Just war theory explained

The just war theory (Latin: bellum iustum)[1] [2] is a doctrine, also referred to as a tradition, of military ethics that aims to ensure that a war is morally justifiable through a series of criteria, all of which must be met for a war to be considered just. It has been studied by military leaders, theologians, ethicists and policymakers. The criteria are split into two groups: Latin: [[#Jus ad bellum|jus ad bellum]] ("right to go to war") and Latin: [[#Jus in bello|jus in bello]] ("right conduct in war"). The first group of criteria concerns the morality of going to war, and the second group of criteria concerns the moral conduct within war.[3] There have been calls for the inclusion of a third category of just war theory (jus post bellum) dealing with the morality of post-war settlement and reconstruction. The just war theory postulates the belief that war, while it is terrible but less so with the right conduct, is not always the worst option. Important responsibilities, undesirable outcomes, or preventable atrocities may justify war.[3]

Opponents of the just war theory may either be inclined to a stricter pacifist standard (proposing that there has never been nor can there ever be a justifiable basis for war) or they may be inclined toward a more permissive nationalist standard (proposing that a war need only to serve a nation's interests to be justifiable). In many cases, philosophers state that individuals do not need to be plagued by a guilty conscience if they are required to fight. A few philosophers ennoble the virtues of the soldier while they also declare their apprehensions for war itself.[4] A few, such as Rousseau, argue for insurrection against oppressive rule.

The historical aspect, or the "just war tradition", deals with the historical body of rules or agreements that have applied in various wars across the ages. The just war tradition also considers the writings of various philosophers and lawyers through history, and examines both their philosophical visions of war's ethical limits and whether their thoughts have contributed to the body of conventions that have evolved to guide war and warfare.[5]

In the twenty-first century there has been significant debate between traditional just war theorists, who largely support the existing law of war and develop arguments to support it, and revisionists who reject many traditional assumptions, although not necessarily advocating a change in the law.[6] [7]

Origins

Ancient Egypt

A 2017 study found that the just war tradition can be traced as far back as to Ancient Egypt.[8] Egyptian ethics of war usually centered on three main ideas, these including the cosmological role of Egypt, the pharaoh as a divine office and executor of the will of the gods, and the superiority of the Egyptian state and population over all other states and peoples. Egyptian political theology held that the pharaoh had the exclusive legitimacy in justly initiating a war, usually claimed to carry out the will of the gods. Senusret I, in the Twelfth Dynasty, claimed, "I was nursed to be a conqueror...his [Atum's] son and his protector, he gave me to conquer what he conquered." Later pharaohs also considered their sonship of the god Amun-Re as granting them absolute ability to declare war on the deity's behalf. Pharaohs often visited temples prior to initiating campaigns, where the pharaoh was believed to receive their commands of war from the deities. For example, Kamose claimed that "I went north because I was strong (enough) to attack the Asiatics through the command of Amon, the just of counsels." A stele erected by Thutmose III at the Temple of Amun at Karnak "provides an unequivocal statement of the pharaoh's divine mandate to wage war on his enemies." As the period of the New Kingdom progressed and Egypt heightened its territorial ambition, so did the invocation of just war aid the justification of these efforts. The universal principle of Maat, signifying order and justice, was central to the Egyptian notion of just war and its ability to guarantee Egypt virtually no limits on what it could take, do, or use to guarantee the ambitions of the state.

India

The Indian Hindu epic, the Mahabharata, offers the first written discussions of a "just war" (dharma-yuddha or "righteous war"). In it, one of five ruling brothers (Pandavas) asks if the suffering caused by war can ever be justified. A long discussion then ensues between the siblings, establishing criteria like proportionality (chariots cannot attack cavalry, only other chariots; no attacking people in distress), just means (no poisoned or barbed arrows), just cause (no attacking out of rage), and fair treatment of captives and the wounded.[9]

In Sikhism, the term dharamyudh describes a war that is fought for just, righteous or religious reasons, especially in defence of one's own beliefs. Though some core tenets in the Sikh religion are understood to emphasise peace and nonviolence, especially before the 1606 execution of Guru Arjan by Mughal Emperor Jahangir,[10] military force may be justified if all peaceful means to settle a conflict have been exhausted, thus resulting in a dharamyudh.[11]

