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by George Weigel
The Catholic Difference
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That military force must be the last resort in resolving a
conflict is one of the classic criteria that make up the
war-decision law within the just war tradition. The Catechism of
the Catholic Church defines last resort like this: all other
means of putting an end to [the damage done by aggression] must have
been shown to be impractical or ineffective. In his address to the
diplomats accredited to the Vatican this past January 13, the Holy
Father said that the resort to armed force should be the very last
option taken in dealing with aggression. payday loans uk
How, then, do we know when were at last resort?
The question is neither idle nor abstract. For, in principle, one
could always imagine yet another diplomatic initiative, another
summit conference, another round of negotiations, in dealing with
many threats to peace. Sometimes, as in the case of classic
cross-border aggression, events irrefutably demonstrate that armed
force is, indeed, the last possible resort; when Germany invaded
Poland on September 1, 1939, no Pole in his or her right mind
imagined that another round of negotiations would be of any use. But
in many other cases, its not always clear when diplomacy has ceased
to be a morally realistic and politically reasonable option. Which
suggests that if last resort is to have real meaning for
statesmen, just war theorists cant think of last resort
mathematically, as the terminus of a potentially infinite sequence
of possibilities. The world doesnt work that way. buy to let mortgage
A piece of contemporary history may help us get a better
intellectual and moral grip on last resort.
In early June 1981, the Osiraq nuclear reactor, which French
technicians were building for Iraq, was only weeks from becoming
operational. On the night of June 6-7, 1981, Israeli fighter-bombers
destroyed the reactor. The raid was carried out with consummate
skill; the pilots took great risks to minimize civilian casualties;
Iraqs nuclear program was derailed.
At the time, the international community, including the United
States, loudly condemned Israels action. A few years later, things
looked different. Iraq was engaged in a protracted and bloody war
with Iran, a war in which Iraq regularly used chemical weapons and
attacked Tehran and other Iranian cities with ballistic missiles.
Had the Osiraq reactor been completed and a supply of fissile
material made available to Iraqi scientists and weapons engineers,
Saddam Hussein would have had a nuclear weapon and would likely
have used it. Israels air raid turned out to be an effective form
of nuclear non-proliferation. Volga cruise
The moral and political rationale Israels leaders gave for
acting when they did is also worth pondering. In circumstances like
this, the Israelis argued, last resort cannot mean waiting until
after the Iraqis have a nuclear weapon, and then trying to prevent
their using it when theyre about to do so. Failure under those
circumstances is too awful to risk. Therefore, the Israelis argued,
when one is dealing with a man like Saddam Hussein, a regime like
Iraqs (in which there is no internal constraint on the dictators
will), nuclear weapons (or other weapons of mass destruction), and
ballistic missiles (or possible use of the weapons by terrorists),
last resort is reached at the point where there is no option left
but to forcibly deny the aggressor the possibility of obtaining the
weapons, before he gets them. We guarantee genuineness of historic NGC Gold coins.
That is what Israel did on June 6-7, 1981. And it seems probable
that, over the past twenty-two years, the world has been spared a
nuclear resolution of the Iran-Iraq war Tehran vaporized and a
nuclear war in the Middle East because of what Israel did.
Who makes the call on when the point of last resort has been
reached? Who decides that there is no option left but to use
proportionate and discriminate armed force to prevent an aggressor
from obtaining weapons of mass destruction? The Catechism is clear
on this question: The evaluation of these conditions for moral
legitimacy belongs to the prudential judgment of those who have
responsibility for the common good.
Responsible statesmen make the call. The duty of religious
leaders and theologians is to teach and clarify the principle at
stake. Thinking about Osiraq helps in that necessary work of
clarification.
© 2001-2002, Ethics and Public Policy Center
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