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The Future of Just War: Index

The Future of Just War
Index
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. Section One. Jus ad Bellum
    1. Chapter One
    2. Chapter Two
    3. Chapter Three
    4. Chapter Four
  7. Section Two. Jus in Bello
    1. Chapter Five
    2. Chapter Six
    3. Chapter Seven
    4. Chapter Eight
    5. Chapter Nine
  8. Section Three. Jus post Bellum
    1. Chapter Ten
  9. Contributors
  10. Index

INDEX

Abidjan Peace Accord, 69–70

accidents (friendly fire), 83–84, 102, 106

accountability, 31, 33–34, 41, 105, 158

Ackerly, Brooke, 157

Aegis Combat System, and Iran Air Flight 655, 104

Afghanistan: as asymmetrical challenge for United States, 80, 102, 122

HRW report on casualties in, 122

and interventionist declarations, 148

and jus post bellum, 176

and Taliban, 176

and UAVS in AfPak region, 102

U.S. casualties in, 83, 84t

African Union (AU), and Constitutive Act to protect, 56

Agamben, Giorgio, 158

AirLand Battle doctrine, 86

airstrikes, target discrimination and planning of, 122

al Qaeda, and territoriality, 102

ambiguity, and moral agency, 107–10

America. See United States

Anscombe, G. E. M., 135, 139–40

Aquinas. See Thomas Aquinas, Saint

Aristotle, 17–19, 169, 172

armies. See military roles

Arms to Africa scandal, 69

assassination, 104–11

asymmetrical risk-free warfare: and Just War tradition, 80–90, 92–93, 102, 105, 118–23

theoretical challenges to, 79–82, 93

AU (African Union), and Constitutive Act to protect, 56

Augustine, Saint, 19–20, 33–34, 168–69

Aune, Bruce, 135

Austin, John, 134

authority: political, 17–29

procedural, 18, 22–23. See also legitimacy / legitimate authority

Bacevich, Andrew J., 88

Bagnoli, Carla, 60n26

Baldwin, Thomas, 142

Battle of Omdurman, 90–91

Baumann, Zygmunt, 85–86

beautiful soul trope, 12, 148–56

Beck, Ulrich, 85

Bellamy, Alex J., 4, 18, 20, 25, 62–63

Bellum Civile/Bellum Romanum, and reciprocity principle, 91

Bennett, Jonathan, 140–41

Bentham, Jeremy, 134

bias, as epistemic, 7, 17–21, 24

Bin Laden, Osama, 102, 112–13n21, 120

bombers, 89–90, 132–33, 140–41

Bosnia casualties, 84t

Boyle, Joseph, 137–38

Branch Energy, and EO, 68–69

Bratman, Michael, 135–37, 141

British Imperial Army, 90

Brown, Christopher, 4

Burma conflict, 175

Bush, George H. W., 87

Bush, George W., 54–55, 121, 148, 169

Bush Doctrine, and Just War tradition, 2, 20

Canada, on human security, 31

casualties: attitude toward, in Vietnam war, 79

in Battle of Omdurman, 90

correlation of planning and noncombatant, 122

and Doctrine of Double Effect, 117

U.S. military (1861–2011), 83–84, 84t

casualty aversion, and rethinking Just War tradition, 3, 9–10, 79–80, 83, 86–87

Catholic Church, 3, 19–21, 130

Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 83, 105, 169

Chan, David K., 141

Chisholm, Roderick, 135–36

Christianity, and development of Just War theory, 168

Christian theology, on legitimate authority, 19

Churchill, Winston S., 90

CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), 83, 105, 169

Cicero, 49–50, 52–53, 56

civilian contractors. See private military companies (PMCS)

