted to.  For example, it is murder deliberately to target civilians, or to kill enemy soldiers who have already been rendered harmless by being wounded or taken prisoner.  Hence, orders to carry out such actions must be disobeyed.  Indeed, the U.S.’s own Uniform Code of Military Justice requires servicemen to disobey such manifestly unlawful orders.

In short, the general principles just war doctrine provides for guiding soldiers are: First, in determining whether to participate in a war decided upon by their government, soldiers should presume that the war is just and thus participate, unless the end for which the war is being fought is manifestly immoral.  Second, in the conduct of the war once it begins, soldiers should never obey specific orders to do something that is manifestly immoral.

30 comments:

  1. This is one for the ages. A treasure trove of wisdom.

    Thanks for your sanity in these times Prof.

    Although if I could suggest something, could you temper your feed with a reminder of the next life.

    Sometimes the end times theme of the posts these days feels a bit heavy.

    Cheers

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  2. 1. If you're a young man and volunteer for service, at least some of the reason is for adventure, which war brings, and you don't care about the details of the reasons for the war. But you still are instructed in boot camp on not committing war crimes.
    2. I argued the Gulf War was unjust and almost was fired for saying so to my newspaper in 1991, the Orange County Register. Fortunately, the management put up with my impertinence and kept me on.
    3. Given grabbing Greenland, certainly unjust, almost certainly wouldn't get anyone killed, with the Danes surrendering quickly, a young troop would not be wrong to participate in it. It also would not be for him to parse the lies -- keeping it from Russia and China -- used to justify it.

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  3. Kudos to you for this and the manifest horrors you have to endure on Twitter vis this subject Ed. Just looking at some of them is a reminder of the human capacity for viciousness.

    I might disagree with you on some topics, but you have consistently upheld the reasoned morality of natural law throughout times when the US and world political climate has been determined to drowned any kind of reasoned morality in the clamour of power politik. I wish more philosophers would resist the tides of opinion.

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  4. Lee Gilbert
    @LeeGilbert41943
    ·
    Mar 12
    Mr Feser, you write, "But soldiers do not need to be morally certain in order to fight in a war. The commonly accepted general principle among just war theorists is that soldiers should presume that a war they are sent to fight in is just, giving their leaders the benefit of the doubt."

    With apologies to Flannery O'Connor, if it is just a theory, then to hell with it. I am not going to hazard my eternal soul for a theory. In addition to a degree in ethics/moral theology, how can anyone dare to open his mouth on this topic-or deserve a hearing- without being battle-tested and walking among the slain? Did any of these theorists throw a grenade, plunge a bayonet into someone's belly, drop a bomb or launch a missile?

    To all such insufficiently credentialed academics I would like to ask, "Was you there Charlie?" Not that I was, admittedly, but being asked to entrust my eternal soul to theoreticians who have little idea what they are talking about is galling.

    Still, after Nurenburg we are expected to accept that the moral theology of war justifies giving our leaders the benefit of the doubt!? We hung men at Nurenburg for doing just that. I have little doubt that among the Auschwitz guards we machine-gunned after liberating that camp were Catholic young men who had sat in Catholic gymnasia a few years earlier and heard their Catholic priest teachers telling them exactly what I heard from my Catholic priest teachers in 1960, that we should give our leaders the benefit of the doubt. Here I do not mean to cast aspersions on the priesthood, but merely to say that these teachings came with sacerdotal, divine authority.

    No, I will answer to God for my own acts, period. I and no one else have to work through the moral calculus of what I am about to do, all presidents, generals, lieutenants and sergeants to the contrary notwithstanding. On this depends my eternity. I am not going to risk it for a theory.

    You write, "Again, a military organization would simply be unworkable if soldiers could opt out of any war they personally judged to be unjust." This is bad? Somewhere JFK said (something like) "War will exist until that distant day when the conscientious objector enjoys the same prestige that the warrior does today." We aren't there yet, safe to say.

    Once in the early morning hours I took a walk here in Portland and was accosted by a Jehovah's Witness. The discussion came round to their pacifist stance and when I was refuting it, the specter of two world wars with Catholic and Christian soldiers slaughtering each other under pain of mortal sin rose up in my mind and the words died in my throat. It was there Christendom committed suicide.