East Asian

Chinese philosophy produced a massive body of work on warfare, much of it during the Zhou dynasty, especially the Warring States era. War was justified only as a last resort and only by the rightful sovereign; however, questioning the decision of the emperor concerning the necessity of a military action was not permissible. The success of a military campaign was sufficient proof that the campaign had been righteous.[12]

Japan did not develop its own doctrine of just war but between the 5th and the 7th centuries drew heavily from Chinese philosophy, and especially Confucian views. As part of the Japanese campaign to take the northeastern island Honshu, Japanese military action was portrayed as an effort to "pacify" the Emishi people, who were likened to "bandits" and "wild-hearted wolf cubs" and accused of invading Japan's frontier lands.[13]

Ancient Greece and Rome

The notion of just war in Europe originates and is developed first in ancient Greece and then in the Roman Empire.[14] [15] [16]

It was Aristotle who first introduced the concept and terminology to the Hellenic world that called war a last resort requiring conduct that would allow the restoration of peace. Aristotle argues that the cultivation of a military is necessary and good for the purpose of self-defense, not for conquering: "The proper object of practising military training is not in order that men may enslave those who do not deserve slavery, but in order that first they may themselves avoid becoming enslaved to others" (Politics, Book 7).[17]

In ancient Rome, a "just cause" for war might include the necessity of repelling an invasion, or retaliation for pillaging or a breach of treaty.[18] War was always potentially nefas ("wrong, forbidden"), and risked religious pollution and divine disfavor.[19] A "just war" (bellum iustum) thus required a ritualized declaration by the fetial priests.[20] More broadly, conventions of war and treaty-making were part of the ius gentium, the "law of nations", the customary moral obligations regarded as innate and universal to human beings.[21]

Christian views

Christian theory of the Just War begins around the time of Augustine of Hippo[22] The Just War theory, with some amendments, is still used by Christians today as a guide to whether or not a war can be justified.War may be necessary and right, even though it may not be good. In the case of a country that has been invaded by an occupying force, war may be the only way to restore justice. [23]

Saint Augustine

Saint Augustine held that individuals should not resort immediately to violence, but God has given the sword to government for a good reason (based upon Romans 13:4). In Contra Faustum Manichaeum book 22 sections 69–76, Augustine argues that Christians, as part of a government, need not be ashamed of protecting peace and punishing wickedness when they are forced to do so by a government. Augustine asserted that was a personal and philosophical stance: "What is here required is not a bodily action, but an inward disposition. The sacred seat of virtue is the heart."[24]

Nonetheless, he asserted, peacefulness in the face of a grave wrong that could be stopped by only violence would be a sin. Defense of one's self or others could be a necessity, especially when it is authorized by a legitimate authority:

They who have waged war in obedience to the divine command, or in conformity with His laws, have represented in their persons the public justice or the wisdom of government, and in this capacity have put to death wicked men; such persons have by no means violated the commandment, "Thou shalt not kill."[25]
While not breaking down the conditions necessary for war to be just, Augustine nonetheless originated the very phrase itself in his work The City of God:

But, say they, the wise man will wage Just Wars. As if he would not all the rather lament the necessity of just wars, if he remembers that he is a man; for if they were not just he would not wage them, and would therefore be delivered from all wars.[25]

Augustine further taught:

No war is undertaken by a good state except on behalf of good faith or for safety.[26]

J. Mark Mattox writes,

In terms of the traditional notion of jus ad bellum (justice of war, that is, the circumstances in which wars can be justly fought), war is a coping mechanism for righteous sovereigns who would ensure that their violent international encounters are minimal, a reflection of the Divine Will to the greatest extent possible, and always justified. In terms of the traditional notion of jus in bello (justice in war, or the moral considerations which ought to constrain the use of violence in war), war is a coping mechanism for righteous combatants who, by divine edict, have no choice but to subject themselves to their political masters and seek to ensure that they execute their war-fighting duty as justly as possible.[27]

Isidore of Seville

Isidore of Seville writes:

Those wars are unjust which are undertaken without cause. For aside from vengeance or to fight off enemies no just war can be waged. [28]

Peace and Truce of God

See main article: Peace and Truce of God. The medieval Peace of God (Latin: Latin: pax dei) was a 10th century mass movement in Western Europe instigated by the clergy that granted immunity from violence for non-combatants.

