The dire consequences of proportionality are so clear that it makes you wonder if it is a fig leaf for anti-Israel sentiment in general. Anyone who knows anything about the Middle East knows that proportionality is madness. For Israel, a small country within reach, as we are finding out, of a missile launched from any enemy's back yard, proportionality is not only inapplicable, it is suicide. The last thing it needs is a war of attrition. It is not good enough to take out this or that missile battery. It is necessary to re-establish deterrence: You slap me, I will punch out your lights.
[snip]
Readers of my recent column on the Middle East can accuse me of many things, but not a lack of realism. I know Israel's imperfections, but I also exult and admire its achievements. Lacking religious conviction, I fear for its future and note the ominous spread of European-style anti-Semitism throughout the Muslim world -- and its boomerang return to Europe as a mindless form of anti-Zionism. Israel is, as I have often said, unfortunately located, gentrifying a pretty bad neighborhood. But the world is full of dislocated peoples and we ourselves live in a country where the Indians were pushed out of the way so that -- oh, what irony! -- the owners of slaves could spread liberty and democracy from sea to shining sea. As for Europe, who today cries for the Greeks of Anatolia or the Germans of Bohemia?
These calls for proportionality rankle. They fall on my ears not as genteel expressions of fairness, some ditsy Marquess of Queensberry idea of war, but as ugly sentiments pregnant with antipathy toward the only state in the Middle East that is a democracy. After the Holocaust, after 1,000 years of mayhem and murder, the only proportionality that counts is zero for zero. If Israel's enemies want that, they can have it in a moment.

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A Catholic who denies one of the pillars of Just War theory, funny.>
Proportionality is Church teaching.
Rod, you let yourself get stampeded into ignoring just war teaching once. Are you really going to let yourself get fooled twice?>
Honest question here:
Is "Proportionality" in reference to intentended goal or actual accomplishments? If the actual intentions of Hezbollah is the complete destruction of Israel, is it proportional for Israel to retaliate with the complete destruction of Hezbollah? If it is in reference accomplishments, does Israel keep a tally of its citizens killed by Hezbollah and then use that tally to allow them to kill that many Hezbollah militiants?>
Proportionality is a word that is victim to a long orwellian campaign to redefine it in a manner incompatible with Church teaching. The relevant battlefield is the dictionary, not the actual battlefield where troops die.
The JWD concept of proportionality is that you minimize force to the level where you achieve your just objectives but not one bit more. That means that if the only way you can take a rocket launcher out that is firing on your city is to drop a bomb on a building that contains civilians, you drop the smallest bomb possible that will take the launcher out. You don't use a city buster nuclear bomb for the job when you have an arsenal full of smaller ordnance that can do it.
This form of proportionality is christian, just, and eminently practical. It is also something that Israel has been following and getting cudgeled for it. The inevitable response is that if they're going to get the short end of the stick from world opinion anyway, they might as well go truly disproportionate and minimize the time of the war to minimize the damage and the risk of war loss due to political pressure from the international community.
It is this latter danger that everybody seems blind to and that would be best guarded against by a campaign to recover the proper use of the word proportionality. All military men in 1st world countries are taught this but with newsrooms being dominated by non-veterans these days, it is not getting into the papers and on the news shows.>
Thanks for the clarification TM Lutas.>
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