    Another image has always stayed with me. Once in1962 at Northwestern U as I was waiting to cross the street an older man came up along side me and out of the blue began discussing his experience in WWI. He spoke of American soldiers crossing the battlefield and out of hatred bayonetting men already dead. This came to mind when Fr. Barry S.J. took a group of us Catholic men at Tigerland ( Fr. Polk, LA, 1966) out for a field Mass and a bit of Catholic exhortation. "You must love your enemy, men, even while you are pulling the trigger." Right. Of course, but how? I admit the pacificist view is untenable, but it is practically just as untenable to keep oneself holy in that theater of death and to come unspotted before the Lord of all. It was, moreover, possible for all the Catholic and Christian men of those wars to simply say no to their governments. Hell no, we won't go. And for that they would have incurred guilt?

    For me in that circumstance I would have asked, where is the risk of eternal damnation greater? That to me seems the right question to ask and the right rubric under which to discuss the ethics of war.

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    1. I imagine cowards go to hell too. I mean the variety that for fear of the eternal soul fail to defend the weak, helpless, etc... So, an attempt to provide a nuanced theory to inform one's conscience seems a justifiable, even if seemingly impossible.

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    2. @Lee

      Or, in other words, we can't both believe that our leaders deserve the benefit of the doubt and that fighting an unjust was in no different than murder. You need to know whether or not you're committing murder when you pull that trigger. Anything less is practically moral nihilism.

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    3. "I am not going to hazard my eternal soul for a theory...No, I will answer to God for my own acts, period."

      Like the act of making an oath to the President to obey him, like military members do? You effectively make an oath to give leaders the benefit of the doubt.

      Without good reason, you can't just disobey after making an oath. That could potentially "hazard" your eternal soul too.

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    4. Lee Gilbert has a couple of good points, but embedded in some major misunderstandings.

      On this depends my eternity. I am not going to risk it for a theory.

      Lee, the term "theory" appended to "Just War" is not a term like for the scientific theory of relativity, (well attested in experiment but not proven). The term really stands for "the collected body of principles and conclusions, collated and organized into a compact space." Before it was so collected, the principles and major conclusions were equally true, and some were equally known. Take any 5 definite moral principles you hold to be solid and certain, collect them, and slap the name ""Gilbert's Moral Theory": the term "theory" doesn't render them uncertain, it renders them collected together. Nobody thinks "deliberately attacking innocent and harmless children is wrong" is an uncertain standard in war.

      No, I will answer to God for my own acts, period. I and no one else have to work through the moral calculus of what I am about to do, all presidents, generals, lieutenants and sergeants to the contrary notwithstanding.

      Everyone everywhere will always have to render an account to God for their own moral choices, and choosing to follow orders IS a moral act, by its very nature. You should be ready to take responsibility for your choices. Good...so far.

      But that doesn't go far enough, not yet. Aquinas makes this totally clear in his treatise on law: man is a social animal, whose happiness entails living in communities. We each have different minds and incomplete parts of the whole truth, so we will always be in an unequal stance as to what actions will best promote the common good: some closer and others farther. He points out that if everyone acts under what his own opinion tells him is for the best, there will be great disorder, very far indeed from the common good, and nothing like a true society. Hence governments are necessary, in which someone (or some fewer) decide upon the common pathways of action that will be taken to achieve the common good. For this overall good, then, everyone else rightly submits, foregoing the application of THEIR prudential judgment about how the community will act, in favor of the governing body's prudential judgment. The necessity of the common good makes this submission a moral duty.

      This moral duty does have limits: for one, you cannot have a moral duty to submit to orders that directly contradict Divine Law, or that command directly actions that are manifestly intrinsically evil of their nature. For another, you have no duty to obey commands that are not about the common good at all (like whom you are to marry). But within the proper constraints, your rightful obligation toward the common good entails your rightful obligation to obey orders of the government on prudential matters properly within the scope of judgment of the government. In such case, your obligation toward the common good coalesces behind your due and proper moral analysis of your own moral action, and normally assigns to you the due obligation to submit to the judgment of those in authority on such an issue. Thus you fulfill your moral duty in such analyses as (a) is this person giving the order one properly in authority; (b) is this order given one within the scope of his legal authority under the community's constituted government; (c) is this order manifestly contrary to Divine Law and natural law...and so on. Having ascertained that it is not contrary to Divine Law and natural law, and that it is properly within the scope of matters for which he is assigned authority to decide, you normally uprightly choose to obey, not because he has convinced you and so your own prudence agrees that this is the best way, but because his prudence is has the authority to rule, to decide for others.

