S
SemiThomist
Guest
I’ve enjoyed Fr. Barron’s videos and so I was interested on what he had to say about Just War and the whole Libya situation. This part, however, was quite troubling:
Does anyone know of any papal statements which would support (or contradict) what Fr. Barron is saying? If so, can we be sure they’re doctrinal, or just the Pope’s prudential opinion. I do find it hard to believe that if, say, a nation was comitting genocide and refused to stop it, the other nations of the world would be morally bound to just sit by as long as the genocidal nation kept their acts within their borders.*
*Assuming, of course, there was no other way to stop the crime.
Is this true? Has Catholic doctrine ruled out going to war when there’s no other way to stop the great evil that’s confined to one nation (ex. Rwanda genocide)? The Catechism never exactly says what he does, though it does mention “the aggressor’s” damage to “the community of nations” (though it could be said that a nation doing damage to itself is, by that very fact, damaging the community as well.)In regard to the second standard, things get a good deal murkier. Traditionally, legitimating causes included the repulsing of an unjust aggression against one’s nation as well as the righting of wrongs in other nations or cities. Thus, in accord with that second specification, Thomas Aquinas said that a nation could go to war to punish a wicked king. Here we might see a ground for our pre-emptive moves against both Saddam Hussein and Muammar Gaddafi. Also, it would seem to provide a justification for sending troops into, say, Rwanda while the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of innocents was proceeding there without any interference. On the other hand, the Popes of the twentieth century, taking into account the terribly destructive nature of modern warfare, have ruled out the righting of wrongs criterion and have accepted only the repulsing of unjust aggression as a legitimating cause.
Does anyone know of any papal statements which would support (or contradict) what Fr. Barron is saying? If so, can we be sure they’re doctrinal, or just the Pope’s prudential opinion. I do find it hard to believe that if, say, a nation was comitting genocide and refused to stop it, the other nations of the world would be morally bound to just sit by as long as the genocidal nation kept their acts within their borders.*
*Assuming, of course, there was no other way to stop the crime.