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Single Idea 23583

[filed under theme 25. Social Practice / E. Policies / 1. War / b. Justice in war ]

Full Idea

When a country's right to war is questionable and uncertain, the constraints on the means it can use are all the more severe.

Gist of Idea

If an aggression is unjust, the constraints on how it is fought are much stricter

Source

John Rawls (A Theory of Justice [1972], p.379), quoted by Michael Walzer - Just and Unjust Wars 14

Book Ref

Walzer,Michael: 'Just and Unjust Wars' [Penguin 1984], p.229


A Reaction

This is Rawls opposing the idea that combatants are moral equals. The restraints are, of course, moral. In practice aggressors are usually the worst behaved.


The 14 ideas with the same theme [ethics of how wars are fought]:

Our obedience to the king erases any crimes we commit for him [Shakespeare]
It is permissible in a just cause to capture a place in neutral territory [Grotius]
War gives no right to inflict more destruction than is necessary for victory [Rousseau]
When war was a profession, customary morality justified any act of war [Weil]
If an aggression is unjust, the constraints on how it is fought are much stricter [Rawls]
Jus ad bellum and Jus in bello are independent; unjust wars can be fought in a just way [Walzer]
For moral reasons, a just war must be a limited war [Walzer]
Napoleon said 'I don't care about the deaths of a million men' [Walzer]
Proportionality in fighting can't be judged independently of the justice of each side [McMahan]
Can an army start an unjust war, and then fight justly to defend their own civilians? [McMahan]
Soldiers cannot freely fight in unjust wars, just because they behave well when fighting [McMahan]
The law of war differs from criminal law; attacking just combatants is immoral, but legal [McMahan]
If the unjust combatants are morally excused they are innocent, so how can they be killed? [McMahan]
During wars: proportional force, fair targets, fair weapons, safe prisoners, no reprisals [Tuckness/Wolf]