Starting in the 11th Century, the Truce of God (Latin: Latin: treuga dei) involved Church rules that successfully limited when and where fighting could occur: Catholic forces (e.g. of warring barons) could not fight each other on Sundays, Thursdays, holidays, the entirety of Lent and Advent and other times, severely disrupting the conduct of wars. The 1179 Third Council of the Lateran adopted a version of it for the whole church.

Saint Thomas Aquinas

The just war theory by Thomas Aquinas has had a lasting impact on later generations of thinkers and was part of an emerging consensus in Medieval Europe on just war.[29] In the 13th century Aquinas reflected in detail on peace and war. Aquinas was a Dominican friar and contemplated the teachings of the Bible on peace and war in combination with ideas from Aristotle, Plato, Socrates, Saint Augustine and other philosophers whose writings are part of the Western canon. Aquinas' views on war drew heavily on the Latin: [[Decretum Gratiani]], a book the Italian monk Gratian had compiled with passages from the Bible. After its publication in the 12th century, the Latin: Decretum Gratiani had been republished with commentary from Pope Innocent IV and the Dominican friar Raymond of Penafort. Other significant influences on Aquinas just war theory were Alexander of Hales and Henry of Segusio.[30]

In Summa Theologica Aquinas asserted that it is not always a sin to wage war, and he set out criteria for a just war. According to Aquinas, three requirements must be met. Firstly, the war must be waged upon the command of a rightful sovereign. Secondly, the war needs to be waged for just cause, on account of some wrong the attacked have committed. Thirdly, warriors must have the right intent, namely to promote good and to avoid evil.[31] [32] Aquinas came to the conclusion that a just war could be offensive and that injustice should not be tolerated so as to avoid war. Nevertheless, Aquinas argued that violence must only be used as a last resort. On the battlefield, violence was only justified to the extent it was necessary. Soldiers needed to avoid cruelty and a just war was limited by the conduct of just combatants. Aquinas argued that it was only in the pursuit of justice, that the good intention of a moral act could justify negative consequences, including the killing of the innocent during a war.[33]

Renaissance and Christian Humanists

Various Renaissance humanists promoted Pacificist views.

A leading humanist writer after the Reformation was legal theorist Hugo Grotius, whose De jura belli ac pacis re-considered Just War and fighting wars justly.

First World War

At the beginning of the First World War, a group of theologians in Germany published a manifesto that sought to justify the actions of the German government. At the British government's request, Randall Davidson, Archbishop of Canterbury, took the lead in collaborating with a large number of other religious leaders, including some with whom he had differed in the past, to write a rebuttal of the Germans' contentions. Both German and British theologians based themselves on the just war theory, each group seeking to prove that it applied to the war waged by its own side.[35]

Contemporary Catholic doctrine

The just war doctrine of the Catholic Church found in the 1992 Catechism of the Catholic Church, in paragraph 2309, lists four strict conditions for "legitimate defense by military force:"[36] [37]

The Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church elaborates on the just war doctrine in paragraphs 500 to 501, while citing the Charter of the United Nations:[38] Pope John Paul II in an address to a group of soldiers said the following:[39]

Russian Orthodox Church

The War and Peace section in the Basis of the Social Concept of the Russian Orthodox Church is crucial for understanding the Russian Orthodox Church's attitude towards war. The document offers criteria of distinguishing between an aggressive war, which is unacceptable, and a justified war, attributing the highest moral and sacred value of military acts of bravery to a true believer who participates in a justified war. Additionally, the document considers the just war criteria as developed in Western Christianity to be eligible for Russian Orthodoxy; therefore, the justified war theory in Western theology is also applicable to the Russian Orthodox Church.[40]

In the same document, it is stated that wars have accompanied human history since the fall of man, and according to the gospel, they will continue to accompany it. While recognizing war as evil, the Russian Orthodox Church does not prohibit its members from participating in hostilities if there is the security of their neighbours and the restoration of trampled justice at stake. War is considered to be necessary but undesirable. It is also stated that the Russian Orthodox Church has had profound respect for soldiers who gave their lives to protect the life and security of their neighbours.[41]