civilians: and beautiful soul trope, 148–56

and ethics of just war theorizing, 156–59

gendered victimization of, 151–53. See also noncombatants

civil wars, 55, 63, 176

Clarke, Victoria, 113n21

Clausewitz, Carl von, 65, 151, 156

Clinton, Bill, 55, 120, 148

closeness, and DDE, 139–41

COIN (counterinsurgency field manual), 40

Cold War, as deterrence strategy, 36, 119–21

collateral damage, 105–6, 109–10, 117, 123

colonialism, 19–20, 35, 90–91, 157

communication, and cross-cultural competency, 42

community living, 23, 26, 41–42

conflict management, 42, 168–69

Constantine, and Christian Just War tradition, 168

Conventional Prompt Global Strike (CPGS), 115–16, 118–23, 127

cosmopolitanism, and R2P, 53

counterinsurgency field manual (COIN), 40, 92–93

Counter-Terrorist Center, 105

CPGS (Conventional Prompt Global Strike), 115–16, 118–23, 127

crimes against humanity, 41, 56. See also war crimes

cross-cultural competencies, 41–42

Darfur crisis, and AU intervention, 56

DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency), 121

Davidson, Donald, 135

decision making, 104–5, 124–25, 155–56

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), 121

democracy/democratic states, 4, 18, 20, 26

democratic peace, and human security, 31

deprivation, and R2P, 52

Der Derian, James, 89

Desert Shield, as casualty averse, 79

Desert Storm, as casualty averse, 79, 84t, 87

deterrence concept, 36, 118–21

Devine, Philip E., 140

diplomacy, as Cold War strategy, 36

discrimination principle: and CPGS, 115–16, 118–23

and jus in bello, 116–18

Doctrine of Double Effect (DDE): and diagram of standard reasoning, 132

ethics of, 11–12, 131–33

and harm as means to good, 141, 143

and I/F distinction, 131–33, 136–42

and noncombatant casualties, 102, 117, 131–33 (see also intent)

Pauline foundation of, 141

Doe, Samuel, 68

drones, 89, 103. See also unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS)

weapons/weapons systems

duality, of authority and legitimacy, 18–21

Duff, Antony, 136–37

Duff, R. A., 138–39

duty to protect, 48–50, 52–58. See also Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine

ECOMOG (Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group), 69

Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG), 69

education of military, 40–41

EIR (Ethics and International Relations), and DDE, 12, 131

Eldredge, Niles, 167–68

Elshtain, Jean Bethke, 2–4

Enlightenment era, and social contract, 33

environmental security, 33

EO (Executive Outcomes), 63–64, 67–73

ethical conduct: and civilian/combatant dichotomy, 156–59

as high bar for security sector agencies, 37–38

and jus ad bellum principle, 177

and jus post bellum restraints, 176–77

as new knowledge for military members, 41

and nuclear retaliation, 119–20

and prudential criteria, 62–63

theoretical roots of, 33–34

and UAVS, 98–99

and witness accounts, 158

Ethics and International Relations (EIR), and DDE, 12, 131

ethnic cleansing, 24, 51

European Security Strategy, 39

European Union (EU), on human security, 31, 39–40

Executive Outcomes (EO), 63–64, 67–73

feminism, and reconstruction of Just War theorizing, 17, 149, 151–52, 154–55

Finland, 36

food security, 33

Foot, Philippa, 139–40

foreign language skills, as expectation for military education, 40

Forrestal, James, 170

freedom, notions of, 26, 32–33, 45, 52

Fricker, Miranda, 18, 21–22, 26

friendly fire, 83–84, 102, 106

Gaddafi, Muammar, 24

gender: and intentional civilian victimization, 151–52

and noncombatant immunity, 149–50, 152–53

Geneva Conventions: and Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded, 174

