I
The Price of Peace begins with George Weigel insisting that ‘Just War’ does not begin from a presumption against war, because it can be a duty to pursue a war if it is undertaken for justice.Footnote 1 This means that war is ‘not inherently suspect morally’ (p. 24).Footnote 2 Of course this follows from the very notion of a just war. Yet it is itself a suspect argument. Consider a parallel. For Afghan farmers to grow poppies is not inherently suspect morally, and may be a duty if it is the only way they can feed their families. Yet the likelihood that the poppies will lead to the evil of widespread indiscriminate heroin-addiction is so great that every effort must be made to find another way of sustaining the Afghan people. Similarly with war. If it were a means of justice it could be a duty. But the likelihood, in modern circumstances, of its causing widespread indiscriminate evils is so great that there is also a duty to avoid it wherever possible. In this sense, just war theory today does begin from a presumption against war, and Weigel is wrong to sidestep this point.
Yet he is right to make the key distinction between bellum and duellum, that is between ‘the use of armed force for public ends by legitimate public authorities who have an obligation to defend those for whom they have assumed responsibility’ (p. 24), and ‘the private use of armed force for private ends’ (p. 20). He is also right to say that a just war is an effort of statecraft to promote justice in pursuit of tranquillitas ordinis, or the tranquillity of order. But what is ‘statecraft’? And what kind of order?
Weigel seems to assume, as his argument proceeds, that statecraft is equivalent to the practice of states, and almost inevitably today this slides into the practice of international relations between post-Westphalian sovereign nation-states. But in itself statecraft does not necessarily mean this: it is rather the political management of any human community. Weigel traces his thought back to Augustine: but he does not point out (as Philip Bobbitt doesFootnote 3) that for ancient societies statecraft, and therefore justice in war, operated among communities quite different from modern sovereign states. Just war theory did not begin with conflict among nation-states, and will not end there either.Footnote 4 (Indeed Philip Bobbitt thinks we are already in the middle of a transition to what he calls ‘market-states’).
A second lack of definition concerns the ‘tranquillity of order’. What kind of order? Weigel insists it must be based on justice, security and freedom. But in that case, Pinochet's Chile, or the Burma of the generals, or any number of other unjust regimes would be offenders against this order. Trying to get rid of them by force could therefore be a duty in behalf of tranquillitas ordinis. But surely using armed force against all unjust regimes would be an offence against such order?
Finally what do ‘public’ and ‘private’ mean in the definitions of bellum and duellum? Weigel seems to be saying that the ‘private’ use of armed force in a duellum simply means a lack of competent authority. But the unjust side in a just war also, almost by definition, lacks such authority. Does this mean that the unjust side in a just war is necessarily a ‘private’ entity?
II
Weigel now lists four ‘new things’ which must affect the concept of just war in the twenty-first century (pp. 21-22). They are:
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1. the rise of ‘non-state actors’ capable of politically consequential force-projection over long distances;
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2. new questions about the locus of war-decision authority, given the fallibility of the UN and other international organisations;
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3. new technologies, such as precision-guided systems among the most powerful states, and the rise of suicide-bombing among non-state actors, combining to result in ‘asymmetrical warfare’;
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4. the falsity of the post-Westphalian assumption that all states are sovereign and equal, regardless of the nature of their governing regimes.
All of these raise new, difficult questions for just war theory. Weigel outlines his own answers to them by discussing some defective responses which need to be rejected (pp. 22ff).
The first defect is to view just war theory as a set of criteria, or hurdles, each one of which must be successively met in turn by the responsible politician before he can go to war. On the contrary, Weigel insists, the politician's job is first of all to prevent the evil. It follows that there are times when waging war is ‘morally imperative to defend the innocent and to promote the minimum conditions of international order’ (p. 23). Humanitarian intervention is the obvious case. But then humanitarian intervention is not exactly war, for it is ultimately designed to impose the rule of law, rather than compelling an enemy in a two-sided contest to do our will, which is what Clausewitz means by war.Footnote 5 Unfortunately Weigel (unlike Clausewitz) does not say exactly what he thinks war amounts to, so it is not clear how he regards humanitarian intervention. Yet today such intervention is the crux of international ‘statecraft’.