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    5. This is what government means: that some decide for others, and those others therefore act not on the basis of their own prudential judgment, but on that of the deciders. And they act morally when they do so, not ceasing to be moral agents, but that the moral choice is constituted in uprightly ceding the decision-making authority to those in charge, under the proper and due limits.

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    6. Tony,

      You're right, of course, that the state has no authority to command its subjects/citizens as to whom they are to marry, and that if it tries, people are free to disregard those commands.  This is settled Church teaching.  Can you explain what you mean, though, by saying that the reason such laws are null and void is because such things do not concern the common good?  Who marries whom absolutely affects the common good of a political community, and laws about it--though they are unjust, tyrannical, and null--are often made with the common good in mind.  For example, there are cases of rulers forbidding people from marrying within their own ethnic group or broadly-extended family as a way of reducing ethnic and family tensions and promoting the unity of the political community as a whole.  Those laws were unjust, but they clearly pertained to the common good, and Aristotle lists intermarriage among families and ethnic groups as goods that promote the flourishing of the city.  It seems to me there must be some other reason that these laws are not binding.  But maybe not, maybe I've misunderstood something.

      In any event, the broader question of "what pertains to the common good" is one that we need a better grasp of.  On one end of the spectrum, one hears claims that sleeping around and having lots of children out of wedlock is a purely private matter, which of course it is not (Thomas Aquinas seems to have been skeptical of attempts to outlaw fornication and prostitution, but not because he doubted that they affected the common good).  On the other end, our governments incessantly regulate choices about personal health and personal risk that are rightly questions of prudence for citizens (and parents on behalf of children) on the grounds that if you get hurt or sick, it affects other people, so really it is not your place to make these choices.  This type of logic seems to have no limiting principle.

      Anyway, I'd like to better understand your argument here.

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  5. Excellent, nuanced, and correct analysis. Thank you for this.

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    1. Great to see people from online catholic sphere back Prof. It seems like he is fighting a lone battle sometimes.

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  6. Thanks for this typically intelligent and calm analysis. A quick question:

    > If that presumption [that the war is just] turns out to be mistaken, the moral guilt for the unjust war attaches to the public authorities who initiated it, not the soldiers who fight in it.

    Would the soldier be an example of a case where someone is non-culpably ignorant of the goodness/evil of an action? In which case, according to Aquinas, the action is not a specifically human action, and thus is not a moral action at all, and thus is neither good or evil for the one that commits it?

    https://www.newadvent.org/summa/2006.htm#article8

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  7. This laying out of the principles is so valuable. It enables everyone to make principled decisions on these moral matters. It enables folks to makes well formed judgements and so to act in good conscience. The examples are also extremely helpful and well selected. If there is enough to say in the form of a book, I suspect it would be another Feser classic.

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  8. An example from the Iran war where justice was gravely violated was the attack on the girls school that was connected to an Iran military officer base. The original missals were followed 40 minutes later by another round that were no doubt intended to target the officers searching in rubble for their little girls. Whoever is responsible for this should be tried for war crimes and punished to the fullest extent possible, up to and including the death penalty.

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  9. I never paid much attention to *just war doctrine*. In war, there is an attacker, and, a responder. Us, and, them. This does not automatically show who is right; who is wrong. Constituative reality illustrates this, if only indirectly. Think about wars that accomplished little beyond sabre-rattling. There have been, ahem, several. Yawn...

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    1. Responses like this seem to be operating under the mistaken assumption that the purpose of just war doctrine is to allow wars to be fought. But since you claim to like practicality so much, Paul, it's curious that you haven't noticed that JW is, in fact, a thinly-disguised conspiracy by the ecclesiastics to abolish war. True, some theologians don't seem to realize this (Dr. Feser included), but if you think the fact that 99% of wars achieved nothing is some kind of argument against JW... well, it's a bit like complaining that the Catholic understanding of self defense basically never allows you to kill your attacker: the supposed flaw in the theory is the entire point of it.

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  10. The military tough guy attitude on the US Right continually surprises me. It is not even that it's consistently Consequentialist, the brighter of whom would realise that (for instance) targeting civilian infrastructure might have, well, negative consequences.

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  11. Dr. Feser confirmed Pillar reader?

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  12. Would it be fair to say that once an legitimate authority determines to go to war, a soldier needs moral certitude of the injustice to decide not to fight it? Do you believe the injustice of current war against is morally certain? You certainly give persuasive reasons against the current war, but there seems to be enough division among public commentators that it is not as clear as the Greenland situation.