Just war tradition

The just war theory, propounded by the medieval Christian philosopher Thomas Aquinas, was developed further by legal scholars in the context of international law. Cardinal Cajetan, the jurist Francisco de Vitoria, the two Jesuit priests Luis de Molina and Francisco Suárez, as well as the humanist Hugo Grotius and the lawyer Luigi Taparelli were most influential in the formation of a just war tradition. The just war tradition, which was well established by the 19th century, found its practical application in the Hague Peace Conferences (1899 and 1907) and in the founding of the League of Nations in 1920. After the United States Congress declared war on Germany in 1917, Cardinal James Gibbons issued a letter that all Catholics were to support the war[42] because "Our Lord Jesus Christ does not stand for peace at any price... If by Pacifism is meant the teaching that the use of force is never justifiable, then, however well meant, it is mistaken, and it is hurtful to the life of our country."[43]

Armed conflicts such as the Spanish Civil War, World War II and the Cold War were, as a matter of course, judged according to the norms (as established in Aquinas' just war theory) by philosophers such as Jacques Maritain, Elizabeth Anscombe and John Finnis. Other scholars such as Robert L. Holmes cited a presumptive moral imperative prohibiting violence against all innocent people as the prima facie basis for questioning whether the norms of just war theories could adequately serve as a rational moral justification for military conflict within the nuclear age.[44] [45] [46] [47]

The first work dedicated specifically to just war was the 15th-century sermon De bellis justis of Stanisław of Skarbimierz (1360–1431), who justified war by the Kingdom of Poland against the Teutonic Knights.[48] Francisco de Vitoria criticized the conquest of America by the Spanish conquistadors on the basis of just-war theory.[49] With Alberico Gentili and Hugo Grotius, just war theory was replaced by international law theory, codified as a set of rules, which today still encompass the points commonly debated, with some modifications.[50]

Just-war theorists combine a moral abhorrence towards war with a readiness to accept that war may sometimes be necessary. The criteria of the just-war tradition act as an aid in determining whether resorting to arms is morally permissible. Just-war theories aim "to distinguish between justifiable and unjustifiable uses of organized armed forces"; they attempt "to conceive of how the use of arms might be restrained, made more humane, and ultimately directed towards the aim of establishing lasting peace and justice".[51]

The just war tradition addresses the morality of the use of force in two parts: when it is right to resort to armed force (the concern of jus ad bellum) and what is acceptable in using such force (the concern of jus in bello).[52]

In 1869 the Russian military theorist Genrikh Antonovich Leer theorized on the advantages and potential benefits of war.[53]

The Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin defined only three types of just war.[54]

But picture to yourselves a slave-owner who owned 100 slaves warring against a slave-owner who owned 200 slaves for a more "just" distribution of slaves. Clearly, the application of the term "defensive" war, or war "for the defense of the fatherland" in such a case would be historically false, and in practice would be sheer deception of the common people, of philistines, of ignorant people, by the astute slaveowners. Precisely in this way are the present-day imperialist bourgeoisie deceiving the peoples by means of "national ideology" and the term "defense of the fatherland" in the present war between slave-owners for fortifying and strengthening slavery.[55]

The anarcho-capitalist scholar Murray Rothbard (1926-1995) stated that "a just war exists when a people tries to ward off the threat of coercive domination by another people, or to overthrow an already-existing domination. A war is unjust, on the other hand, when a people try to impose domination on another people or try to retain an already-existing coercive rule over them."[56]

Jonathan Riley-Smith writes:

The consensus among Christians on the use of violence has changed radically since the crusades were fought. The just war theory prevailing for most of the last two centuries—that violence is an evil that can, in certain situations, be condoned as the lesser of evils—is relatively young. Although it has inherited some elements (the criteria of legitimate authority, just cause, right intention) from the older war theory that first evolved around AD 400, it has rejected two premises that underpinned all medieval just wars, including crusades: first, that violence could be employed on behalf of Christ's intentions for mankind and could even be directly authorized by him; and second, that it was a morally neutral force that drew whatever ethical coloring it had from the intentions of the perpetrators.[57]

Criteria

The just war theory has two sets of criteria, the first establishing jus ad bellum (the right to go to war), and the second establishing jus in bello (right conduct within war).[58]

Jus ad bellum

See main article: Jus ad bellum.