and humanitarian law, 80–82, 91–92, 172

1949 formulation of, 172, 175

and 1977 expansion of legitimate authority, 19, 24

genocide, 24, 51, 55–56, 71, 167

Genocide Convention, 175

Gentili, Alberico, 3, 50–51

Giddens, Anthony, 85

Global War on Terrorism, 10, 20, 98, 108–11, 120–21, 126, 177. See also warfare

Gould, Stephen Jay, 168

Gray, Chris H., 79

Greek warriors, as heroic, 88

Grew, Joseph C., 170

Gross, Michael, 4

Grotius, Hugo, 34, 50, 168

Gulf War, 79–80, 87–90

Hanson, Victor D., 88–89

Hauerwas, Stanley, 2

health security, 33

Held, Virginia, 4, 18, 25

Herring, George, 87

Herz, John H., 99–100, 102–3, 109

Hills, Alison, 137–38, 140–41

Hobbes, Thomas, 168, 175

Holy Roman Empire, 19

holy war tradition, 19, 167

hostile intent, 122

HRW (Human Rights Watch), 122

humanitarian intervention: assigning obligation to, 53–57

in Cicero’s On Duties, 49

as duty, 8, 33, 48–49, 60n26

and individual soldiers, 61n46

as morally obligatory, 48, 50–53, 57–58

and R2P doctrine, 48, 51–52

UN adoption of, 19, 33

humanity: and Bellum Civile/Bellum Romanum, 91

crimes against, 41, 56

and intervention, 48–49, 51

postmodern context of, 104

human relations, 38, 40–41

human rights: and duty to protect, 8, 33, 48–49, 51–52

and jus post bellum principles, 172–74, 177–78

Just War tradition of, 171

protection of, as moral duty, 57

subordinated in wartime, 172–73

and UN Charter, 174–75

Human Rights Watch (HRW), 122

human security, 31–34, 39, 43, 177. See also security

Human Security Response Force, 39

Human Terrain System (U.S.), 40

ICC (International Criminal Court), 32

ICISS (International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty), 32–33, 48, 52

identity power, as subspecies of social power, 22–24

ideology, as secular religion, 85–86

I/F (intention/foresight) distinction, 131–33, 136–43, 146n60

IHL (International Humanitarian Law), 80–82, 91–92. See also Geneva Conventions

immunity principle, 9, 12, 98, 116–17, 149–50, 152–57, 159

income security, 33

India, peacekeeping role of, 36

Indochina (Vietnam) War, 79, 82–90, 84t

injustice, 21–26

institutionalization, and duty to protect, 55–58

intent: and DDE, 133–38

direct versus oblique, 134–38

governing principles of, 135–36

hostile, 122

moral significance of, 138–42

philosophical views of, 133–38

vis-à-vis desiring, 141

intention/foresight (I/F) distinction, 131–33, 136–43, 146n60

International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS), 32–33, 48, 52

