Of course not.Read the Catholic Encyclopedia article on War. Being ready, willing, and able to fight doesn’t make someone a legitimate target in war.
You also have to intend to kill the enemy.
Of course not.Read the Catholic Encyclopedia article on War. Being ready, willing, and able to fight doesn’t make someone a legitimate target in war.
Means, intent, and continued action in that regard does make someone a combatant.Read the Catholic Encyclopedia article on War. Being ready, willing, and able to fight doesn’t make someone a legitimate target in war.
Peace and God bless!
The bomb drop merely traded one set of widgets in a higher number for a lower set in perfect harmony with seeking to move away from the reality of the continued butcher’s bill (as GKC put it), and to effectively end the war as quickly as possible.According to Catholic teaching, both offensive and defensive war is lawful for a sufficiently just casue(sic). This cause must be serious enough to justify the great evils associated with war. No one may take part in an evidently unjust war. In waging war it is not permitted to do any act or use any means forbidden by divine or international law. Although murder is forbidden by divine law, killing of the enemy is permissible in war on the ground of the lawfulness of defense against an unjust aggressor or to secure one’s rights if no one in higher authority will protect them.
That would be willingness to fight. These people had not yet taken up arms and joined combat, so they were non-combatants. Have you read the article yet?Of course not.
You also have to intend to kill the enemy.
So you claim.That would be willingness to fight. These people had not yet taken up arms and joined combat, so they were non-combatants. Have you read the article yet?
Indeed most of us have.Have you read the article yet?
We have enough information to know that these people had not entered combat.So you claim.
Unfortunately there is not enough information to say if you are correct or not.
Good that you have read it. I’m not seeing anything in the context that would justify your argument, however. On the contrary here is what it says so others can see it easily:Indeed most of us have.
One of the things common to Catholic thought is acceptance of the whole to understand the meaning, not just a single phrase or word.
In this case, it would be wise to read the previous few sentences as well.
Destruction and killing is permissible to bring about submission, but this is checked by the proviso that the damage and actions can’t be immoral. It then goes on to describe what is immoral, including the intentional killing of non-combatants and the destruction of their property. The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki did both.This will cover what may be done by the warring power in exercise of its right. It embraces the infliction of all manner of damage to property and life of the other state and its contending subjects, up to the measure requisite to enforce submission, implying the acceptance of a final readjustment and proportionate penalty; it includes in general all acts that are necessary means to such damage, but is checked by the proviso that neither the damage inflicted nor the means taken involve actions that are intrinsically immoral. In the prosecution of the war the killing or injuring of non-combatants (women, children, the aged and feeble, or even those capable of bearing arms but as a matter of fact not in any way participating in the war) is consequently barred, except where their simultaneous destruction is an unavoidable accident attending the attack upon the contending force. The wanton destruction of the property of such non-combatants, where it does not or will not minister maintenance or help to the state or its army, is likewise devoid of the requisite condition of necessity. In fact the wanton destruction of the property of the state or of combatants — i.e. where such destruction cannot make for their submission, reparation, or proportionate punishment — is beyond the pale of the just subject-matter of war.
You have yet to show anything that is assumed in the judgement that the bombings are evil. I’d be happy to change my judgement if you can show some unfounded assumptions.People wish to label the bombings as evil, but to do so they must assume what is not actually written down.
The best that can be said is that there is not enough information to determine.
I agree. Now show me where the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had taken any combative action against the U.S. and I’ll be convinced that they were legitimate targets.Means, intent, and continued action in that regard does make someone a combatant.
I think the Church is fully aware of what war means, and it seeks to mitigate the evils of war. This is like saying that the Church is ignorant of what sex means, and that’s why it stands against pre-marital flings and contraception. The age of chivalry is long dead, and men can no longer be expected to treat women with dignity and respect, and women can’t be expected to maintain their virtue and resist temptation. How can we expect people to guard their chastity in the real world?The Church’s position, as you explain it, makes no sense to me, though I see the moral idea. It’s like the Church is ignorant of what war actually means. Further, I again see no difference in the way the bomb drops were conducted versus how the entirety of the aerial campaigns of the war were conducted.
Sure it does. first, the CCC nor the Encyclopedia defines it.Now you say that “non-combatant” is not defined in the Catechism, but it hardly needs to be.
Training drills.I agree. Now show me where the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had taken any combative action against the U.S. and I’ll be convinced that they were legitimate targets.
