No, everything is fair game. |
25.2% (29) | |
Yes, but current rules impede the function of war. |
5.2% (6) | |
Yes, I think we have enough rules. |
8.7% (10) | |
Yes, but we need to better define them or make more. |
26.1% (30) | |
There are rules in war? |
29.6% (34) | |
No Opinion |
5.2% (6) |
| (Pages: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6) | |
Paperboy Posts: 30 Joined: 5 Mar 2008 | |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2377 Joined: 18 Dec 2007 | All is fair in war. You might not think this when you consider war but when you are fighting for your life and the life of others any thought of what is good and what is wrong will go out of the window. You will do anything to survive, under the right circumstances a nun would kill a group of school children to live. So yes all is fair in War. It might not be fair after the war however. Love on the other hand is not. You are not fighting for your life in love, you are fighting for the atention of an other. Killing another man for the love of another is not allowed while killing a man in war is allowed. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 4743 Joined: 30 Jan 2008 | There are rules of war, like the geneva convention. The problem is when certain players feel it would be easier to cheat, and not play by the rules. (This is as much aimed at Japan as it is at America). The problem is there's no real incentive for a country, besides their sense of honour. And really, there is no honour in modern warfare. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 851 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 | Hmm... Having rules in a war is a moot point; what would the reprocussions be? One side is going to lose, anyway, so why can't they take out as many bogies as possible? That being said, I think that there should be some guidelines. My understanding is that everything that the current rules are simply declarations, not rules, and any willing country can show a stiff middle finger and nobody can do anything about it (besides declaring war, which would defeat the purpose). Individual governments should regulate themselves, not everybody intruding on everybody elses business. What you have to ask yourself is what would the purpose be, and, more importaintly, would making the rules serve the purpose? Apologies for taking so long to type; my cat wants my milk (I'm a sad and lonely person...) |
Infamous Scribbler Posts: 694 Joined: 1 Jan 2008 | Indigo got it right.There are some rules(such as a mutual agreement not to attack Field Hospitals etc.) but during a war, hardly anybody cares. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 4743 Joined: 30 Jan 2008 | Really, the only restriction is that if one side breaks the rules, the other side will too. Its just easier for both to simply stick to the rules and save themselves the hassle. However, as i've said, modern warfare is not so intelligent or sophisticated. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1809 Joined: 14 Nov 2007 | There should be. America bombing Japan not once but twice during WW2 makes me feel pretty ill. But then again, the stuff that Japan did to POW's during WW2 makes me sick as well. It would be lovely if countries could agree that there are rules to abide by whilst fighting each other. But, as we know, politicians are a desperate bunch, and if nuking an enemy into submission is the easiest way to claim victory, they'll do it. That's human nature for you. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2377 Joined: 18 Dec 2007 |
Under the right circumstances this can be changend. For example if a field hospital held vital information than it would be attacked because that vital information could be used to win a battle that could be vital to the war. |
Muckraker Posts: 322 Joined: 18 Jan 2008 |
...which in effect, could win the war earlier with less loss of life for that country, or possibly both. If breaking one "rule" can save thousands of lives for both sides, I can see why the rules are broken. Granted, some people also have the mentality of doing anything to win... @j-e-f-f-e-r-s - You do know that the alternative to the U.S. bombing Japan was a land invasion of Japan, right? Which would have taken countless lives on both sides and dragged the war on for another year or two? I'm not saying bombing Japan twice was justified, but given the alternative, I can see why that decision was made. |
Beat Writer Posts: 142 Joined: 11 Jan 2008 | My brother and I had aa debate over this about a year ago when he was doing a history project and one of the subjects was the German use of Mustard gas in WWI, where he agreed with the historians who believed it to be unethical. I've thankfully never known the savagery of war firsthand, but to me it represents the ultimate failure of civility when two or more nations agree that the only way to settle their differences is the worst possible way. Why, then, are certain weapons and strategies considered 'unethical'? Isn't all war unethical by definition? Sure, a rule banning the targeting of civillians would be great... except that soldiers will understandably do anything they can to survive, including taking cover behind civillian targets or buildings. This isn't sports. When you're fighting for your survival, most rules and niceties go out the window pretty fast. |