international community, and human security paradigm, 31, 34

International Court of Justice, and nuclear weapons debate, 118–19

International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 172

International Criminal Court (ICC), 32

International Humanitarian Law (IHL), 80–82, 91–92. See also Geneva Conventions

International Relations (IR), 12, 21–22, 24–26, 131

intervention. See humanitarian intervention military intervention

IR (International Relations), 12, 21–22, 24–26, 131

Iran, threat-assessment for airstrikes against, 123

Iran Air Flight 655, 104

Iraq War, 23, 80, 84t, 169, 173, 176

Isaacs, Arnold R., 85

Islam, radical, and Western democracies, 20

Japan, on human security, 31

Johnson, James Turner, 65

jus ad bellum principle: and assessment of adversary’s strengths, 63, 71–73

and dual nature of authority/legitimacy, 18–21

and human security paradigm, 31

and moral agency, 98–99

and performance of protection, 150–51

and PMCS, 8–9, 62–73

and reasonable chance of success criterion, 62, 64–66, 71–73

and territoriality, 98–99

and transition to jus post bellum, 169

jus in bello principle: and challenge of risk-free warfare, 79–97

and DDE, 133

and discrimination principle, 115–18

and experience-based theorizing, 158

and moral agency, 98–99

and PMCS, 72

and proportionality principle, 115–18

and relational subjects, 157–58

and territoriality, 98–99

jus post bellum principle: critique of, 174–77

definition and defense of, 170–73

development of, 168–70

and intrastate/nonstate actors, 176

and just peace, 12

and Just War tradition, 177–78

and moral agency, 98–99

as post–Iraq War, 169

and territoriality, 98–99

transition to, from jus ad bellum, 169

and World War II rehabilitation, 175

Just and Unjust Wars (Walzer), 4, 167

just cause, 32, 63–66, 71, 152–53

justice, and human rights, 52, 173–75

just peace tradition, 169

just warrior tradition, 149–50

Just War theory/tradition: and aggressor-defender paradigm, 35

and Bellum Civile/Bellum Romanum, 91

and Catholic moral theology, 130

and changes in security sector, 30

and civilian immunity principle, 149–50, 152–56

as without civilians, 156–59

and conflation of sovereignty, 6

criteria for, 19, 48–50

and DDE criteria, 131–33

development of, 167–69, 171–72

and epistemic injustice, 21

and gender hierarchy tradition, 153–55

and humanitarian intervention principles, 48

and human rights, 172

and human security, 33–34

and IHL, 80

and jus post bellum, 177–78

and killing in war, 80–90

marginalization of, 3–6, 72–73, 82–90

and moral agency, 49–50, 81, 98–99

and nuclear strategies, 118–23

peace as objective of, 172

as performative, 149

postmodern challenges to, 108–11

as predating Westphalian system, 73

and prudential principle, 62–63

and reasonable chance of success, 62–63, 71–72

and reciprocity threshold, 92–93

and relational subjects, 157–58

and right intention principle, 101–2

and rise of PMCS, 72–73

and technological superiority, 82–90

and territoriality, 98–99

three parts of, 171

universalization of, 91

U.S. paradox of, 91–92

and Western superiority, 4

Kaag, John, 107

Kaldor, Mary, 39

Kant, Immanuel, 140

Kaufman, Whitley, 107

Kenny, Anthony, 134

killing in war, 80–82, 104–11

Killion, Thomas, 89

Kissinger, Henry, 79

Kitchener, Horatio, 90

Kochi, Tarik, 4, 18, 25–26

Korean War, 36, 84t

Kosovo, 36–37, 51, 80–81, 83, 84t, 148

Law, Charles, 89

Laws of War, 80, 88, 91–92, 133

Leahy, William, 170

Lebanon, 4, 84t

legitimacy / legitimate authority: defined, 18–19

dual nature of, 18–21

and epistemic bias, 7, 17–29

expansions of, 19–20

moral versus legal, 22–23

and nonstate actors, 17–29

as resting on righteousness and piety (Augustine), 20

as secular (Luther), 21

as sovereign (Augustine/Thomas Aquinas), 19–21

and territoriality, 99

Walzer’s view of, 20

liberal hermeneutic, critique of, 20

Liberia, U.S. special relationship with, 54–55

Libya, 24, 89

Liddell-Hart, B. H., 172

livelihood capacity, 42

local populations, 41

Lockean thought, and 1977 Additional Protocols, 24

London School of Economics, 39

Luther, Martin, 21

Luttwak, Edward N., 86

Mahdi Militia (Iraq), 108

Mandela, Nelson, 24

Manichean vision, and liberal hermeneutic, 20

Maritain, Jacques, 59n19

Maronite Christians, of Lebanon, 4

masculinity, and just warrior tradition, 149–50, 153–55

Mayer, Jane, 105

McCaffrey, Barry, 87

mercenary forces. See private military companies (PMCS)

Miele, Alfred, 134, 142

military contractors. See private military companies (PMCS)

military education, and cross-cultural competence, 40–41

military intervention: and cross-cultural considerations, 42–43

as just response of last resort, 52

and R2P, 48

and sovereignty, 102

military organizations, 35–43

military roles, 8, 30, 34–35

Miller, David, 53

mineral exploitation (mining), and PMC contracts, 68–69

moral agency: ambiguity of, 106–8

and asymmetrical warfare, 82–90

components of, 100–101

confounded in perpetual warfare, 104–11

and DDE Utilitarian-Absolutist split, 138–39

individual and collective, 101

and intention, 106–7

and Just War tradition, 98–102

postmodern challenges to, 108–11

and prudential criteria for jus ad bellum, 62–64

and responsibility, 142–43

moral legitimacy, 17–18, 21–22, 80

moral philosophy, on intentionality, 133–38

Morgenthau, Hans, 103

mutuality, 3–4, 6–7

mutual risk, and reciprocity principle, 81

nationalism, 86, 99, 150

nationality, moral relevancy of, 53

National Patriotic Front of Liberia, 68

NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), airstrike criteria for, 122

natural law, and legitimate authority, 19

netcentric warfare. See Vietnam War

New World, and intervention theories, 50

Nickel, James, 52

Nixon, Richard, 85

non-aggression, codified in international law, 19

non-aligned countries, as peacekeepers, 36

noncombatants: and asymmetrical warfare, 79, 81, 105, 118–23

and DDE, 130–33

and gender immunity, 149–50

HRW report on Afghanistan casualties, 122

and immunity principle, 12, 116–17

as intentional objects, 140–41

non-intervention, codified in international law, 19, 50–51

nonstate actors, 25, 52, 176

North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), airstrike criteria for, 122

