ASSASSINATION: TARGETING NUCLEAR SCIENTISTS
Since 2007, five scientists involved in Iran's nuclear program have been killed under mysterious circumstances. This is not the first time that nuclear scientists have come under direct attack. Scientists are legally civilians. Like the rest of us, they are protected by laws prohibiting murder...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Law and philosophy 2014-03, Vol.33 (2), p.207-234 |
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description | Since 2007, five scientists involved in Iran's nuclear program have been killed under mysterious circumstances. This is not the first time that nuclear scientists have come under direct attack. Scientists are legally civilians. Like the rest of us, they are protected by laws prohibiting murder and perfidious killing, and enjoy civilian immunity during wartime. Moreover, powerful moral arguments oppose assassination policies specifically. Nevertheless, contemporary theories of just war allow for the partial extension of combatant status to civilians who are either threatening or responsible for unjust threats. Weapons manufacturers, their factories and employees, are accorded less than absolute protection within just war theory, and even under international law. Dramatic events compel us to think through these issues of political violence in a principled manner, whatever our particular views on the Iranian case may be. The various moral arguments against assassination on the one hand and the complex status of munitions workers on the other suggest that scientists involved in weapons manufacturing may in some cases be morally liable to direct harm, as well as being legally liable to proportionate collateral damage. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s10982-013-9181-6 |
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subjects | Armaments Assassination Assassinations Civilian personnel Civilians Damages Ethics International law Iran Just war Just War Theory Killing Law Law and Criminology Laws of war Legal History Manufacturing Morality Norms Philosophy of Law Political Philosophy Political violence Scientists Soldiers Theories of Law War Weapons |
title | ASSASSINATION: TARGETING NUCLEAR SCIENTISTS |
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