Weigel is correct in saying that classic just war theory ‘begins by defining the … responsibilities of governments, continues with the definition of … appropriate political ends and then takes up the question of means’(p. 24).Footnote 6 But he is wrong if his claim is that the in bello criteria of discrimination and proportionality are somehow subordinate to those of the ad bellum. His case is that the in bello considerations have of necessity less ‘surety’ about them than the ad bellum ones, because they are more contingent. Only the ad bellum criteria ‘have some measure of moral clarity’ (p. 25). This weird argument betrays the weakness of Weigel's theory of ethics. There is no less clarity about a claim that a certain act of war (say the bombing of Coventry or Hiroshima) entails the intentional killing of the innocent than there is about a claim that a certain authority (say the authority to invade Iraq) is ‘legitimate’ or ‘competent’. What kind of ethical theory denies this? Well, it might come out of a muddle between law and ethics; or between consequentialist ethics and virtue ethics; or between goals and intentions: all prominent muddles in much modern just war theorising. But at any rate, it is a shoddy argument.Footnote 7
Weigel also claims that it is wrong to think of the events of 11th September 2001 as ‘crimes’ rather than ‘what moral realism would have instinctively understood (as) … acts of war’ (p. 26). The argument for saying that 9/11 was an act of war is later amplified by the claim ‘that al-Qaeda and similar networks function like states, even if they lack certain attributes and trappings of sovereignty’ (p. 28).Footnote 8 This is a thoroughly muddled argument, apparently depending not on reason but on the ‘instincts’ of what Weigel calls ‘moral realism’. Given the unclarity, even redundancy, of the word ‘moral’ in Weigel's argument as a whole, the notion of ‘moral realism’ is far from clear. Anyhow it is more ‘realistic’, in the ordinary sense of the term, to see 9/11 as a crime rather than as an act of war. Al-Qaeda is much more like a gang of criminals than it is like a nation-state. It is engaged in a duellum not a war. Weigel does not spell out the attributes and ‘trappings’ of statehood which he admits al-Qaeda lacks, but surely they are fundamental: it does not enter into treaties, have a government, tax its members or claim membership of the United Nations. These are hardly ‘trappings’ of sovereignty in today's world: they are fundamental to statehood.Footnote 9 The mere fact that al-Qaeda can project force over long distances by means of suicide bombings etc. does not begin to show that it is a kind of ‘state’: only that in the twenty-first century we are faced with a new species of criminal gang, bent on using force for its own private ends (including its own private interpretation of Islam). Weigel's argument certainly does‘fudge’ the distinction between bellum and duellum (p. 28).