North Korea, 123

nuclear weapons, and jus in bello criteria, 10–11, 118–23

Nuremberg war crimes trials, 175

Nussbaum, Martha, 53

Obama, Barack, 51, 102, 105, 115–16, 121, 148

obligation to intervene. See humanitarian intervention

occupation, as intermediate phase of warfare, 169

oil exploration, by PMCS, 68

Okros, Al, 45–46n20

On Duties (Cicero), 49–50, 52–53, 56

O’Neill, Onora, 53–55

Operation Desert Storm, 79, 84t, 87

Operation Geronimo, 102

Orend, Brian, 171

Pakistan, 89, 102

Paul, Saint, and DDE, 141

peace, 172, 174

peace agreements, 69–70, 174

peacekeeping, as role for non-aligned countries, 36

Peace of Westphalia, 21. See also Westphalian system

Peet, Jessica, 12

Persian armies, 88–89

personality/social pathology, as military education subjects, 41

personal security, 33

perspective taking, and cross-cultural competence, 42

Peterson, V. Spike, 153

philosophers of law, on intention, 134

Philosophically Sophisticated Terror Bomber (PSTB), 140–41

Plato, on legitimate authority, 17–19

PMCS. See private military companies (PMCS)

political authority, and epistemic bias, 17–29. See also legitimacy / legitimate authority

political violence, and hermeneutical injustice, 24–26

postcolonial era, and 1977 Protocol Additional Geneva Conventions, 19

posthuman warfare, and postmodern military, 89–90

postmodern America, and risk aversion, 86, 88

power concept, and assessment of adversary’s capabilities, 63, 71–72

private military companies (PMCS): and aftermath of contract work, 69

and assessment of power/success, 63–66, 70–73

development of market for, 66–68

Executive Outcomes (EO), 63–64, 67–68

as freelance contractors, 72–73

and reasonable chance of success, 8–9, 62–75

and related mining/mineral companies, 68–69

Sandline, 69–70

services provided by, 67, 71

Singer’s typology of, 66–67

spear analogy of, 66–67

procedural authority: defined, 18

and moral credibility, 22–23. See also legitimacy / legitimate authority

Project on Defense Alternatives, 122

proportionality principle: and CPGS, 115–16, 122–23

and DDE, 131–33

and jus in bello, 116–18

Protocol Additional Geneva Conventions (1977), 19

prudential principle, as jus ad bellum criterion, 62–64

PSTB (Philosophically Sophisticated Terror Bomber), 140–41

Qaeda, al, and territoriality, 102

Quadrennial Defense Review (U.S.), 40, 89–90, 115–16, 121

Quinn, Warren S., 140–41

rape, as associated with male dishonor, 151–52

Reagan, Ronald, and countercontrol nuclear strategy, 120

reasonable chance of success criterion: continuous assessment of, 71–73

future of, and privatized conflicts, 69–73

as moral principle, 64

and PMCS, 64–66, 70–73

as prudential consideration, 64

and Sierra Leone, 70–73

reciprocity (mutual risk) principle: in age of colonialism/European empire, 91

and asymmetrical warfare, 80–82

post–Vietnam War, 82–90

relationship building, and cross-cultural competence, 42

religion, embedding of, in American psyche, 85–86

remote weapons. See unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS)

weapons/weapons systems

Rengger, Nicholas, 2, 5

responsibility, and intention, 134–35, 142–43

Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine, 8

and allocation of duty to intervene, 53–57

and expansion of legitimate authority, 19

focus of, on prevention of crises, 58

and humanitarian intervention, 48

and human security, 31

limits to costs of, 56–57

and new vision of security, 32–33

and sovereignty, 6

Revolutionary United Front (RUF), and Sierra Leone’s civil war, 63, 66, 68–73

risk aversion: and asymmetrical warfare, 80–90, 92–93, 102, 105, 118–23

of European colonial powers, 90–92

of postmodern America, 86, 88–90

robots. See unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS)

