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E-raamat: Politics and the General in Supreme Command: Law Reform and Averting Unjust War [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
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This book argues for reform of the convention that, when politicians decide on a course of action, the general in supreme command obeys without question.



This book argues for reform of the convention that, when politicians decide on a course of action, the general in supreme command obeys without question.

The entire spread-out chain of command is unified in the general, who offers the only connection between the military and politics. Offering the sole connection between the military and politics, only the general can turn political directions into military command and capacitate war. Thus, the general has unique opportunity to resist unconscionable direction to launch an unjust war or to conduct or expand war unjustly. This book argues for reform, so the general has the right in law to refuse direction, which is lawful, but awful. The legal capacity to refuse would mean the general would be expected to act responsibly, not merely as the unresisting pawn of politics. Such reform, creating legal opportunity for the supreme command to refuse lawful but unconscionable directives, might avert unjust war.

This book will be of much interest to students of the ethics of war, civil-military relations, and International Relations.

1 Introduction

2 Whats Been Said Scholarship has Paid Insufficient Attention to the
General

3 Law and War Law Cannot Capture Wars Moral Complexity

4 Liberalism and Law The Risk in Laws Overstatement

5 Conscience Some Things will be Morally Impossible

6 For All of Us, As One of Us The General is Equal as a Citizen

7 More Than a Postman The Generals Singular Burden

8 Let the General Say No Moral Space in the Shadow of Law

9 Conclusion
Richard Adams is a commander in the Royal Australian Navy. He has doctorates from the University of Western Australia and the University of New South Wales. He was an Australian Fulbright scholar to Yale University and a visiting research fellow to the Changing Character of War programme at the University of Oxford.