Competent authority: Only duly constituted public authorities may wage war. "A just war must be initiated by a political authority within a political system that allows distinctions of justice. Dictatorships (e.g. Hitler's regime) or deceptive military actions (e.g. the 1968 US bombing of Cambodia) are typically considered as violations of this criterion. The importance of this condition is key. Plainly, we cannot have a genuine process of judging a just war within a system that represses the process of genuine justice. A just war must be initiated by a political authority within a political system that allows distinctions of justice".[59]
  • Probability of success: According to this principle, there must be good grounds for concluding that aims of the just war are achievable.[60] This principle emphasizes that mass violence must not be undertaken if it is unlikely to secure the just cause.[61] This criterion is to avoid invasion for invasion's sake and links to the proportionality criteria. One cannot invade if there is no chance of actually winning. However, wars are fought with imperfect knowledge, so one must simply be able to make a logical case that one can win; there is no way to know this in advance. These criteria move the conversation from moral and theoretical grounds to practical grounds.[62] Essentially, this is meant to gather coalition building and win approval of other state actors.
  • Last resort: The principle of last resort stipulates that all non-violent options must first be exhausted before the use of force can be justified. Diplomatic options, sanctions, and other non-military methods must be attempted or validly ruled out before the engagement of hostilities. Further, in regard to the amount of harm—proportionally—the principle of last resort would support using small intervention forces first and then escalating rather than starting a war with massive force such as carpet bombing or nuclear warfare.[63]
  • Just cause: The reason for going to war needs to be just and cannot, therefore, be solely for recapturing things taken or punishing people who have done wrong; innocent life must be in imminent danger and intervention must be to protect life. A contemporary view of just cause was expressed in 1993 when the US Catholic Conference said: "Force may be used only to correct a grave, public evil, i.e., aggression or massive violation of the basic human rights of whole populations."
  • Jus in bello

    Once war has begun, just war theory (jus in bello) also directs how combatants are to act or should act:

    Distinction
  • Just war conduct should be governed by the principle of distinction. The acts of war should be directed towards enemy combatants, and not towards non-combatants caught in circumstances that they did not create. The prohibited acts include bombing civilian residential areas that include no legitimate military targets, committing acts of terrorism or reprisal against civilians or prisoners of war (POWs), and attacking neutral targets. Moreover, combatants are not permitted to attack enemy combatants who have surrendered, or who have been captured, or who are injured and not presenting an immediate lethal threat, or who are parachuting from disabled aircraft and are not airborne forces, or who are shipwrecked.
    Proportionality
  • Just war conduct should be governed by the principle of proportionality. Combatants must make sure that the harm caused to civilians or civilian property is not excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated by an attack on a legitimate military objective. This principle is meant to discern the correct balance between the restriction imposed by a corrective measure and the severity of the nature of the prohibited act.
    Military necessity
  • Just war conduct should be governed by the principle of military necessity. An attack or action must be intended to help in the defeat of the enemy; it must be an attack on a legitimate military objective, and the harm caused to civilians or civilian property must be proportional and not excessive in relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated. This principle is meant to limit excessive and unnecessary death and destruction.
    Fair treatment of prisoners of war: Enemy combatants who surrendered or who are captured no longer pose a threat. It is therefore wrong to torture them or otherwise mistreat them.
  • No means malum in se: Combatants may not use weapons or other methods of warfare that are considered evil, such as mass rape, forcing enemy combatants to fight against their own side or using weapons whose effects cannot be controlled (e.g., nuclear/biological weapons).
  • Ending a war: Jus post bellum