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  13. So it seems it would be safe to say that a soldier could not morally participate in the forcible annexation of Greenland (should such a nightmare occur).

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  14. Ed,
    Thanks for all the writing that you've been doing on just war theory. You've had to put up with plenty of nonsense because of it, but you've also reached a lot of people who otherwise wouldn't have been reached.

    I have one small quibble with the post.  You write:  "Again, a military organization would simply be unworkable if soldiers could opt out of any war they personally judged to be unjust."  I doubt this is generally true, and it raises some other questions if it is, but before we can even get to that: "personally judged" as opposed to what, exactly?  Isn't this post a guide for soldiers on how to make, well, personal judgments about whether or not to participate in war that their government is waging?

    In one sense this is only a quibble about a good post, but I think that it is worth raising for two reasons.  

    The first is that one encounters a sort of Hobbesian fear of "personal judgment" leading to chaos among some advocates of the virtue ethics tradition found in Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas, and it can make it more difficult for many people to take that tradition seriously.  That tradition, after all, is centered on the training of the whole person to reliably exercise good judgment.  But many of the advocates of virtue ethics (by no means all: look at Aladsair MacIntyre and his disciples!) seem anxious about anything that seems incompatible with the kind of obedience demanded by the huge, opaque, bureaucratic structures that came to dominate America by the mid-twentieth century and claimed credit for making the country comfortable and powerful.  My guess is that this is because so many virtue-ethics advocates are conservatives and were traumatized by the Sixties and Seventies, but I'm not a psychologist.  At the very least, it can create an obstacle to seeing virtue ethics as proposing a serious challenge or alternative to modernity.

    The second issue is this: is it really bad if it is difficult to wage a war that most military-aged men view as unjust?  Again, I'm not a psychologist, but I don't think twenty-year-old men are the most morally cautious part of any population, especially when it comes to fighting.  By way of analogy, the United States had no draft pre-registration going into 1940 but had no problem raising a huge army for World War II, because all levels of civil society cooperated with the effort and a great many men volunteered.  The cause was just and the United States had been attacked.  The draft for Vietnam was much more widely evaded by would-be conscripts and interfered with by local governments and civil society organizations (some sprung into being to do precisely this) despite a more developed system for tracking potential conscripts already being in place.  This was not an indication that we need better systems to facilitate conscription because "otherwise, how will the Best and Brightest be able to carry out their foreign policy?", but rather an indication that the cause in Vietnam, whatever else one might say about it, did not justify conscripting Americans.  This is only an analogy; moral and legal compulsion aren't identical.  But I think the point stands.

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    1. Billy, you raise some intelligent questions. In particular:

      I doubt this is generally true, and it raises some other questions if it is, but before we can even get to that: "personally judged" as opposed to what, exactly?

      I think the answer lies in 2 points: First, distinguish between 3 possible conditions. (A) Our country (whichever country you belong to) waging this war is manifestly just to all (or to nearly all, say, above 95%) who bother looking at the obvious facts. (B) It's neither manifestly (to all or nearly all who have the facts) just, nor manifestly (to all) unjust, but gray and muddled and disputable. And (C) it's manifestly unjust.

      If condition (A) holds, there's no problem: the government thinks we should go to war and commands us to arm, and we think so too, so there's no problem. If (C) holds, we DO exercise our own judgment on the manifest conditions and the manifest result "it's unjust", and refuse to comply. It's certainly uncomfortable, because the government probably will punish those who disobey, but your duty is clear, and you take the punishment.

      It's in condition (B) that we have the difficult question here: whose judgment decides? And the answer is that as long as the matter is gray and disputable and uncertain, then you are supposed to accept the prudential judgment of those in authority, that's what government is for: to decide the difficult judgments that aren't fully resolvable to conclusions certain and definitive and obvious, and also to have information not readily available to all, to have expertise most don’t have, etc. Your own judgment (to have landed in zone (B) ) you should hold as uncertain, doubtful, and therefore not sufficient to overturn the otherwise ordinary duty to obey the government. As James Zahler suggests above, there’s a moral standard involved: you generally have a duty to obey the government, and this can be overturned when you have moral certitude the government’s commands are unjust. Decisions in category (B) are, by that fact, normally NOT “morally certain” to most or all.

