| by George Weigel
The Catholic Difference
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For more than fifteen hundred years, the venerable just war
tradition has helped responsible Christians think through the many
moral problems involved in deciding to go to war and in the conduct
of war itself and to do so in ways that recognize the distinctive
realities of warfare. That this tradition lives in our cultural
memory is demonstrated by the fact that Americans have,
instinctively, been debating the future of the war against terrorism
and the possible use of military force against outlaw states with
weapons of mass destruction in classic just war categories: all deals
What just cause would justify putting U.S. armed forces, and the
American homeland, in harms way?
Who has the moral authority to wage war? The President? The
President and Congress? The United States acting alone? The United
States with sufficient allies? The United Nations?
Is it ever right to use armed force first? Can going first ever
be morally imperative, not just morally permissible?
Can the use of armed force contribute to building peace, justice,
and freedom in the world?
It says something important about American society that, in
considering military action, we put these questions at the front of
the debate. That is emphatically not the case in other countries,
where foreign affairs are considered a realm of amorality. Americans
dont think that way. And thats all to the good. Compatibility and adult dating service focused on Adultfriendfinder.com site.
On the other hand, it should be a cause for concern that many of
the nations religious leaders and religious intellectuals seem
unfamiliar with the moral logic of just war thinking and with what
we might call the just war traditions location.
Judging from the recent debate, it seems widely assumed by many
religious commentators that the just war tradition is a set of
hurdles primarily having to do with the possible effects of war
that religious thinkers set for policymakers. If the policy-makers
make it over the hurdles, then religious leaders will, in
recompense, offer at least a tacit blessing to the use of armed
force. That, I suggest, is a very bad understanding of the just war
tradition. cute ukrainian marriage agency pretty elena
The just war tradition does not begin (as, against the historical
evidence, so many religious leaders today insist), with a
presumption against violence or a presumption against war. Why?
Because to begin there is to begin with questions of means, not
ends. Rather, as a tradition of morally serious statecraft, the just
war tradition begins with the moral obligation of legitimate
authorities to defend the security of those for whom they have
assumed responsibility. Real just war thinking begins, in other
words, with defining the morally appropriate political ends to be
sought in a given situation: for example, the vindication of
international law and prudent statesmanship by the disarmament of a
lawless regime feverishly seeking weapons of mass destruction. Real
just war thinking gets to questions of means Can this be done
through diplomacy and negotiation? Can this be done only by the use
of proportionate and discriminate armed force? afterwards.
Thus, in the just war tradition, means get related to ends in a
morally serious way. To start with calculations about means is to
start in the wrong place and starting in the wrong place, in moral
theology as well as in other areas of life, often gets you to the
wrong destination.
There also seems to be some confusion about where the just war
tradition is located or, to put it another way, who the
tradition is for. I suggest that it is primarily for statesmen for
those who have assumed the burden of moral responsibility for public
policy. The proper role of democratically responsible religious
leaders and public intellectuals is to clarify the moral issues at
stake, while recognizing that there is a charism of political
discernment that is unique to the vocation of public service.
Religious leaders (like the Jesuit superiors of the United States)
who suggest to the President of the United States that they have
superior insight into the future of U.S.-Iraqi relations (because of
the Jesuits alumni network with Iraqis and Iraqi-expatriates) make
themselves (and, far worse, the just war tradition they debase) look
absurd.
A great public resource should be better cared for by its
traditional custodians.
© 2001-2002, Ethics and Public Policy Center
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