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Moral Clarity in a Time of War
First Things ^ | December 2002 | George Weigel

Posted on 01/15/2003 9:05:27 AM PST by Cicero

Moral Clarity in a Time of War


George Weigel


Copyright (c) 2002 First Things 128 (December 2002): xx-xx.

In Book Three of Tolstoy’s epic, War and Peace, the hero, Pierre Bezukhov, arrives at the battlefield of Borodino to find that the fog of war has descended, obscuring everything he had expected to be clear. There is no order, there are no familiar patterns of action, all is contingency. He could not, Count Bezukhov admits, “even distinguish our troops from the enemy’s.” And the worst is yet to come, for once the real fighting begins, chaos takes over in full.

From the Iliad to Tolstoy and beyond, that familiar trope, “the fog of war,” has been used to evoke the millennia–old experience of the radical uncertainty of combat. The gut–wrenching opening scenes of Saving Private Ryan brought this ancient truth home to a new generation of Americans: in even the most brilliantly planned military campaign, such as the Allied invasion of Normandy, contingency is soon king, and overcoming it draws on a man’s deepest reserves of courage and wit.

Some analysts, however, take the trope of “the fog of war” a philosophical step further and suggest that warfare takes place beyond the reach of moral reason, in a realm of interest and necessity where moral argument is a pious diversion at best and, at worst, a lethal distraction from the deadly serious business at hand.

To which men and women formed by biblical religion, by the great tradition of Western moral philosophy, or by the encounter between biblical religion and moral philosophy that we call moral theology must say: “No, that is a serious mistake.” Nothing human takes place outside the realm or beyond the reach of moral reason. Every human action takes place within the purview of moral judgment.

Thus moral muteness in a time of war is a moral stance: it can be a stance born of fear; it can be a stance born of indifference; it can be a stance born of cynicism about the human capacity to promote justice, freedom, and order, all of which are moral goods. But whatever its psychological, spiritual, or intellectual origins, moral muteness in wartime is a form of moral judgment–a deficient and dangerous form of moral judgment.

That is why the venerable just war tradition–a form of moral reasoning that traces its origins to St. Augustine in fifth–century North Africa–is such an important public resource. For fifteen hundred years, as it has been developed amidst the historical white water of political, technological, and military change, the just war tradition has allowed men and women to avoid the trap of moral muteness, to think through the tangle of problems involved in the decision to go to war and in the conduct of war itself–and to do all that in a way that recognizes the distinctive realities of war. Indeed, in the national debate launched by the war against terrorism and the threat of outlaw states armed with weapons of mass destruction, we can hear echoes of the moral reasoning of Augustine and his successors:

What is the just cause that would justify putting our armed forces, and the American homeland, in harm’s way?

Who has the authority to wage war? The President? The President and Congress? The United States acting alone? The United States with a sufficient number of allies? The United Nations?

Is it ever right to use armed force first? Can going first ever be, not just morally permissible, but morally imperative?

How can the use of armed force contribute to the pursuit of justice, freedom, and order in world affairs?

That these are the questions that instinctively emerge in the American national debate suggests that the just war tradition remains alive in our national cultural memory. And that is a very good thing. But it is also a somewhat surprising thing, for the past thirty years have witnessed a great forgetting of the classic just war tradition among those who had long been assumed to be its primary intellectual custodians: the nation’s religious leaders, moral philosophers, and moral theologians. That forgetting has been painfully evident in much of the recent commentary from religious leaders in the matter of U.S. policy toward Iraq, commentary that is often far more dependent on political and strategic intuitions of dubious merit than on solid moral reasoning. The fact of the matter today is that the just war tradition, as a historically informed method of rigorous moral reasoning, is far more alive in our service academies than in our divinity schools and faculties of theology; the just war tradition “lives” more vigorously in the officer corps, in the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and at the higher levels of the Pentagon than it does at the National Council of Churches, in certain offices at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, or on the Princeton faculty. (There are different degrees of forgetfulness here, of course, and recent statements by the U.S. Catholic bishops on the question of Iraq were of a higher degree of intellectual seriousness than the effusions of other national religious bodies. But the bishops’ statements did, I would argue, continue a pattern of just war forgetfulness whose origins I shall discuss below.)

This “forgetting” in the places where the just war tradition has been nurtured for centuries has led to confusions about the tradition itself. Those confusions have, in turn, led to distorted and, in some cases, irresponsible analyses from the quarters to which Americans usually look for moral guidance. That is why it is imperative that the just war tradition be retrieved and developed in these first perilous years of the twenty–first century. At issue is the public moral hygiene of the Republic–and our national capacity to think with moral rigor about some very threatening realities of today’s world.

(Excerpt) Read more at firstthings.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: iraq; justwartheory
This important article is too long to post here in its entirety, but it's a very important read. Ultimately, a moral and religious case must be made for Bush's War Against Terror, which will by no means end with Iraq. Otherwise we may see another foolish peace movement really take root against it. This article is a good starting place.
1 posted on 01/15/2003 9:05:27 AM PST by Cicero
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To: Cicero
That is a very interesting article, but it is fraught with so much idealism that the basic principles mentioned in it are not relevant. In fact, after reading this article I am more convinced than ever that our government has it all wrong.

If a government's first responsibility is to protect its citizens and promote a certain "order" that offers the best chance to respect human rights, then the United States has a moral obligation, not to topple regimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, but to round up Muslims in this country and send them out to sea on barges.

And the lawyers and civil libertarians must go with them.

And if anyone complains, then the barges will be set on fire.

There is no reason to present a high-minded discourse on the application of "just war" principles to the war against terrorism without first recognizing that "war" is silly and pointless unless it deals with the most direct threats to this nation and its people.

2 posted on 01/15/2003 9:17:17 AM PST by Alberta's Child
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To: Cicero

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3 posted on 01/15/2003 9:28:54 AM PST by cake_crumb (REFUSE TO BE ASSIMILATED INTO THE COLLECTIVE! DONATE TO FR!!)
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To: Cicero
The United States HAS the perfect moral reason for this war: the terrorists verbalized their intent to destroy the United States, and then the terrorists ACTED upon that which they verbalized and murdered over 3,000 people, in two attacks, in a period of minutes.

Now we need severe limits on immigration, and then we'll have a good plan.

4 posted on 01/15/2003 9:31:47 AM PST by cake_crumb (REFUSE TO BE ASSIMILATED INTO THE COLLECTIVE! DONATE TO FR!!)
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To: Alberta's Child
I agree with you that Bush's foreign policy toward terrorism has been more distinguished than his domestic policy.

IMHO, his greatest failure has been not to deal with the clintonoids everywhere in the government. Maybe there would still be problems with homeland security, but as it is, hardly anything has been done yet.
5 posted on 01/15/2003 1:34:35 PM PST by Cicero
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To: Cicero
The United States has been "at war" since 9-11. The enemy has been at war with the United States since, at least,the incident of the Marine barracks in Lebanon but The US finally made it a two sided war after 9-11. We do not have the option of considering whether this a just war and it is not "pre-emptive", The enemy struck us first- over and over.
Does a just war doctrine make self defense illegitimate.
6 posted on 01/15/2003 3:22:14 PM PST by arthurus
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