Roman Catholic Church. See Catholic Church Roosevelt, Franklin D., 170

R2P. See Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine

RUF (Revolutionary United Front), and Sierra

Leone’s civil war, 63, 66, 68–73

Rumsfeld, Donald, 173

Rwanda: civil war in, 55

genocide in, and Just War criteria, 50–51

Sandline (PMC): and EO, 69

and Sierra Leone countercoup, 69–70

Sankoh, Foday, 68

Scanlon, T. M., 138

scholarship, on human security, 31

Schott, Robin May, 157–58

security: and conceptual change, 30–34

defined, 32–33, 37–38

environmental, 33

in EU, 31, 39–40

European Security Strategy, 39

health, 33

human, 31–34, 43

humanitarian, 35

income, 33

and jus in bello ethics, 158–59

and legacy ideas, 43

personal, 33

and R2P principle, 32

shifts in understanding of, 34–35

threats to, 33–34

security sector agencies, 37–43

self-defense, as states’

procedural authority, 19

self-preservation, and Grotius’s view of intervention, 50

September 11, 2001, and arguments for intervention, 51

Sharkey, Noel, 107

Shaw, Martin, 137

Shearer, David, 69

Shue, Henry, 52, 54–55, 57

Sidgwick, Henry, 134–35, 142

Sierra Leone, use of PMCS, 63–64, 66–73

Singer, Peter W., 5, 66–67, 109

sobels (epithet), 68

social contract concept, 33

social organization, as cross-cultural consideration, 42

social power, and epistemic injustice, 22

Somalia, 36, 84t, 89

South African apartheid, 24

sovereign states: and jus post bellum principle, 176

and legitimate authority, 18–21, 35

and mutuality, 6

as privileged actors, 23

as secular, 21

as security actors, 34

versus substate actors, 21

as Westphalian insiders, 17

sovereignty: and legitimacy, 26

as outmoded for Just War principles, 177

and responsibility, 45n15

and technology, 100

and territoriality, 99–100

Thomas Aquinas’s view of, 20–21

Soviet Union, and Cold War strategies, 119–20

Sri Lanka, 24

statehood, conflation of, 4–6

states: autonomous, 20, 22, 100–101, 104

as gendered, 15

as key security actors, 34

priority of duties to protect, 52–53, 55

right of non-intervention versus intervention, 51–52

Stern, Maria, 17

Stimson, Henry, 170

Strasser, Valentine, 68–69

Strategic Bomber (SB), and DDE, 132–33, 140–41

Strategic Resource Corporation, and EO, 68

substate actors, 17–18, 20–21, 23–26

success of just war, and principle of last resort, 64–66

Sverdlik, Steven, 134, 142

Sweden, peacekeeping role of, 36

Sylvester, Christine, 158

symmetry of combatants, and Just War tradition, 81–82

Syria, 148

Taliban, 102, 176

Tamilese, versus Sri Lankan state, 24

Tan, Kok-Chor, 54

targeted killing, 104–11

Taylor, Charles, 68

technology: and asymmetrical warfare, 82–85, 88–90

and transformation of power centers, 99–100

weapons, and moral agency, 104–11

Teitel, Ruti G., 175

Tenet, George, 169

territoriality, 99–100, 102–4, 108–11, 112n12

Terror Bomber (TB), and DDE, 132–33, 140–41

terrorism: defined, 25

difficulty in defining, 176

and epistemic bias, 24

and facial recognition of UAVS, 103

as subjective term, 24–25. See also Global War on Terrorism

Thirty Years War, and Peace of Westphalia, 21

Thomas Aquinas, Saint: and DDE, 131, 143

on jus post bellum, 169

on legitimate authority, 19–21, 34

on self-defense, 131

and social contract principle, 33–34

Thomism. See Thomas Aquinas, Saint

threat assessment, and proportionality, 123

Tilly, Charles, 34–35

Total Force policy, of U.S. military, 86

True, Jacqui, 17

Truman, Harry S., 169–70

UAVS (unmanned aerial vehicles), 10, 89, 98–99, 102–4

United Nations (UN): Blue Helmets as legitimate authority, 19

codifies Westphalian norms, 19

Genocide Convention, 175

on human security concepts, 31

ICC, 32

1998 Rome Statute, 32

