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Originally Posted by Dâriûsh
:bow:Quote:
Originally Posted by Seamus Fermanagh
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dâriûsh
:bow:Quote:
Originally Posted by Seamus Fermanagh
I agree, though I totally disagree with nationalism in any form,it separetes people it doesn't unite them. But I'll have to make a correction on your final statement. The soldier doesn't has to do everything the general sais, if the action to be performed is of such disvalue that any reasonable human being should know that disvalue and reject the order, then the soldier can and must reject it, of course it will be different in middle of war, where laws don't exist.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
With modern western nations its actually each soldiers responsibility to uphold human rights and international standard. If he disagree, he should refuse orders.
The jelly man may very well be right on his. But shouldn't soldiers EVER question their commanding officers?Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
You know WW2 was over 60 years ago guys!? This horse has been dead so long theres nothing left to kick... :shame:
The problem with having soldiers follow their conscience is that they may decide that civilian government is not capable of properly ruling the nation, and thus they should act to correct the situation. You after all will not be the one to decide what they should believe. When that kind of thinking becomes the standard you get men like Saddam Hussein. An apolitical military is an absolute necessity for a stable democratic government.Quote:
Originally Posted by bmolsson
Yet, I think it would be more honorable to refuse to fight if your fight is worthless or leading to the extermination of millions of innocent people.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
Soldiers who refused to serve as canon fooder during WWI and understood they were fighting for some petty generals' popularity, and who were executed were probably as honorable as the ones who fought and died in the trenches.
Wise words! :bow:Quote:
Originally Posted by Meneldil
Never understood why you go to the army to serve your country. There are other and better ways:
nurses, fire fighters, police men ...
When we are talking about ww2, the vast majority of soldiers didnt "join" as far as I know, they were drafted. In some cases they joined after being brainwashed with facist propaganda, like the kids and old men defending Berlin when the realistic choice was to run for your life to the west.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
As Lazul already was into, what do you do when the state sign your life away (AKA draft), and if that is done to invade another country?Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
C'mon, this is ridiculous. You cannot be prosecuted under the UCMJ unless you disobey an unlawful order. There is no 'short' answer about this.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
bmolson's, right. It comes down to the individual soldier to follow lawful, as best as he can tell at the time, orders.
When was the point when a simple German soldier should have stopped following the orders? Austria? CSR? Poland? Norway? France? England? Greek? USSR? Please keep in mind that he hardly had any other information besides official propaganda!
No good answer for that, except it demonstrates how important it is to live in a free country with an introspective press (even if it is tendentious).
This cannot be true. Joining the army, or any other organisation for that matter, does not deprive you of being a moral being responsible for your own actions. You don't become a machine or an animal. As Prole has rightly said, there are legally recognised limits to the orders an officer can give, never mind the moral issue.Quote:
When you join the ranks as a common grunt, you sign your life away. You belong to the state, and your Honour as a matter of measurement is dependant on how well you do your duty. It cannot be equated with any other part of society.
Of course, that is not to say that a soldier given an unlawful order is not personally in a difficult position. The ethics are clear, he must refuse no matter the consequences. And if he shoots the civilian, if can in principle he tried and punished, and he can't possibly hope that the fact that he was ordered to do so will help him. But if he does not shoot, well, the difficulties that may cause him are obvious.
Except, I read or heard recently that in fact, in some units at least, soldiers on the Eastern front were given the chance to say that they did not wish to take part in executions. Not very many did, but those who did were assigned other duties and not punished. So, "I had to do it" may turn out to have been an overworked argument.
Very interesting.
This I think is a different issue. Fighting, in accordance with the laws of war, to protect a country, even if the country's regime is terrible, is not itself wrong. To use Dariush's word it may not be honorable (although per se I don't see why such a soldier might not be said to have behaved honorably personally). But the soldiers duty not to follow an unlawful order relates to things he himself is ordered to do, like killing a civilian, not to a moral judgement about the nature of the government he serves.Quote:
When was the point when a simple German soldier should have stopped following the orders? Austria? CSR? Poland? Norway? France? England? Greek? USSR? Please keep in mind that he hardly had any other information besides official propaganda!
People who have never been in the military should not make blanket statments about what a soldier must do and what they can do in regards to following orders.
Soldiers in the United States Army are given several yearly classes and refreshers on just this subject (at least when I was in from 1985-2000) even the National Guard is given these annual classes. Unlawful orders are always instructed to be disobeyed.
I disagree. Every citizen in a democratic society is responsible for its military and therefore they should be aware what is put on their soldiers even if they are not soldiers themselves.Quote:
Originally Posted by Redleg
Not true. Furthermore, the officers where privates before they became officers. There is a difference between good teamwork and leadership compared to tyranny and horror mastering.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
Erm, you're concuring with Redleg, I believe.
Geneva convention, I guess?Quote:
Originally Posted by Redleg
That being said, I was not told about it when in the army(a shame, conscript training really s***s), but outside.....
