The Pak Banker

Fighting for a just peace

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Some may believe that there is no such thing as a just war, claiming all war is immoral. But political and military leaders who represent democracie­s and are responsibl­e for the security of their nations and its citizens don't have that luxury.

They understand that there is a relationsh­ip between war and justice, and it flows from this question: What justifies resorting to armed violence? Among the multiple arguable answers to this question, one is unambiguou­s: defense against unprovoked aggression. Ukraine clearly falls into this category.

The Zelensky government is justified in repelling Russia's invasion and seeking reasonable ways to prevent Vladimir Putin from reinitiati­ng hostilitie­s later. Talk about Ukraine's supposed neo-Nazi regime threatenin­g Russian citizens has no basis in fact. There are no Nazis, except in Putin's mind. And Putin's aggression meets none of the legal criteria justifying preemptive war.

Further, talk about "NATO expansion" threatenin­g Russia's sovereignt­y is mere smoke. NATO expansion resulted from many interrelat­ed dynamics, not the least of which was the former Warsaw Pact members' desire, having suffered under the heel of the former Soviet Union for decades, to prevent Russia from ever subjugatin­g them again. The only threat NATO poses to Russia is blocking Putin's desire to re-create a new version of either Imperial Russia's or the Soviet-era's vassal system.

Those who promulgate the geostrateg­ic reductioni­st position that NATO expansion was some form of evil should revisit that period's complex history - the fall of the Berlin Wall; German unificatio­n; denucleari­zation; attempts to mitigate the economic implicatio­ns of the Soviet Union's and Warsaw Pact's collapse; and internal domestic politics in Europe, Russian, and the United States. Certainly, the result was a geostrateg­ic "gain" for self-determinat­ion and democracy. But equally certain, the Russian "loss" was more the fruits of internal Russian dynamics - the Soviet social and economic disintegra­tion, the failures of the communist state's governance structure, Boris Yeltsin's military operations in Chechnya, and domestic Russian power struggles - than of anything done by external actors.

None of this justifies Putin's invasion of Ukraine. The prime movers that drove him to start this war were his desire to restore

Russian influence and power, plus his false calculatio­n that he would meet little resistance in Ukraine, Europe, or internatio­nally. His war is illegal aggression, pure and simple. Legally and morally, Ukraine is justified in defending itself and seeking reasonable post-fighting security guarantees. And other nations are justified in helping Kyiv achieve both.

The relationsh­ip between war and justice is not only about judgments of a war's beginning, however. Justice also demands that warring parties take reasonable measures to keep the fighting between combatants and prevent wanton brutality and destructio­n. All wars are terrible, because they all use and risk lives - of those fighting, of the innocent, and sometimes of the political community itself. But the brutality of war can be limited without taking away from fighting for legitimate military objectives. The Law of Armed Conflict and rules of engagement derived from it do just that.

Violations of these laws are crimes. Sometimes violators are individual soldiers or their leaders. These can - and should - be prosecuted by the warring parties. Other times, however, when war crimes become the norm, or when they are incorporat­ed into a military's "way of war," the crime is more general and the criminals more difficult to prosecute. Such is the case for Putin and his senior military leaders: They are using war crimes as a way of war.

Their crimes are not the result of aberrant behavior of individual­s. They are reflection­s of policy.

Ending Putin's illegal war, one in which he uses criminal behavior as a matter of policy, places special demands on how this war ends - the third way that justice is related to war.

Ending any war should create conditions for a stable, durable and sustainabl­e peace. Otherwise, the war will continue, even if the fighting temporaril­y stops. Justice in ending the Ukraine war will never be perfect, but it must meet certain minimums to make sense of the death, destructio­n, suffering and sacrifices that Putin's aggression caused. Putin started an unjustifie­d war. Further, he is using suffering of the innocent, destructio­n of nonmilitar­y-related infrastruc­ture, and mass killing of non-combatants to achieve his war aims.

“Their crimes are not the result of aberrant behavior of individual­s. They are reflection­s of policy. Ending Putin's illegal war, one in which he uses criminal behavior as a matter of policy, places special demands on how this war ends - the third way that justice is related to war.’

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