| United States Conference of Catholic Bishops,
Washington, D.C.
November 13, 2002
As we Catholic Bishops meet here in Washington, our nation, Iraq
and the world face grave choices about war and peace, about pursuing
justice and security. These are not only military and political
choices, but also moral ones because they involve matters of life
and death. Traditional Christian teaching offers ethical principles
and moral criteria that should guide these critical choices.
Two months ago, Bishop Wilton Gregory, President of the United
States Conference of Catholic Bishops, wrote President George Bush
to welcome efforts to focus the world's attention on Iraq's refusal
to comply with several United Nations resolutions over the past
eleven years, and its pursuit of weapons of mass destruction. This
letter, which was authorized by the U.S. Bishops' Administrative
Committee, raised serious questions about the moral legitimacy of
any preemptive, unilateral use of military force to overthrow the
government of Iraq. As a body, we make our own the questions and
concerns raised in Bishop Gregory's letter, taking into account
developments since then, especially the unanimous action of the U.N.
Security Council on November 8th. kummutid
We have no illusions about the behavior or intentions of the
Iraqi government. The Iraqi leadership must cease its internal
repression, end its threats to its neighbors, stop any support for
terrorism, abandon its efforts to develop weapons of mass
destruction, and destroy all such existing weapons. We welcome the
fact that the United States has worked to gain new action by the UN
Security Council to ensure that Iraq meets its obligation to disarm.
We join others in urging Iraq to comply fully with this latest
Security Council resolution. We fervently pray that all involved
will act to ensure that this UN action will not simply be a prelude
to war but a way to avoid it. Installation of spas and hot tubs located indoors are governed by the following requirements.
While we cannot predict what will happen in the coming weeks, we
wish to reiterate questions of ends and means that may still have to
be addressed. We offer not definitive conclusions, but rather our
serious concerns and questions in the hope of helping all of us to
reach sound moral judgments. People of good will may differ on how
to apply just war norms in particular cases, especially when events
are moving rapidly and the facts are not altogether clear. Based on
the facts that are known to us, we continue to find it difficult to
justify the resort to war against Iraq, lacking clear and adequate
evidence of an imminent attack of a grave nature. With the Holy See
and bishops from the Middle East and around the world, we fear that
resort to war, under present circumstances and in light of current
public information, would not meet the strict conditions in Catholic
teaching for overriding the strong presumption against the use of
military force.*
Just cause. The Catechism of the Catholic Church limits just
cause to cases in which "the damage inflicted by the aggressor on
the nation or community of nations [is] lasting, grave and certain."
(#2309) We are deeply concerned about recent proposals to expand
dramatically traditional limits on just cause to include preventive
uses of military force to overthrow threatening regimes or to deal
with weapons of mass destruction. Consistent with the proscriptions
contained in international law, a distinction should be made between
efforts to change unacceptable behavior of a government and efforts
to end that government's existence.
Legitimate authority. In our judgment, decisions concerning
possible war in Iraq require compliance with U.S. constitutional
imperatives, broad consensus within our nation, and some form of
international sanction. That is why the action by Congress and the
UN Security Council are important. As the Holy See has indicated, if
recourse to force were deemed necessary, this should take place
within the framework of the United Nations after considering the
consequences for Iraqi civilians, and regional and global stability.
(Archbishop Jean-Louis Tauran, Vatican Secretary for Relations with
States, 9/10/02).
Probability of success and proportionality. The use of force must
have "serious prospects for success" and "must not produce evils and
disorders graver than the evil to be eliminated" (Catechism, #2309).
We recognize that not taking military action could have its own
negative consequences. We are concerned, however, that war against
Iraq could have unpredictable consequences not only for Iraq but for
peace and stability elsewhere in the Middle East. The use of force
might provoke the very kind of attacks that it is intended to
prevent, could impose terrible new burdens on an already
long-suffering civilian population, and could lead to wider conflict
and instability in the region. War against Iraq could also detract
from the responsibility to help build a just and stable order in
Afghanistan and could undermine broader efforts to stop terrorism.
Norms governing the conduct of war. The justice of a cause does
not lessen the moral responsibility to comply with the norms of
civilian immunity and proportionality. While we recognize improved
capability and serious efforts to avoid directly targeting civilians
in war, the use of military force in Iraq could bring incalculable
costs for a civilian population that has suffered so much from war,
repression, and a debilitating embargo. In assessing whether
"collateral damage" is proportionate, the lives of Iraqi men, women
and children should be valued as we would the lives of members of
our own family and citizens of our own country.
Our assessment of these questions leads us to urge that our
nation and the world continue to pursue actively alternatives to war
in the Middle East. It is vital that our nation persist in the very
frustrating and difficult challenges of maintaining broad
international support for constructive, effective and legitimate
ways to contain and deter aggressive Iraqi actions and threats. We
support effective enforcement of the military embargo and
maintenance of political sanctions. We reiterate our call for much
more carefully-focused economic sanctions which do not threaten the
lives of innocent Iraqi civilians. Addressing Iraq's weapons of mass
destruction must be matched by broader and stronger
non-proliferation measures. Such efforts, grounded in the principle
of mutual restraint, should include, among other things, greater
support for programs to safeguard and eliminate weapons of mass
destruction in all nations, stricter controls on the export of
missiles and weapons technology, improved enforcement of the
biological and chemical weapons conventions, and fulfillment of U.S.
commitments to pursue good faith negotiations on nuclear disarmament
under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
There are no easy answers. Ultimately, our elected leaders are
responsible for decisions about national security, but we hope that
our moral concerns and questions will be considered seriously by our
leaders and all citizens. We invite others, particularly Catholic
lay people -- who have the principal responsibility to transform the
social order in light of the Gospel -- to continue to discern how
best to live out their vocation to be "witnesses and agents of peace
and justice" (Catechism, #2442). As Jesus said, "Blessed are the
peacemakers" (Mt. 5).
We pray for all those most likely to be affected by this
potential conflict, especially the suffering people of Iraq and the
men and women who serve in our armed forces. We support those who
risk their lives in the service of our nation. We also support those
who seek to exercise their right to conscientious objection and
selective conscientious objection, as we have stated in the past.
We pray for President Bush and other world leaders that they will
find the will and the ways to step back from the brink of war with
Iraq and work for a peace that is just and enduring. We urge them to
work with others to fashion an effective global response to Iraq's
threats that recognizes legitimate self defense and conforms to
traditional moral limits on the use of military force.
____________________
*"Just war teaching has evolved
as an effort to prevent war; only
if war cannot be rationally avoided, does the teaching then seek to
restrict and reduce its horrors. It does this by establishing a set
of rigorous conditions which must be met if the decision to go to
war is to be morally permissible. Such a decision, especially today,
requires extraordinarily strong reasons for overriding the
presumption in favor of peace and against war. This is one
significant reason why valid just-war teaching makes provision for
conscientious dissent." The Challenge of Peace: God's Promise and
Our Response (1983), #83.
December 12, 2002 Copyright © by United States Conference of
Catholic Bishops
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