    In recent years, some theorists, such as Gary Bass, Louis Iasiello and Brian Orend, have proposed a third category within the just war theory. Jus post bellum concerns justice after a war, including peace treaties, reconstruction, environmental remediation, war crimes trials, and war reparations. Jus post bellum has been added to deal with the fact that some hostile actions may take place outside a traditional battlefield. Jus post bellum governs the justice of war termination and peace agreements, as well as the prosecution of war criminals, and publicly labelled terrorists. The idea has largely been added to help decide what to do if there are prisoners that have been taken during battle. It is, through government labelling and public opinion, that people use jus post bellum to justify the pursuit of labelled terrorist for the safety of the government's state in a modern context. The actual fault lies with the aggressor and so by being the aggressor, they forfeit their rights for honourable treatment by their actions. That theory is used to justify the actions taken by anyone fighting in a war to treat prisoners outside of war.[64] [65]

    See also

    Further reading

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Cicero . Marcus Tullius . De officiis. With an English translation by Walter Miller . Miller . Walter . 1913 . London Heinemann . Robarts - University of Toronto.
    2. Book: Fellmeth . Aaron X. . Bellum iustum . 2009 . https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195369380.001.0001/acref-9780195369380-e-285 . Guide to Latin in International Law . Oxford University Press . en . 10.1093/acref/9780195369380.001.0001 . 978-0-19-536938-0 . 2022-02-27 . Horwitz . Maurice.
    3. Book: Guthrie . Charles . Quinlan . Michael . 2007 . Just War: The Just War Tradition: Ethics in Modern Warfare . 978-0747595571 . 11–15 . III: The Structure of the Tradition . Bloomsbury .
    4. Web site: William James on Peace and War. McHenry. Robert. 22 March 2010. blogs.britannica.com. Britannica Blog. en-US. https://web.archive.org/web/20151031190308/http://blogs.britannica.com/2010/03/william-james-on-peace-and-war/. 31 October 2015. dead. 6 August 2017.
    5. Web site: Just War Theory. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 30 October 2016.
    6. Lazar . Seth . Just War Theory: Revisionists Versus Traditionalists . Annual Review of Political Science . 2017 . 20 . 1 . 37–54 . 10.1146/annurev-polisci-060314-112706. free .
    7. Web site: Lazar . Seth . War . The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy . Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University . 13 June 2023 . 2020.
    8. Cox. Rory. Expanding the History of the Just War: The Ethics of War in Ancient Egypt. International Studies Quarterly. 61. 2. 371. 10.1093/isq/sqx009. 2017. 10023/17848. free.
    9. Book: Paul Robinson . Just War in Comparative Perspective . 2017 . 9781351924528 . Routledge .
    10. Book: Syan, Hardip Singh . Sikh Militancy in the Seventeenth Century: Religious Violence in Mughal and Early Modern India . 2013 . I.B.Tauris . 9781780762500 . London & New York . 3–4, 252 . 15 September 2019.
    11. Book: Louis E. Fenech . Historical Dictionary of Sikhism . W. H. McLeod . 2014 . Rowman & Littlefield . 9781442236011 . 99–100.
    12. A Confucian Contribution to the Catholic Just War Tradition. Journal of Interreligious Studies . 2023 . Kwon, David.
    13. Book: Friday, Karl F.. Samurai, Warfare and the State in Early Medieval Japan. Karl Friday . Routledge . 2004 . 21–22. 9781134330225.
    14. Gregory Raymond, The Greco-Roman Roots of the Western Just War Tradition, Routledge 2010.
    15. Rory Cox, "The Ethics of War up to Thomas Aquinas" in (eds. Lazar & Frowe) The Oxford Handbook of Ethics of War, Oxford 2018.
    16. Cian O'Driscoll, "Rewriting the Just War Tradition: Just War in Classical Greek Political Thought and Practice," International Studies Quarterly (2015).
    17. Web site: Aristotle . Politics, Book 7 . Perseus Digital Library.