Beat Writer Posts: 135 Joined: 6 Feb 2008 |
Hmm... so it wasn't just a test to see what would happen to a real live population? Why they detonated it in the two places where they did, with the best testing conditions? The murder of many innocent civilians (remembering that only one bomb hit america, and that was a fluke?), as opposed to soldiers fighting? As far as I can see it, the only reason to have rules in war is to make allies, which can help you to win the war (i.e. reaching out to fellow minded countries). Many atrocities have been carried out by many (if not all) countries in times of war, but they have to know that at the end they will be held accountable by their people... |
Beat Writer Posts: 167 Joined: 30 Apr 2008 |
Yes 100,000 Japenese dead is awful but is it not nearly as awful |
Infamous Scribbler Posts: 694 Joined: 1 Jan 2008 | Yes, it's all true... ...but assuming that (hypothetically) Japan had nuclear weapons and used it in it's counter-attack, we would have a Nuclear Winter in 1945 and the war would continue for years until both countries would be unable to carry on. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1223 Joined: 18 Sep 2007 | To thieve from Lois Bujold's work, the point of war isn't just to win the war... it's to create a better peace than existed before war broke out. Rules of war (hopefully) limit the frightfulness so that some sort of better peace (or at least a peace no worse than the one before war broke out) can result out of the conflict. Atrocities and the resulting ill-will tend to make post-war peace negotiations somewhat difficult. As to the ethics of the Nagasaki bombing, it's a thorny issue but I lean towards the interpretation that it was justified as an attempt to prevent the million-plus Allied and civilian casualties that would've resulted from Operation Olympic, the conventional invasion of Japan. I just wish the Japanese war cabinet had capitulated earlier and made the dilemma moot when it became clear that their cause was defeated... though I also understand their reluctance to accept unconditional surrender, given the atrocities committed by Japan's own occupation troops in their conquered territories. (Another argument for "laws of war", that.) -- Steve |
Press Junketeer Posts: 429 Joined: 17 Oct 2007 | War should have rules. War DOES have rules. However, when some jackasses play outside the rules by, say... fake surrender or torturing POWs (the latter one being a big problem in real life right now)...Yeah. The Geneva convention exists for a reason. As for the Japan thing, that is a very blackly humorous event, really. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1223 Joined: 18 Sep 2007 |
Um, no. The US nuclear arsenal for all of 1945 amounted to at most 10 warheads of 10-20 kilotonne yield apiece. Even had Japan matched that, and had some sort of delivery mechanism for them, that's far too few warheads to trigger a "nuclear winter"; that level of colateral damage takes hundreds of megatonnes' worth of detonations over a significant fraction of the Earth's surface, not just a dozen or two ruined cities. (After all, Allied strategic bombing had already levelled most German and Japanese industrial centers using good ol' high explosives; burning cities are burning cities as far as smoke and ash are concerned.) Besides, Japan's industrial plant was far too ruined by conventional bombing and blockade to support any sort of extended nuclear exchange. -- Steve |
Infamous Scribbler Posts: 552 Joined: 23 Dec 2007 | Plus the fact Japan had no heavy bombers to deliver that warhead also makes it a moot point. Personally, I would rather that the nuclear bomb had never been created. I don't know why, but the idea of such a small thing causing so much devastation offends me. But in truth there are no rules in war. Win, lose, you will have to kill some civilians somewhere. |
Muckraker Posts: 257 Joined: 25 Jan 2008 |
Yeah, uh... not everyone is willing to kill to survive. There are things worse than death, and I suspect the guilt of mass murdering children is one of them. I think the problems with our current system of rules of war is not that they're ill-defined, it's that they're ill-enforced. There are ways to enforce international law, like trade embargoes (which are actually pretty effective, depending on who participates), but they require a lot of international cooperation in order to work well. Unfortunately, that's exactly the kind of cooperation that tends to avoid wars in the first place. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1809 Joined: 14 Nov 2007 |
