S
smichhertz
Guest
GWright,The thing, in war, is that many people are called upon to commit immoral acts thanks to their participation in the war (which may be forced upon them).
I see war as a temporary suspension of normal circumstances, if you will, in that individuals might commit immoral acts (murder) but these are not sinful in the usual way, if the war meets our Catholic understanding of a “just war”.
From the Catechism, for a war to be a “just war”, it must satisfy these demands:
No amount of foreign death, military or civilian, was too much for them to bear in their efforts to win. And when you consider the massive toll of Allied lives an invasion of the Japanese home islands would have cost, the bombings seem proportionate. Especially when you consider the repeated Japanese refusal to surrender. They even refused again after the first atom bomb, which is why the second was necessary.
- It must be authorised by a competent authority (For America, in WW2, this is satisfied by the United States Government, a democratically elected body, declaring war on Japan in response to an unprovoked surprise attack by the Japanese).
- It must have a just cause (the American cause for war was just as they were victims of unprovoked, surprise aggression which cost many American lives, as well as a global “loss of face” for America).
- It must have a just purpose (which was to defeat Imperial Japan, an aggressive nation which attacked America)
- It must be a last resort (essentially a moot point here, as war was forced on America by Japan’s surprise attack. America did not make the decision and so cannot be accused of going to war too readily).
- the methods used must be proportionate (this is perhaps a debatable point. I would argue however that the bombings were proportionate. Imperial Japan was a dreadful, fearsome enemy - let us not forget - which was happy to invoke large scale slaughter of P.O.W.s and civilians, and terrifying (to the western mind) suicide attacks in their war effort.
An invasion of the home islands would only been successful if every last Japanese adult (males anyway) had been killed. Remember that surrender was a total dishonour to the Japanese mind and generally their troops would chose to die - even needlessly - rather than give up. I think the bombings were a tragedy, but I think they were a lesser - and less individualised - tragedy than would have occured, if America was forced to physically invade Japan. It was Japan who started the war and it was Japan who ultimately forced the bombings by refusing to surrender, when they had no remaining chance of success - see below also).
I think there can be no doubt that Americas war against Japan (as part of the wider WW2) was a just war. And so any act of killing within that war, while still being immoral, as all murder is, was “just”. The only debatable point is whether or not one thinks the bombings were proportionate - which must be weighed up against the methods Japan used to fight the war, and the likely massive human cost of victory via conquering the Japanese home islands.
- there must be a reasonable chance of success (America had every right to feel confident, being the dominant global industrial and military force of the middle 20th century)
You’re entire post is flawed because it hinges on the idea that a combatant killing another combatant in war is murder. It’s not. It is morally permissible for a combatant to kill another during war.
If we start out by saying “war is murder” then there is no way to argue for the legitimacy of war as we’ve ruled it out as immoral.
Secondly, you are correct with the Just War Theory, but that’s just used to justify the act of going to war, not for individuals acts of war after the fact. No one on this thread is arguing that the US wasn’t justified in going to war, only that the bombing of Hiroshima was immoral. There’s a difference.
Hope that helps.