    18. Livy 9.1.10; Cicero, Divinatio in Caecilium 63; De provinciis consularibus 4; Ad Atticum VII 14, 3; IX 19, 1; Pro rege Deiotauro 13; De officiis I 36; Philippicae XI 37; XIII 35; De re publica II 31; III 35; Isidore of Seville, Origines XVIII 1, 2; Modestinus, Libro I regolarum = Digesta I 3, 40; E. Badian, Roman Imperialism in the Late Republic (Ithaca 1968, 2nd ed.), p.11.
    19. [William Warde Fowler]
    20. [Livy]
    21. Cicero, De officiis 3.17.69; Marcia L. Colish, The Stoic Tradition from Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages (Brill, 1980), p. 150.
    22. http://olympia.anglican.org/churches/B/stdunstan/Beliefs/Christians_War/Christians_War_2.htm Christians and War: Augustine of Hippo and the "Just War theory"
    23. Web site: What is a just war?. BBC. 11 May 2020.
    24. Web site: A Time For War?. Robert L. Holmes. ChristianityToday.com. September 2001 . 25 April 2015.
    25. Web site: City of God . https://web.archive.org/web/20130725190746/http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/toccer-new2?id=AugCity.xml&images=images%2Fmodeng&data=%2Ftexts%2Fenglish%2Fmodeng%2Fparsed&tag=public&part=all . 25 July 2013 . 25 April 2015 . dead .
    26. City of God, 22.6, quoted in Web site: Lockwood . Thornton . Cicero's Philosophy of Just War . PhilArchive . 28 July 2023. The text seems from a missing fragment of Cicero's dialog On the Republic, by the Laelius character.
    27. http://www.iep.utm.edu/aug-poso/#SH3c Augustine: Political and Social Philosophy
    28. Etymologies 18.1.2-3, quoted in Web site: Lockwood . Thornton . Cicero's Philosophy of Just War . PhilArchive . 28 July 2023. . The text seems from a missing fragment of Cicero's dialog On the Republic, by the Laelius character.
    29. Book: Thomas Aquinas on War and Peace. Gregory M. Reichberg. Cambridge University Press. 2017. 9781107019904. viii.
    30. Book: Thomas Aquinas on War and Peace. Gregory M. Reichberg. Cambridge University Press. 2017. 9781107019904. vii.
    31. Book: Aquinas, Thomas . Summa Theologica . Christian Classics Ethereal Library . pt. II, sec. 2, q. 40, a. 1.
    32. Book: The Oxford Handbook of Ethics of War . Seth Lazar . Helen Frowe. Oxford University Press. 2018. 9780199943418. 114.
    33. Book: The Oxford Handbook of Ethics of War . Seth Lazar . Helen Frowe. Oxford University Press. 2018. 9780199943418. 115.
    34. MacKenzie . Kathleen . John Colet of Oxford . Dalhousie Review . 21 . 1 . 15–28 . 28 July 2023.
    35. Mews, Stuart. "Davidson, Randall Thomas, Baron Davidson of Lambeth (1848–1930), Archbishop of Canterbury", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2011.
    36. Book: Catechism of the Catholic Church. 2. Liberia Editrice Vaticana. 1574551108. 25 April 2015. 2000. registration.
    37. Web site: Just-War Theory, Catholic Morality, And The Response To International Terrorism.. 11 May 2020.
    38. Web site: Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church. 10 April 2024.
    39. Web site: The Church's Just War Theory. Saunders. William. Catholic Education Resource Center. en-US. 10 May 2020.
    40. 10.3390/rel11010002. free. 'Militant Piety in 21st-Century Orthodox Christianity: Return to Classical Traditions or Formation of a New Theology of War?. 2019. Knorre. Boris. Zygmont. Aleksei. Religions. 11. 2. Text was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
    41. Web site: Social Concepts, Chapter VIII.. en-US. 10 May 2020. 9 June 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200609115628/https://mospat.ru/en/documents/social-concepts/viii/. dead.
    42. News: Ben Salmon and the Army of Peace . . John Dear . 23 February 2010.
    43. Book: A History of the Parish of Trinity Church in the City of New York: The rectorship of Dr. William Thomas Manning 1908 to 1921. C. T. Bridgeman . 1962. 256.
    44. Meyers . Diana T. . 1992 . Reviewed work: On War and Morality, Robert L. Holmes . The Philosophical Review . 101 . 2 . 481–484 . 10.2307/2185583 . 2185583.
    45. Rock . Stephen R. . 1989 . Reviewed work: On War and Morality, Robert L. Holmes; Paths to Peace: Exploring the Feasibility of Sustainable Peace, Richard Smoke, Willis Harman . The American Political Science Review . 83 . 4 . 1447–1448 . 10.2307/1961738 . 1961738.
    46. Lee . Steven . 1992 . Reviewed work: On War and Morality., Robert L. Holmes . Noûs . 26 . 4 . 559–562 . 10.2307/2216042 . 2216042.