Without that system the last thousands of years may have been a bit more fun.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
A valid point, and one that was considered at Nuremberg. Soldiers captured by the western Allies were treated as POWs and, unless participation in war crimes could be documented, and POWs were released when appropriate (Soviet definition of this may differ). This included soldiers of the SS who were not part of the Einsatzgruppen. The lack of information available to a footsoldier was true of all armies in that conflict, and I am sure that the Germans have their stories akin to those of the 101st AB, many of whom found out that Bastogne was in Belgium days after they had begun defending it, and didn't know jack about what was happening only 10 miles back.Quote:
Originally Posted by Franconicus
Seamus
The ranks of enlisted men who become officers is small undded and are usually the best officers. Most officers are never privates. They go straight to officers school like West Point or Annapolis. Or they went to some other college and go to some other officers school or basic trainging if thats what you want to call it.Quote:
Furthermore, the officers where privates before they became officers.
Gawain:Quote:
Originally Posted by Gawain of Orkeny
Oddly enough, the "mustang" officer was more likely in the Wermacht than in any other army of WW2. Most of them never made it to the high staff positions -- no Prussian Junkers in their pedigrees -- but quite a few of the non-field grade leaders had started behind a bayonet.
Only the USA came even close in terms of promotion from the ranks.
Seamus
Aren't all unjust wars also industrialized mass-murder? Weapons are created in an industrial manner in factories, soldiers are trained industrially, and casualties are pretty evenly distributed per day during war, just like if it had been industrial. People are trained in straight lines, killed in straight lines, and kill in straight lines.
War is statesponsered mass-murder for the sake of the state. That is the result you will find if you look deep into it. But it is often hard to find a situation where you can apply some sort of guilt that is justified enough. War is comlpex in more terms than just the military maneuvers and production.
Just to point it out, nationalism doesn't drive us apart on its own, it needs a catalyst. I'm very much a nationalist for my country, but does that mean I will go to war with Germany? France? Sweden? USA? Heck no! We have too much in common, too much at stake and we are friends.
Nationalism can actually bring people together I have found. Surprising huh? Well, a nationalist likes to brag about his country, that is inherent, another nationalist will try to brag about his. If they have no personal issues with the other's country or people (those can be applies as well) they will most often find a common ground rather than duke it out.
That is what I experienced as an exchange student in Jamaica. Bring 60 people from the entire world togther and you will see. The nationalists makes us see the good in other countries as well as the bad, and we need to know both.
“Soldiers are trained to follow orders to the letter” Well, not in the Frencv Army. It is illegal to follow illegal orders, such attacked a bank or kill unarmed prisoners, to participate in illegal operations as definite by International Conventions (Geneva and The Hague). A soldier have to use his/her brain nowadays, we are not in 1900… ~:)
“Short Answer: Never. Ever. Not once.” Hi hi hi, that is a good joke… Never heard about fragging in Vietnam? When an officer was going out of order, received a smoke grenade as warning, the second one was a real one… Never heard about “to be killed in the back in front of the enemy”? ~D
The majority of posters misinterpreting your posts must be an indictment of their comprehension, not the effort you put into your posts, I guess.
:dizzy2:
There are quite a few members of the military on this board who would not like to be painted as a bunch of Bushido Warriors ready to sever the heads of the populace when given the order.
Your long answer reads like a slight after-thought when you've already stated that culpability just comes down to the commanding officers and they're property of the government and must follow the letter of the command and so on.Quote:
Originally Posted by Gelatinous Cube
Honor, like obscenity, is more readily labeled than defined.
Do I feel that most of the soldiers fighting for the 3rd Reich did so honorably? Yes, or at least I am sure from their writings after the fact that most believed themselves to be behaving honorably at the time.
Yet I do not feel that organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan are honorable, nor were the actions of the Japanese at Nanking, nor was Stalin's forced collectivization of soviet agriculture...the list abounds (sadly). Is there honor in exploding a bomb under a bus full of schoolkids simply because that bus is loaded with kids who go to the Church of Ireland instead of a Catholic one? Is there honor in setting off a bomb that drives nails through the stomach of a pregnant mother simply because she attends a synagogue rather than a mosque?
There is honor in defending one's home, one's family, and - by extension - one's community as well. What is honorable is that which is required to effect that defense. There is honor in maintaining one's humanity in the face of temptation to allow the ends to justify all means. My country has spent billions on weapons designed to hit targets with extreme precision both for effectiveness and to minimize are ability to harm those who are not in direct opposition to us. I recall seeing film of a bridge bombing where the bomb was diverted into the water because of the unexpected presence of one Iraqi civilian vehicle on the bridge. If honor can be maintained in war, I know of no other people working harder to do so.
There are regimes that should not be fought for, causes unworthy and dishonorable. I suppose that all any soldier or person can do is define honor for themselves and then work to fight for that which is honorable. SO both Bush and Cindy Sheehan are, I guess, fighting the good fight. The rights of mankind must be weighed along with the values and beliefs of the individual weighing that decision. I dearly wish my world were as simple as my faith.
Seamus
So GC in a hypothetical fifty years from now after the USA military force has been down er right-sized by a Hippie Liberal Government and China invades.
Will you see the troops as good and honourable as you are herded into an internment camp and anyone who is white is sent to gas chambers?