Removal of a damaged fallopian tube is morally neutral. The child is not targeted by the the surgery, but is indeed killed by the surgery. That is an evil effect, but not an evil act, because the action is the targeting of the compromised tube.
In the atomic bombings the non-combatants were among the targets of the attacks. They were not merely unintended but unavoidable victims of an otherwise neutral act. If a factory was the target but non-combatants were likely to die in the attack.
Back to the pregnancy example, the bombings are more like a direct abortion of an ectopic pregnancy, rather than the surgical removal of a compromised tube.
Peace and God bless!
Ghosty,jonbhorton: I agree. Now show me where the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had taken any combative action against the U.S. and I’ll be convinced that they were legitimate targets.
I think the Church is fully aware of what war means, and it seeks to mitigate the evils of war. This is like saying that the Church is ignorant of what sex means, and that’s why it stands against pre-marital flings and contraception. The age of chivalry is long dead, and men can no longer be expected to treat women with dignity and respect, and women can’t be expected to maintain their virtue and resist temptation. How can we expect people to guard their chastity in the real world?
In teaching on morality in war the Church isn’t offering tactics for winning the battle, it’s teaching about how to preserve the soul through the battle. If morality can’t be preserved through the war then perhaps the war shouldn’t be fought; it is better to lose your life but save your soul. I don’t believe that morality is impossible to preserve through war, but some have argued that in light of modern weaponry the whole concept of “Just War” must be rethought and called into question. They have said this not to argue that immorality is permitted, but rather that war might not be permitted.
I’m not convinced that it’s impossible to wage a moral war, but I’m open to the argument.
Peace and God bless!
Had a land invasion taken place the inhabitants of both those cities would have fought to the death, as you well know, because of the fanaticism of the Japanese.Now show me where the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had taken any combative action against the U.S. and I’ll be convinced that they were legitimate targets.
You obviously think morality wasn’t preserved by Truman and Churchill and have thus condemned them, yes?If morality can’t be preserved through the war then perhaps the war shouldn’t be fought;
I take it you apply that reasoning to Roosevelt Truman and Churchill. That both should have allowed the Japanese and Germans to have succeeded in their respective military aggression. Therefore by your reasoning, because the Allied leaders didn’t take the course of action approved by you they have now lost their souls?it is better to lose your life but save your soul.
So, are you now saying that we must have peace at any price?They have said this not to argue that immorality is permitted, but rather that war might not be permitted.
It would seem that your entire argument is based on on the the statements of the committee that selected the target. Had these individuals said something quite different - “…the intent of this single bomb is to destroy the enemy’s military capability and while there will be civilian casualties, this is not the intent of the bombing.”
If that was truly the intent then the issue would definitely change, but the answer might still be the same if all other things remained equal. The targeting would no longer be the issue, but the proportionality and the mitigation of destruction would then be the issues. Honestly I’ve not given much thought or study to the targeting capabilities of the time period to say what would be appropriate mitigation of damage, so I’m not capable of judging that hypothetical at this point.If such a hypothetical statement had been released, what would your position be?
Done.vz71: Go look in any dictionary for the definition of non-combatant. It is not a theological terms and needn’t be defined by the Church in order for it to be used.
And again, the Japanese people in both cities are placed squarely in the gray area of unknown.someone who is not involved in fighting during a war
And the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki had not been activated to engage in combat. Training does not equal mobilization, and it certainly doesn’t make one a combatant.Done.
One that does not engage in combat.
The specific examples cited were a surgeon and a chaplain.
Since these people were trained in combat, the definition leaves them firmly in a gray area.
It is not unknown. What combat had the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki engaged in?And here is another definition:
And again, the Japanese people in both cities are placed squarely in the gray area of unknown.
What is your definition of a combatant and non-combatant?It is not unknown. What combat had the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki engaged in?
I go by the definition found in dictionaries and international law. It’s easy to find online, and it’s the one used by the Church in its teaching.What is your definition of a combatant and non-combatant?
It’s becoming another game of run-around because of dancing around definitions.
Right, I get that, but the definitions VZ has found indicate obscure notions. What do you fill the obscurity with? I’m genuinely wondering as saying non-combatant or combatant is like saying water and ice are the same thing. Substantially similar, but totally different in actuality.I go by the definition found in dictionaries and international law. It’s easy to find online, and it’s the one used by the Church in its teaching.
Peace and God bless!