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Analysis Of Jeff Mcmahan's The Ethics Of Killing In War

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I. INTRODUCTION
In The Ethics of Killing in War (2006), Jeff McMahan advocates for the rejection of moral equality of combatants. His argument is built upon exposing flaws in Michael Walzer’s traditional description of permissibility of killing in war and provides an alternate model, the responsibility criterion. In this essay, I will explain the traditional just war theory and McMahan’s alternate responsibility-based approach. Further, I will present a number of objections to the responsibility criterion and consider my personal responses to these, as well as those McMahan discusses in his paper. Overall, I will conclude that the responsibility criterion provides a valuable account of the deep morality of war and develops a persuasive argument for rejecting the moral equality of combatants.
II. TRADITIONAL JUST WAR THEORY …show more content…

The theory places emphasis on the division of the population into combatants, those who fight in the war (soldiers), and noncombatants, those who do not fight (civilians). It also encompasses two sets of principles: jus ad bellum, which governs the justness of going to war, and jus in bellum, which evaluates conduct in war (Lazar, n.d., p. 1). Jus ad bellum dictates that states are only permitted to go to war when satisfying a number of principles. For this discussion, the most important of these principles is the requirement of a “Just Cause,” meaning the war is initiated in an attempt to rectify an appropriate injury (Lazar, n.d., p. 7). Traditionally, the only appropriate injuries are national attacks (or attacks on allies), where war is incited for national self-defence, or to intervene in “crimes that shock the moral conscience of mankind, “ (Walzer, n.d., p.

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