This is an important point because Weigel knows that many just war theorists refuse to recognise al-Qaeda as capable of engaging in war (bellum) because it is not a state, and he admits this as an important point of principle (p. 28). But his case appears to rest on nothing more than the notion that al-Qaeda presents ‘a legitimate military target’. But this again is muddled: a criminal gang engaged in duellum may indeed be a legitimate target for armed force, but this does not turn its criminality into warfare. This point is important because earlier, as we have seen, Weigel defines warfare (bellum) as ‘the use of armed force for public ends by legitimate public authorities who have an obligation to defend the security of those for whom they have taken responsibility’. The trouble is that this definition is just as applicable to armed policemen working against criminal gangs as it is to war.Footnote 10 Despite Weigel's earlier insistence on the distinction between bellum and duellum his definition does not capture the essence of war as distinct from private gangsterdom.Footnote 11 What this amounts to is that ‘asymmetrical warfare’ is better described as using legitimate armed force for policing criminals. Just as al-Qaeda and similar gangs have created an unprecedented species of criminality, based on new technologies and methods of wickedness, it demands new and unprecedented kinds of policing to cope with it.Footnote 12
A principle objective of Weigel's argument seems to be to justify preventive attacks by armed force on what he calls (but never defines) as ‘rogue states’.Footnote 13 In doing so he deliberately muddles the pre-emptive use of force with the preventive use. Pre-emption, in logic and in law is about the use of force to counter an imminent attack. It is generally accepted that such use is legally and morally licit. Whereas prevention is about the use of force to stop a merely possible future attack taking place. This is generally accepted as morally and legally illicit.Footnote 14 But of course the authority to undertake forceful preventive action is one of the defining differences between policing and war. To act preventively is normal for the police: it is an ordinary part of their job. And this fact rests on the insight that maintaining the rule of law is unambiguously a good objective. Whereas compelling the enemy to do ‘our will’, which is the aim of warfare, is far from being unambiguously a good thing. The objective of a belligerent state's will in war is not necessarily good at all. Only when its war is just will this be the case. This is why preventive action is rightly not permitted either in the ethics or the international laws of war. If preventive action is required to deal with an imminent injustice, this automatically shows that what is needed is police action, not war.
Of course, global policing of criminals also requires a new concept of competent and legitimate authority, because the criminality is now global. Hence, as John Langan says later in the book, Pope John XXIII was right (pace Weigel) to talk of the need for a ‘universal public authority’ (p. 21). The difficulty is how to create it. The world has already taken a few tentative steps in this direction, as the latest verdict from the International Court of Justice about Serbian atrocities in Bosnia shows. But this is only the tiny beginning of a process which has to go much further in directions we can hardly imagine as yet. Bobbitt's idea that the nation-state is on its last legs, and is being replaced by the ‘market state’ is relevant here.
Weigel says nothing new about ‘competent authority’ or ‘last resort’. But his attempt to show that a document like NSS-2002, which simply identifies pursuit of American interests with what the world as a whole needs, hardly needs elaborating on. For the thrust of genuine just war statecraft in today's world is that pursuit of national interests by the use of national armed forces, even in ‘self-defence’, is no longer a way to tranquillitas ordinis. John Langan accepts this conclusion. Something far more ambitious is required: the replacement of national interests by common human ones – a theme the Holy See is constantly hammering at in the UN and elsewhere, largely because, having no national interests to defend, it can be clear-headed. There are many factors, like global warming and the internet, pushing the world in this direction. Just war thinking is another to be added to the list.
My key point is not new. It is that Weigel is stuck in the old rut of seeing all use of armed force, including its use by al-Qaeda and suchlike, as a kind of warfare. Whereas the true development of the thinking behind ‘just war’ today leads us to see that the pursuit of justice in today's world, even by the legitimate use of armed force, has to be not by war but by something else: namely global policing. Rupert Smith, Michael Quinlan and others have recognised that today ‘industrial war’ between nuclear nation-states is virtually impossible. This is a gain of a sort, albeit at the unacceptable price of gross corruption of the national will in the strategy of nuclear deterrence. What none of them has yet gone on recognise is that ‘asymmetrical warfare’ or global criminality is really a quite different phenomenon; for which a quite new ‘use of armed force for public ends’ is needed. (Calling criminal gangsterdom ‘asymmetrical warfare’ is just a lazy way of reverting to the familiar categories of the past instead of recognising the novelty of the twenty-first century dilemma). Anyhow, this new use of armed force must not be designed to render the enemy powerless so that he has no option but to do our will (as in genuine warfare), but to force the enemy to obey the law by arresting, convicting and putting him out of our harm's way. Mary Kaldor says much the same thing in her essay. To be able to do this on a global scale is perhaps unimaginable today. Yet it is a necessity, just like solving the problem of global warming. Without this development (which is a genuine development of just war tradition, in Newman's sense of the term) mankind is probably bent on suicide. We had better start thinking about how to do it – soon.
