[cog] BreakPoint - Just War Department

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From: "Stephen Hall" <sossteve@...>
Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2001 15:51:30 -0800
BreakPoint with Charles Colson
Commentary #011130 - 11/30/2001
The (Just) War Department: America's Debt to Christianity


On most days on BreakPoint, you'll hear examples of how we are trying to
resist the cultural slide and maintain our witness against formidable
odds -- often bad news.

That's why I'm happy for this broadcast -- some good news -- a case of our
leaders working hard to honor the principles that came down to us through
the Christian tradition.

Wednesday, I attended a meeting called by my old friend Donald Rumsfeld, the
Secretary of Defense. He had invited a dozen or so religious leaders -- one
imam, one rabbi, the rest Christians, mainline and evangelical -- to the
Pentagon. The purpose was an open, no holds barred, discussion of the moral
limits on war -- what is the Just War doctrine. The fact that the Secretary
of Defense would demonstrate sensitivity to these concerns was in itself
heartening, but even more heartening were the presentations given by the
Pentagon officials.

The Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, Admiral Thomas Wilson, told
us how targets in the war in Afghanistan are determined. His briefing was
straight out of the Just War tradition, emphasizing the importance of
proportionality and avoiding civilian casualties. He told us that they use
just enough ordnance to do the job but not enough to cause collateral
damage.

The enemy, he said, often uses innocent civilians as "human shields" around
key leaders or targets. Then he added that we choose not to hit those
targets because it's not moral to take out civilians even in the pursuit of
important targets.

And this policy hasn't been without cost. Pilots have complained about lost
opportunities created by our insistence on protecting civilians.

Dr. Joseph Collins then gave a heart-rending account of our extraordinary
efforts to provide relief to suffering Afghanis. I was impressed by the
Pentagon's humanitarian concerns.

Rumsfeld himself spoke for only ten minutes. "I didn't come to talk," he
said, "I came to listen." In
the discussion that followed, he was, as always, quick, bright, and engaged.

When I asked Rumsfeld about the sensitive question of preemptive strikes, he
quickly responded with the example of the Israeli attack on the Iraqi
nuclear power plant in 1981, an example most Christians believe to have been
a just use of force. Our lively dialogue made it clear that Rumsfeld had
thought deeply about the moral questions and was committed to prosecuting
this war against terrorism in a way consistent with the Just War doctrine.

The only less-than-satisfactory answer was when the Secretary repeated the
administration's line about
the terrorists "hijacking" Islam, a "peaceful religion." I can understand
the political necessity
to say this, but I suggest that my old friend read Samuel Huntington's Clash
of Civilizations for adifferent take on Islam's problems with the West.

Listening to Pentagon officials describe a battle plan that could have been
formulated by St. Augustine or Thomas Aquinas was encouraging beyond
description. I can't remember ever attending a meeting in Washington quite
like this.

It was also a reminder of how much our culture and society owes to
Christianity. Just War is an idea
that came to the West from Christianity. Despite the rise of secularism,
when America wants to know the right thing to do, it turns to Christianity.

We can thank God that we see Christian truths being lived out in, of all
places, the Pentagon by men and women who are prosecuting a just war by just
standards.



More:

Samuel P. Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World
Order (Touchstone, 1998).  This book will soon be available from the
BreakPoint Store at
Parable.com via this URL:
http://www.parable.com/breakpoint/item.asp?sku=0684844419

BreakPoint's fact sheet on Just War theory has been updated with additional
reading.
http://www.breakpoint.org/partner/Article_Display_Page/0,,PTID2228|CHID
100546|CIID836768,00.html

Transcripts of Secretary Rumsfeld's prayer at the National Day of Prayer and
Remembrance and speech at the October 11 Memorial Service for those lost at
the Pentagon on September 11.
http://www.defenselink.mil/speeches/2001/s20010914-secdef.html
http://www.defenselink.mil/speeches/2001/s20011011-secdef.html

Official page for the Secretary of Defense:
http://www.defenselink.mil/osd/topleaders.html

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