But why, after the US had already flattened Hiroshima with one bomb, did Truman then decide to flatten Nagasaki as well. He'd already wiped one major city from the face of the earth. Anything more was, for lack of a better word, overkill. Imagine if some evil foreign army bombed New York, then when you Yanks were ready to surrender, they bombed Washington as well. It was a spiteful display of power, that in total caused the death of over 200,000 Japanese during the actual bombing, and thousands more due to the radiation fall-out that happened afterwards. And, of course, most of those casualties were civilians. To me, the mass killing of hundreds of thousands of civilians counts as a war-crime of huge proportions. But I digress. To expound on my earlier point- human nature means we'll always play dirty. Whether it's fabricating reasons for us to go to war, using weapons that cause frightening amounts of destruction, assassinations, infiltrations... to use a lewd phrase, we're all fucking each other from behind. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1223 Joined: 18 Sep 2007 |
Because Japanese military leaders were still making propaganda broadcasts (that American intelligence could hear) instructing the civilian population on how to resist American invaders even with their nukes, that the US must have only one bomb to drop, that Japanese troops had developed anti-flash protective gear to fight on a nuclear battlefield, and that they'd never surrender. And they'd had no diplomatic contact indicating that the Japanese military would accept unconditional surrender. From the Allied (not just US) viewpoint, Japan looked to be seeking to prolong the war in the hopes of making the Allies give up out of frustration or bankruptcy. The Allies were dead-set against allowing the Japanese war cabinet to remain in power; they feared a resurgeance of another Pacific war as happened in Europe after World War I's inconclusive end. They (Churchill especially) also feared what would happen if Stalin invaded Japan, after his shennanigans in occupied East Europe. Besides, the incendiary raids on Tokyo had already killed more civilians than nuclear attacks combined. "Thousand bomber raids" had been common in the European theatre, razing entire cities in order to destroy Axis industrial production... because, despite the war-time propaganda, massed bomber formations were so inaccurate they had to select targets as big as a city and drop saturation quantities of bombs in order to hit vital targets. The RAF learned this bitter lesson in 1942; the US, with its later involvement and despite it's superior technology, in 1943 (if I recall correctly). World War II was an ugly war; it's glamourisation is a disservice, in my opinion, to every veteran of it. It's a shame that people get mesmerised by those two single raids at the end and miss that they weren't dramatically new... just perfections of a terrible, cruel, and yet (arguably, though arguably not as well) necessary strategy. -- Steve |
Infamous Scribbler Posts: 525 Joined: 13 Nov 2007 |
This pretty much summarizes my beliefs on the topic. Humans, on average, aren't driven to play by the rules out of the goodness of their hearts, they're driven only by fear of punishment. Take away consequences, you take away morals. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1485 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 | ok for the dropping of the bomb during ww2, it was a necessary evil that saved lives on both sides. if you understand japan you'd know they'd rather die than giving up the island. it was also one of the hardest decisions truman made, he actually feared for his soul for that decision. also i do believe both targets were also thought to be secret army bases and manufacturing centers, so they weren't as innocent as you'd think now for the topic at hand, fairness is VERY subjective, what is fair to one person is not fair to another. my version of fair might be vastly different than the person i'm fighting. the only fairness i believe in war is the ability to remove the dead, wounded and women and children, after that every thing else is fair. i think what ppl should ask is what is humane and what isn't. a lot of ppl think of good strategy as unfairness. say you have a large army and severely outnumber the other force, is it a wise idea for the smaller force to go head-to-head with the larger one? no it's suicide. is it smarter for the smaller force to resort to guerrilla tactics and strikes to whittle down the larger force and their morale? yeah i think it would be, but that's considered unfair to some ppl i've had this debate, well the fairness one a few times, mostly with "what is a fair (street) fight?" to me that's one i don't get hurt in, i don't care about the other person |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3364 Joined: 14 Jan 2008 | Didnt know that there were rules in war other than the "no neuculer wepons" thing. Thaught the idea of war was to just kill everbody that wanted to kill you by anymeans nessary other that making half the world go boom. |
