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Accountability for Killing - Moral Responsibility for Collateral Damage in America's Post-9/11 Wars (Paperback)
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Accountability for Killing - Moral Responsibility for Collateral Damage in America's Post-9/11 Wars (Paperback)
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The unintended deaths of civilians in war are too often dismissed
as unavoidable, inevitable, and accidental. And despite the best
efforts of the U.S. to avoid them, civilian casualties in
Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan have been a regular feature of the
United States' wars after 9/11. In Accountability for Killing, Neta
C. Crawford focuses on the causes of these many episodes of
foreseeable collateral damage and the moral responsibility for
them. The dominant paradigm of legal and moral responsibility in
war today stresses both intention and individual accountability.
Deliberate killing of civilians is outlawed and international law
blames individual soldiers and commanders for such killing. An
individual soldier may be sentenced life in prison or death for
deliberately killing even a small number of civilians, but the
large scale killing of dozens or even hundreds of civilians may be
forgiven if it was unintentional-"incidental"-to a military
operation. The very law that protects noncombatants from deliberate
killing may allow many episodes of unintended killing. Under
international law, civilian killing may be forgiven if it was
unintended and incidental to a militarily necessary operation.
Given the nature of contemporary war, where military
organizations-training, and the choice of weapons, doctrine, and
tactics-create the conditions for systemic collateral damage,
Crawford contends that placing moral responsibility for systemic
collateral damage on individuals is misplaced. She develops a new
theory of organizational moral agency and responsibility, and shows
how the US military exercised moral agency and moral responsibility
to reduce the incidence of collateral damage in America's most
recent wars. Indeed, when the U.S. military and its allies saw that
the perception of collateral damage killing was causing it to lose
support in the war zones, it moved to a "population centric"
doctrine, putting civilian protection at heart of its strategy.
Trenchant, original, and ranging across security studies,
international law, ethics, and international relations,
Accountability for Killing will reshape our understanding of the
ethics of contemporary war.
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