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In the war on terror, both 'sides' have taken great pains to
justify their actions in moral terms. As force is employed so are
sophisticated arguments which directly invoke the just war
traditions of the west and Islam. Jihad and Just War in the War on
Terror offers an exploration of the ways in which George W. Bush
and Osama bin Laden drew upon, and simultaneously
re-conceptualized, important moral concepts from within the western
and Islamic just war traditions. It examines a range of jus ad
bellum and jus in bello issues, including western debates about
pre-emptive self-defence, Islamic requirements for right authority
to declare war, proportionality in the Battle of Fallujah, and the
legitimacy of suicide bombing in Islam. The book also considers how
a series of authoritative voices in the west and in the Muslim
world appealed to just war and jihad ideas to vigorously contest
Bush and bin Laden's cases for war. The author's central
argument--that the Bush administration and al-Qaeda departed from
important consensuses about justified warfare--contains within it
an alternative way of understanding the war on terror. Rather than
a clash between civilizations, Brahimi suggests that the conflict
can be accounted for by a clash within civilizations: in resorting
to war, both sides acted against their own traditions and
contravened the requirements of their own civilizations.
This book is a project of the Oxford Leverhulme Programme on the
Changing Character of War.
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