That is not true. The ***directed indicates intent ***of target. That may or may not be the destruction of civilians.
All cases of when the civilians are the target, when the attack is directed at them are immoral.
However, when the target is military, and the principal has made efforts to reduce or eliminate civilian casualties (such as warning of an impeding attack on a nearby military target) then there in no moral fault.
Actually, the CCC prefaces that with the word ‘indiscriminate’, which, in the authoritative Latin, means having a lack of discernment. So that is also a moral qualifier.
In other words, you have to really, REALLY, examine all your options before you can commit to using such weapons.
But it doesn’t exclude their use.
Indiscriminate
does not describe “intent”. It is an adjective not a qualifier. “Directed to” is a preposition and is also not a qualifier and does not describe intent.
**indiscriminate **
in·dis·crim·i·nate
Function: adjective
1 a: not marked by careful distinction : deficient in discrimination and discernment b: haphazard, random
Adjectives typically answer the following questions: What kind? Which one? How many?
A qualifier is a word or phrase that changes how absolute, certain or generalized a statement is.Qualifiers include:
Qualifiers of quantity: some, most, all, none, etc.
Qualifiers of time: occasionally, sometimes, now and again, usually, always, never, etc.
Qualifiers of certainty: I guess, I think, I know, I am absolutely certain, etc.
Qualifiers of relative quality: best, worst, finest, sharpest, heaviest, etc.
“Directed to” is a preposition (prepositions are words such as “to”)
Here’s how I break down the sentence:
Every act of war (noun or subject) / directed to (preposition ) / the indiscriminate (adj) destruction of whole cities or vast areas with their inhabitants (prepositional phrase) / is (verb) a crime against God …
The use of the word indiscriminate in this sentence is an adjective describing “destruction of whole cities or vast areas with their inhabitants” and is part of a prepositional phrase. Adjectives always appear immediately before the noun or noun phrase that they modify. It is answering what kind of “destruction of whole cities or vast areas”.
International law describes types of “indiscriminate weapons”:
Customary international law also prohibits the use of indiscriminate weapons. An indiscriminate weapon is one that cannot be directed at a legitimate military objective. The V-2 rockets used by Germany in World War II were indiscriminate weapons,
in that they could not be directed at any target smaller than an entire city. After the 1991 Gulf War, the U.S. Department of Defense reported to Congress that the SCUD missiles used by Iraq (which were not very much more accurate than the V-2) were indiscriminate, and that their use constituted a war crime.
crimesofwar.org/thebook/weapons.html
The very nature of Nuclear, Chemical & Biological Warfare is indiscriminate “in that they could not be directed at any target smaller than an entire city”. Again, this is not referring at all to “prudential” judgment, but to the nature of the weapon.