    47. https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/american-political-science-review/article/abs/on-war-and-morality-by-robert-l-holmes-princeton-princeton-university-press-1989-320p-3500-cloth-1395-paper-paths-to-peace-exploring-the-feasibility-of-sustainable-peace-by-richard-smoke-with-willis-harman-boulder-westview-1987-114p-2150-cloth-1195-paper/FC5CE69B925297C5462A8CC626F2D4CE Rock SR. On War and Morality. By Robert L. Holmes. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989. 320p. Review of the book "On War and Morality" by Robert L. Holmes on Cambridege.org/core/journals/american-political-science-review
    48. Book: David, Saul . https://books.google.com/books?id=8Llw8JSZEXYC&dq=De+bellis+justis+Stanis%C5%82aw+of+Skarbimierz&pg=PA345 . The Encyclopedia of War from Ancient Egypt to Iraq . 2009-10-01 . Dorling Kindersley Limited . 978-1-4053-4778-5 . 345 . en . Ethics of War . Saul David.
    49. Francisco de Vitoria on the Ius Gentium and the American Indios. Ave Maria Law Review. 2012. Victor M. Salas Jr.. 11 July 2022. 9 December 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211209150822/https://lawreview.avemarialaw.edu/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/AMLR.v.10i2.salas_.pdf. dead.
    50. [Gutman]
    51. Web site: JustWarTheory.com . JustWarTheory.com . 16 March 2010 . 6 March 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190306044341/http://www.justwartheory.com/ . dead .
    52. Web site: Home > Publications > . Eppc.org . 1 September 1998 . 16 March 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090509230737/http://www.eppc.org/publications/pubID.1998/pub_detail.asp . 9 May 2009.
    53. Book: Genrikh Antonovich Leer . Opyt kritiko-istoricheskogo issledovaniya zakonov isskusstva vedeniya voyny. ru:Опыт критико-исторического исследования законов искусства ведения войны . Critico-historical research into the laws of the art of the conduct of war . 1869 . 1ff . Рипол Классик . 9785458055901.
    54. Web site: Just Wars in the Light of Marxism. Marxists Internet Archive. Erich. Wollenberg.
    55. Web site: Socialism and War, ch. 1. Marxists Internet Archive. Vladimir. Lenin .
    56. Web site: Just War . 26 June 2019 . Murray N. Rothbard . lewrockwell.com.
    57. Web site: Rethinking the Crusades . Catholic Education Resource Center . Jonathan R. . Smith . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20010723130919/http://www.catholiceducation.org/articles/history/world/wh0042.html . 23 July 2001.
    58. Childress, James F.. Just-War Theories: The Bases, Interrelations, Priorities, and Functions of Their Criteria. Theological Studies. 39. 3. 1978. 427–445. James Childress. 10.1177/004056397803900302. 159493143.
    59. Web site: Just War Theory. 25 April 2015. 7 September 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130907081045/http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl201/modules/just_war_theory/criteria_intro.html. dead.
    60. Don Hubert and Thomas G. Weiss et al. "The Responsibility to Protect: Supplementary Volume to the Report of the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty". (Canada: International Development Research Centre, 2001)
    61. Web site: War (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) . 2014-08-27. plato.stanford.edu.
    62. Book: Seybolt, Taylor B.. Humanitarian Military Intervention: The Conditions for Success and Failure. January 2007. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-925243-5.
    63. Web site: Just War Theory and the Last of Last Resort - Ethics & International Affairs. Ethics & International Affairs. April 2, 2017. 12 June 2015. 21 June 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150621004346/https://www.ethicsandinternationalaffairs.org/2015/just-war-theory-last-last-resort/. dead.
    64. Book: Studies in Moral philosophy: Just War Theory. October 2012. Brill. 978-9004228504 . 187 . Thom Brooks.
    65. Book: Justice after War: Jus Post Bellum in the 21st Century. May 2023. Catholic University of American Press. 978-0813236513 . David Kwon.
    66. Book: Holmes, Robert L. . On War and Morality . 14 July 2014 . Princeton University Press . 978-1-4008-6014-2.