Copy Clerk Posts: 83 Joined: 10 Apr 2008 | War without rules only makes sense if your only aim is to win. The use of genocide or torturing prisoners may shorten the war but it virtually ensures that you will have problems governing or dealing with your subdued enemies when peace is declared. For example, initially the Ukrainians welcomed the German armies in Operation Barbarossa. When the Germans looted from them and burned their villages partisan groups formed in occupied territory and more villages were burned in a vicious circle of guerilla warfare. If they had avoided harming civilians in the first place this senseless combat could have been avoided. |
Copy Clerk Posts: 117 Joined: 25 Apr 2008 | It's impossible to define rules of war. It's not like wars are highly controlled chess games anyway, where you can go back a move if the referee points out an error. Protocol and propaganda sounds great in a politician's speeches but the reality is that war is about killing people, plain and simple. There's no good or evil, no honor, there might not even be God on a battlefield, just surviving. Look throughout history and you'll see that when a faction gets out of control - like German's blitzing London or insurgents mowing down UN peacekeepers in Somalia or women and children in Darfur - shouting "That's not fair" usually does very little to stem the violence. Be chivalrous all you want, but war's a game were the loser dies and the winner gets to justify everything. That is, if you can say war has "winners". I wouldn't use that word to describe most vets I've met. They seem just happy to be alive. *sigh* As for love...a blunt "No". Not all's fair there. You don't want to hurt a person that you love. |
Copy Clerk Posts: 123 Joined: 22 Feb 2008 | But then again you have to look at the justification of the rules. You guys say that there should be rules so that inhuman monstrosities won't occur, so that there wouldn't be a clear wrong in what you are doing. But to the losers losing would be unfair. When you face a mosterous foe that is trampling all that you believe in and their justification for doing so is that they are doing what they think is right and that you shouldn't whine because they are playing by what ever predefined rules that was made before hand. In which would make you believe the rules are unjustice and oyu have to "cheat" to defeat this enemy to create rules that are fair, so in essence you wouldn't be cheating. There isn't really cheaters as there are people who have differnt morals in what is right. You would think by now people would know what is right and what is wrong, but my belief is that no one really has the right to say that fighting a war is doing what is right unless God himself was standing by his side and the devil was on the other. Hilter I think was pretty close to the devil. I guess we won't have a unified nation to defend us against the alian invasion... |
Infamous Scribbler Posts: 694 Joined: 1 Jan 2008 | @ Nuclear Wars. Defcon seems to be the best Nuclear War simulator up-to-date.Everybody loses. |
Muckraker Posts: 257 Joined: 25 Jan 2008 |
No, wars are not about killing people. Wars are about defeating your opponents. Killing their soldiers tends to be the simplest method to accomplish that, but the point of war isn't to just rack up a body count. That's why we have a separate word for massacre. That's also why we accept surrenders. We don't want our opponents dead, we just want them to stop fighting us. By the way, the only way there's no evil on the battlefield is if you define evil as intentionally bad, and there's no rational thought on a battlefield. Otherwise, just because you have to do something to survive, doesn't mean it isn't evil. |
Press Junketeer Posts: 374 Joined: 7 Nov 2007 |
nah, genocide, rape, child soldiers is not fair by any means. soldiering is a professional occupation so act like one. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1466 Joined: 13 Sep 2007 ![]() | |
I couldn't find a debate on the internet on the subject of the Laws of Armed Conflict (Rules of War) that was debating the validity of such a concept. I had a debate with a co-worker on the subject. He believes that LOAC is a silly idea and the only way to truly defeat an opponent is to become more brutal and monstrous than them. I disagree, believing that while war is sad and unfortunate facet of human existence, it needs rules particularity in the modern age where absolute obliteration of life in now possible. I think his tactic will simply lead to a never dying enemy or more opponents in the future and is doomed to failure. I think that he misjudges the human capacity found in everyone to commit the darkest of atrocities in needed believing everyone has a line they won't cross. His reference was Vlad the Impaler using his savage tactics to hold off his enemies despite being a relatively small faction. I pointed out that all (or nearly all) oppressive regimes are overthrown (even if they are replaced with another oppressive regime).
I wanted to field this question to this forum because I think I have a larger than average chance of people supporting my co-worker in war should have no rules. I want to know what you think and please give some arguments for your stand.