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    2. The second issue is this: is it really bad if it is difficult to wage a war that most military-aged men view as unjust? Again, I'm not a psychologist, but I don't think twenty-year-old men are the most morally cautious part of any population, especially when it comes to fighting.

      Your point suggests two different ideas, probably in tension: First, is it sufficient (to oppose the war by refusing orders) if most “military aged men” view it as unjust – but if most of the population as a whole views as just? And secondly, 20-year olds are not known for their caution, but they are also not universally known for their steadfast courage under difficult trials either. They are likely to reflect, in a youthful, unthoughtful manner, the typical vices of their upbringing. If they have suffered nothing particularly difficult, they will tend to have the vices typical of easy living.

      To answer, I would point out first that although that war was quite unpopular among most of young military age people, roughly 2/3 of those who served in Vietnam volunteered. 60% of the US supported the war in the beginning (say, 1965 when we got into major ground operations), and even at the end when it had gone badly, only 60% were clearly opposed to the war. So: condition (B) held. I was young during Vietnam, but grew up expecting to age into the draft. I remember thinking that the arguments the anti-war protestors gave were usually thin, mostly grounded in selfishness or short-sightedness. The war (for the US) might indeed not have been prudent, but THEIR arguments didn’t show it.

      My second point is that 20-year olds who are well-formed should want to turn to the wisdom of their older friends and relatives who have more experience of human nature and (often) more general facts to work from. Most people couldn’t place Vietnam on the globe, and few had any real idea of the political factors involved. Young people today are in even worse shape on their knowledge of global matters. THEY should not trust their own judgment, having poor facts, poor understanding of history, and limited experience of complex large-scale human problems.

      On the other hand, if we get a situation where the prudent men of affairs, men who DO have judgment and experience and know the facts extensively, say “this is an unjust war, and clearly so”, and say so with considerable agreement with the rest of such men, THEN young people of military age (morally) might have a leg to stand on to refuse to obey. If they are going by their own judgment which is at odds with most of the upright and prudent men of society, they don’t.

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  15. As usual, this is very good stuff. Ed. Thanks for setting out clearly the basic issues.

    I will note a small matter that needs some future clarification under Just War Theory:

    Regardless of the justice of the cause, certain methods of warfare are intrinsically gravely evil and may never be resorted to. For example, it is murder deliberately to target civilians, or to kill enemy soldiers who have already been rendered harmless by being wounded or taken prisoner. Hence, orders to carry out such actions must be disobeyed.

    The difficulty with stating it this baldly is that the category "soldier" and "civilian" are not quite as absolute (and separate) as all that. First, in ancient days when each village had its own wall, everyone was (to a degree) expected to help fight off bandits and barbarian invaders. This continued for besieged cities even after standing armies were invented, with relatively dedicated soldiery - which was LONG before uniforms were invented. The idea of a soldiery as a class that took an oath of faithful military service to the leaders / government is also a fairly late idea. And even in later times, i.e. even in modern wars, civilians who unfortunately get stuck in the middle of two armies arguably have a right to defend their own homes, and certainly have a right to defend themselves and their neighbors from rape and other gravely (and patently) unjust war treatment, uniformed or not.

    Similarly, killing "soldiers rendered harmless" is also a complicated matter. No soldier who is conscious and not wholly paralyzed is "rendered harmless" in every respect. Every soldier with a hand or foot (or elbow) free might (in some circumstance) interfere with the capturing soldiers at a most delicate moment - even if they die for it. (And the modern US Code of Conduct for soldiers explicitly denies to soldiers the right to surrender, making it necessary for the opposing army to ALWAYS consider them "at war" regardless of how unarmed and defeated they might appear at any moment.) Not to mention barbarians, terrorists, and various others who simply don't accept the very idea of surrender. The opposing rules and theories of "surrender" have nullified any simple solution being definitively workable across all war situations: sometimes you may have to kill them to "render them harmless" to sufficient confidence.

    These are, broadly speaking, relatively minor quibbles about the intended application of ius in bello principles. I don't have any quibble at all that there ARE such principles. And some can be stated as universal prohibitions without a problem: no rape, ever.

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  16. That post does adress pretty well the doubt i presented on the other post. Thanks, Professor, for the quality work amid the polemics in your country!

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  17. Yes. It stands to reason. In almost all cases, soldiers are obliged to obey orders. Soldiers on both sides with the right dispositions who died fighting have perhaps had a better chance than most of reaching heaven.

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