III
The dialogue between the classic just war tradition and Philip Bobbitt's analysis of the future of states is of great interest. (Philip Bobbitt, The Shield of Achilles, Allen Lane, 2002 passim). In so far as many of the contributors to The Price of Peace continue to think in terms of nation-states, they are probably on the wrong lines if Bobbitt is right to point to a crisis of the nation-state. He sees a world of ‘market-states’ already emerging to replace them. Instead of existing only as long as they can preserve and defend a certain national territory (like nation-states), market-states exist primarily to promote choices and opportunities for their people. In such states, a delimited territory is replaced by an expanding market. And promoting the virtue of justice in international relations (as with classic just war theory) is replaced by promoting a menu of different values, from which people are free to choose.
But thinkers like Weigel, John Langan, Terence Kelly and Mary Kaldor (in The Price of Peace) are right to point to the continuing need for justice in the dealings between states (including justice in war). The problem is that the two claims about contemporary states are not really compatible with each other. For the market state is not really interested in justice. Thus it is concerned with international law only in so far as it consists of ‘the practices of the society of states’ (op. cit. p. xxix). In other words international law is law only as far as the states agree to regard it as such. Such ‘law’ is not designed for the cultivation of the virtue of justice, as genuine law is: rather it is a set of rules agreed to by market-states to enable them to further their own interests, i.e. to enlarge the range of choices open to their publics, which is the fundamental purpose of market states. Whereas the key requirement for a genuine rule of law on a global scale is that it should be possible for definitive verdicts to be issued and enforced. As John Langan points out, this ‘does not presuppose the prior transformation of states into morally or ideologically purified entities. Rather, it commends the establishment of an authority capable of adjudicating disputes among states and of enforcing its decisions’.Footnote 15
The trouble with market states is that, in the absence of any criteria for distinguishing good from bad choices, simply increasing the choices open to the public is a silly idea. Bobbitt's point can be considered, for example, in the light of the current debate about food-labelling and the role of Macdonalds and other food retailers. It is clearly silly to think about increasing the choice of food available to the public without first thinking about what is good food. Now practically by definition good food is food that nourishes people: that is its basic purpose. So offering more choice of foods irrespective of their nutritional value is silly.Footnote 16
It would make sense only if it was impossible to tell good food from bad, i.e. what nourishes people from what does not. Similarly, the promotion of the virtues is good for society: it is what nourishes human beings as social animals. Increasing the choice of ‘values’ available for people to adopt as social beings, without distinguishing the virtues from the vices among these values, is also silly. Yet, if Bobbitt is right, this is what the objective of the market-state is. Hence the market-state's lack of interest in justice and inter-state law, or in statecraft as the pursuit of justice.
Bobbitt insists, possibly rightly, that a world of market-states will not be a world free of wars; only that its wars will be of a new kind. But he does not ask himself the key question: would these be just wars? Now a just war, that is a war fought to promote justice, will be a war that in some way, however far-fetched, nourishes the globalFootnote 17 community. For that is the value of justice as a virtue: it nourishes all of us. Just as it is a silly idea to think of widening the choice of foods without regard to their nourishing ability, so too with choices of what we tend to call ‘values’. It is a silly idea to think of them without asking ourselves: are they ‘nourishing’ values or the reverse? This is why the tradition of thinking about just wars is crucial, and cannot be got rid of without disaster, since market states are not interested in nourishing the virtues like justice, only in promoting society's choices. But to do this today means that we have to think differently about the future of states. What is needed, if what I have said is right, and Bobbit is also right, is replacement of the obsolescent nation-state system with a belief in the common good of all humanity, together with a rule of law for this community which in turn implies the capacity for enforcing verdicts against breaches of this law, and a police force able to catch the gangsters like al-Qaeda who disobey it. The problem is: how to get to this point?