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230 pp
6x9
"Sidney Axinn addresses the hardest questions raised by the experience of war and argues his way to clear and forthright answers. His book is a virtuoso display of intellectual energy and moral courage."
Michael Walzer, Institute for Advanced Study
Should a good soldier ever disobey a direct military order? Are there restrictions on how we fight a war? What is meant by "military honor," and does it really affect the contemporary soldier? Is human dignity possible under battlefield conditions? Sidney Axinn considers these basic ethical questions within the context of the laws of warfare and answers "yes" to each of these questions. In this study of the conduct of war, he examines actions that are honorable or dishonorable and provides the first full-length treatment of the military conventions from a philosophical point of view.
Axinn gives a philosophical analysis of the "Laws of Warfare" as found in the Hague and Geneva Conventions, which have been agreed to by almost every nation in the world. The aims of his study are to establish a basic twentieth-century framework for moral military action and to assist military personnel in analyzing their won professional ethic. Stating that moral reasoning is required by people in military uniform in a wide variety of situations, the author examines the question of the limits of military obedience.
Axinn argues for the seriousness of the concept of military honor but limits honorable military activity by a strict interpretation of the notion of war crime. Major chapters deal with military honor, prisoners of war, spying, war crimes, the dirty-hands theory of command, nuclear weapons, terrorism, and covert operations.
This philosophical study of the line between honorable and dishonorable military action cautions that in compliance with the war conventions professional military personnel and knowledgeable civilians must not lose their moral nerve nor abandon honor to satisfy immoral political requests.
"This is an excellent and long-overdue text on the ethics of the profession of arms. It will be welcomed by both students and instructors due to its straightforward yet entertaining approach to this complex subject. I recommend it highly for both the professional soldier and the citizen concerned with the way his or her country conducts its defense."
LTC John Nugent, USA
"In order to make warfare more humane, the [Geneva and the Hague] Conventions require nations to teach their provisions to their entire military and civilian populations. This book is written to promote and achieve that end, to defend the rules of war and to explain the reasons for them.
it goes a long way toward teaching the basic Conventions of war and showing strong reasons for following them."
Choice
"An interesting read. If war is immoral, can a war be fought morally? According to Axinn, yes."
Reference and Research Book News
Preface
1. Introduction
The kind of question involved in moral military action
Must every order be obeyed?
Forbidden weapons? Nuclear weapons? Terrorism?
The good soldier
Relations between officers and enlisted personnel
The moral foundations of soldiering
The order of topics
The scope and limits of this study
2. Morality: Why Sacrifice Myself?
What are moral questions? What is the meaning of duty?
The four different theories of morality
Universal fairness
Social utility
Individualism
Religious foundations
The range and limits of the different moral styles
The professional army ethic
Choosing among the four moral styles
3. Military Honor and the Laws of Warfare: When Can I Lie to the Enemy?
Military education
Honor: dual duties
Honor and personal risk: hero or coward?
Conclusions
4. Hostilities: All Is Not Fair
Protecting powers
The Hague Rules and some history
A declaration of war
The nature of law
Status of civilians
The principle of double effect
Hostilities: the general principle
The Hague Rules, Article 23
Protected buildings
Legitimate and illegitimate strategy
5. Prisoners of War
A history of the POW
Defining the POW Treatment of POWs
Humane treatment
Fact vs. fiction
6. Spies
Defining a spy
Treason Punishment for spying
The morality of spying
Morality out of uniform
Conclusions
7. Non-Hostile Relations with the Enemy
Parlementaires
Armistices
Surrenders
Safeguards
Military passports, safe-conduct passes, and cartels
8. War Crimes, Remedies, and Retaliation (Dirty Warfare)
Defining a war crime
Biological experiments
Taking hostages: "Surrender, or I'll kill this child!"
Remedies and reprisals
Punishment for war crimes
Terrorism and the concept of war crimes
A moral defense for terrorism?
9. The Dirty-Hands Theory of Command
Dirty Harry
Four styles
The so-called moral value of guilt
Collective morality
A Kantian solution to the problem of dirty hands
The principles of publicity
The fallacy of many questions
10. Nuclear Devices and Low-Intensity Conflicts
Nuclear weapons
Low-intensity conflicts, covert actions, and psychological warfare
11. Conclusions
The war conventions as a moral code
The war conventions as international law
Education: military and civilian
Military honor: a romantic myth or a serious matter?
The need for publicity
Enemy morality
Summary of themes
Appendix A: Are the Hague and Geneva Conventions Obsolete?
Appendix B: Topics Not Considered in the Text
Appendix C: Text on the Laws of Land Warfare
Notes
Brief Bibliography
Index
Sidney Axinn is Professor of Philosophy at Temple University.
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