When state leaders decide to bomb a city like Belgrade without any formal end 
to peace, they are not engaging in war, but in a form of state terrorism. 

 

Published on  <http://www.taipeitimes.com/> Taipei Times
 <http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2009/01/05/2003432982> 
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2009/01/05/2003432982

The return of just wars?

Wars may never be eliminated, but can they be humanized or justified? 

By Robert Spaemann

Monday, Jan 05, 2009, Page 9 

As war loomed over Kosovo 10 years ago, Germany$B!G(Bs then foreign minister, 
Joschka Fischer, said that the principle that had always governed his 
involvement in politics was: $B!H(BNever again war; never again Auschwitz!$B!I(B

Ethnic cleansing and violence in Kosovo, however, soon made it clear to him 
that there were moments when one had to choose between those two imperatives: a 
new Auschwitz sometimes could be prevented only by means of war. 

The idea of a $B!H(Bjust war,$B!I(B legitimized by a justa causa (just cause), 
though scorned for many years, is thus back in vogue. The notion used to be 
frowned upon because any warring party tends to view its own cause as just. 
Moreover, in the absence of an impartial judge, a winner can always impose his 
$B!H(Btruth$B!I(B upon the vanquished, as happened with the Treaty of 
Versailles after World War I. 

While $B!H(Bjust wars$B!I(B seem to be back, international law has also come to 
condemn waging aggressive ($B!H(Bunjust$B!I(B) war as a punishable crime, with 
the consequence that every warring party now declares its wars to be a defense 
against foreign attack, much as Adolf Hitler did in 1939. Indeed, all war 
ministries have become $B!H(Bdefense ministries,$B!I(B leaving one to wonder 
against whom a country must be defended if there are no longer any attackers. 
But in this matter as well, the winner gets to judge who was the aggressor, so 
it is fortunate that Hitler did not prevail. 

Of course, military intervention for purposes beyond defending one$B!G(Bs 
country remains possible, but requires a UN Security Council resolution. The 
latter alone, provided no permanent member of the Security Council disagrees, 
can decide whether a war is legitimized by a $B!H(Bjust cause$B!I(B (nowadays 
generally a gross breach of human rights). 

The Security Council$B!G(Bs permanent members thus remain legibus soluti, ie, 
sovereign in the seventeenth-century sense of the word, meaning $B!H(Bable to 
do evil with impunity.$B!I(B 

HUMAN RIGHTS

The right of humanitarian intervention limits the sovereignty of all other 
countries. Behind this is the notion that respect for human rights can be 
enforced externally, together with the hope that rulers will behave better 
because they recognize that they may be held accountable for violating human 
rights. 

Whether this hope is justified remains to be seen. In the meantime, the return 
to the idea of a $B!H(Bjust cause$B!I(B carries big risks, especially evident 
when, as happened in Georgia, a great power claims the mantle of a protector of 
the rights of its nationals in a neighboring country. If this idea stands, 
Russian minorities from the Baltic to the Crimea may turn out to be ticking 
time bombs. 

The idea of the $B!H(Bmoral indifference$B!I(B of the law of war is based on 
the recognition that wars will not be eliminated, and that they should instead 
be limited and their horrors mitigated by universally applicable rules of 
conduct. Precisely because it is less ambitious than the principle of 
$B!H(Bjust war,$B!I(B moral indifference has been tremendously successful in 
mitigating war$B!G(Bs horrors by banning some particularly inhuman types of 
weapons, forcing armies to protect civilians and accord humane treatment to 
prisoners of war, banning annexations, etc. 

The pacifist Leo Tolstoy, in his novel War and Peace, regarded this pruning and 
tending of war as cynical. Wars shouldn$B!G(Bt happen at all, he believed. On 
the other hand, Tolstoy justified the unrestrained and unregulated eruption of 
public anger and the furious slaying of retreating French soldiers by Russian 
peasants. Mao Zedong ($BLS_7El(B) would approve. 

Pacifists want to understand war as a lawless condition that should be 
abolished. But those who recognize that humanity won$B!G(Bt succeed in stopping 
war seek, instead, to contain and $B!H(Bhumanize$B!I(B it. 

The medieval popes practiced this wisdom when they limited permissible wars to 
certain times of year. But any $B!H(Blast stand$B!I(B type of warfare refuses 
to recognize the possibility of a future war for which it may be a precedent. 
Such a war will always be without rules, always a total war. After all, when 
it$B!G(Bs do or die, no laws apply. 

LIMITED AIMS

So the object of international law is not to ban $B!H(Bunjust$B!I(B wars and 
permit $B!H(Bjust$B!I(B ones, but to assure that wars are waged for limited 
aims, so that they don$B!G(Bt rage out of control. You have to be able to lose 
without losing everything. The language of justice and injustice, and demands 
of unconditional surrender and criminal retribution for the vanquished only 
promote $B!=(B indeed, provoke $B!=(B total war. 

The flip side of the criminalization of $B!H(Baggressive$B!I(B war is the fact 
that peace is also no longer a reliable legal state that can be ended only by a 
formal declaration of war. When state leaders decide to bomb a city like 
Belgrade without any formal end to peace, they are not engaging in war, but in 
a form of state terrorism. Terrorism will prevail if its mentality infects the 
civilized world, and if state leaders resort to terror to fight terror. 
Fighting terrorism is not a war, because terrorism itself is not a warring 
party, but a means to an end. Terrorists, when caught, are subject to criminal 
sanctions and punishment under the law. 

Countries unwilling or unable to prevent terrorist violence emanating from 
their territory forfeit their right to territorial integrity, and others can 
declare war on them to pursue the problem at its root. But those who adhere to 
the motto $B!H(BTerror can only be countered with terror$B!I(B should remember 
who coined that phrase: Adolf Hitler. 



Robert Spaemann is a leading Roman Catholic philosopher and professor of 
Philosophy at the University of Munich and the University of Salzburg. 

 

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