1977 Protocol Additional Geneva Conventions, 19

peacekeeping forces, Chapter VI mandates, 36

R2P doctrine, 19

2005 World Summit document, 32–33

Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 51, 175

United Nations Charter on human rights, 174–75

United Nations Security Council (UNSC), 19, 56, 171–72

United States: as confounding moral agency, 104–8

effects of Vietnam War on, 85

hot pursuit agreement of, with Pakistan, 102

military casualty figures of, 84t

military mission/role of, 40–41

and moral justification for risk-free war, 79–97

as postheroic, 86

as privileged actors, 23

rise of postmodern society of, 86

universal freedom from want/fear, 32–33

unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS), 10, 89, 98–99, 102–4

UNSC (United Nations Security Council), 19, 56, 171–72

U.S. Civil War, casualties, 84t

U.S. Defense Department, Quadrennial Defense Review, 40, 89, 115–16, 121

U.S. military: and Air Force technology, 89–90, 115–16, 121

airstrike criteria for, 122

Army/Marine COIN of, 40, 73, 92–93

Global Strike Concept of, 115–16, 121

Human Terrain System of, 40

as postmodern/postheroic, 88–90

post-1973 reforms of, 86–87

and UAV pilot stress, 103

Utilitarians, 134–35, 138

Vattel, Emer de, 50

Vietnam Syndrome, and Weinberger Doctrine, 87–88

Vietnam War, 79, 82–90, 84t

violence: and conceptual shifts of security sector, 30

monopoly on, challenged by substates, 25

varieties of, 25–26

Walzer, Michael: on definition of success, 65

on identity prejudice, 23

Just and Unjust Wars, 4, 167

on legitimacy/authority, 18

on moral agency, 101

on noncombatants, 105

on obligation to intervene, 53

on sovereign state authority, 20

supreme emergency concept of, 176

on UAV pilot stress, 103

war crimes: and asymmetrical warfare, 81

and collateral damage, 105–6

as defined by winners, 173

global attention to, 41

against humanity, 41, 56

Nuremberg trials for, 175

postmodern challenges to identification of, 110–11

warfare: asymmetrical risk-free challenge of, 80–90, 102, 105, 118–23

evolution of, 11, 88, 90, 99–100

offensive versus defensive, 35

as perpetual, 102–4

phases of, 169, 175–76

as postheroic/postmodern, 88–90

pushbutton (Morgenthau), 102

and territoriality, 99–100. See also Global War on Terrorism

War on Terrorism, 10, 20, 98, 108–11, 120–21, 126, 177

weapons/weapons systems: Aegis Combat System, 104

ancient, 88

ArcLight missile system, 121

autonomous/unmanned, 88–90, 98–99, 104–8

ballistic missiles, 115–16

conventional versus nuclear, 11

CPGS, 115–16, 118–23

Davy Crockett missile, 121

hypersonic conventional missiles, 115, 123–26, 128n16

as legacy items, 43

Maxim machine gun, 90

nuclear, 115–16

and postmodern moral agency, 104–11

predator drones, 89

and sliding scale of autonomy, 104

Trident missiles, 121, 128n14. See also unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVS)

Weinberger Doctrine, 86–88

Westphalian system: critique of, 4

and epistemological injustice, 17, 21–24

and global war on terrorism, 108–11

and hegemony of, 25–26

and legitimate authority, 19, 21

maintained by privilege and power, 23

national military model of, 71

and social power, 22

and substate groups, 24–25

Wilcox, Lauren, 103

Williams, John, 99, 108–9

Wills, Garry, 173

Wilson, Woodrow, 172

women, as civilian beautiful souls, 150–51

World Trade Organization (WTO), and U.S. financial interests, 23

World War I, U.S. casualties in, 84t

World War II: and jus post bellum principle, 175

U.S. casualties in, 84t

and U.S. Just War theorizing, 170

WTO (World Trade Organization), and U.S. financial interests, 23

Yemen, posthuman weapons against, 89

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