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We presume that many of our readers have noticed the recent debate in the Congress of the United States on the subject of retaliation upon rebel prisoners of war in our hands for the treatment ours have received from the rebel authorities; and we think not a few must have been surprised at the course of that discussion. That opinions on this subject should differ is very natural; but so very wide a difference, or rather a direct conflict of opinion, on fundamental principles, would suggest that either the law itself was unsettled, or that the speakers did not well understand it. Indeed, on these questions of the laws and usages of war there is great want of information, not only among our people generally, but among our legislators, courts, lawyers, military officers and other public men. Nor is this to be wondered at. Prior to the present war, the people of the United States made no claim to be a military people; on the contrary they prided themselves as being civil in the strict sense of that word, and disclaimed and discountenanced all knowledge of the military art, or acquaintance with the science of war. Indeed, a profound peace of more than three-quarters of a century could scarcely be said to be interrupted by the insignificant contest of 1812, or the short war with the weak and demoralized Eepublic of Mexico. During this long period our pursuits as a nation have been, not of arms, but of agriculture, manufactures and commerce. Moreover, our very astute politicians and legislators have assured us, time and again, that there was no necessity for any military organization or military knowledge in the United States, for our untrained militia were more than sufficient for any contingency that could possibly arise. It is true that Washington and his contemporaries who achieved our independence and founded the Eepublic took a different view of this question; but who would presume to compare their opinions with those of the sages who lead our modern Congressional debates!
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- Copyright © American Society of International Law 1912
Footnotes
The foregoing paper, like those which have preceded it, was found among the papers of Major-General Halleck at his death, which occurred at Louisville, Kentucky, on January 9, 1872. The article is in the General’s handwriting end was prepared, probably during the year 1864, when the question of the treatment of prisoners of war was undergoing serious discussion, not only in Congress but in the public press. The paper has considerable value as expressing the views of one of the ablest international lawyers of his time in respect to the extent of the power of a government to resort to acts of retaliation in time of public war with a view to coerce the enemy into obedience to the accepted rules and usages of war. — G. B. Davis.
It should be remembered that General Halleck’s Article was written during the Civil War. If the life of the learned author had been prolonged and had the article been written at the present day, the language would, no doubt, have been more measured and restrained. — Editor-In-Chief.
References
* The foregoing paper, like those which have preceded it, was found among the papers of Major-General Halleck at his death, which occurred at Louisville, Kentucky, on January 9, 1872. The article is in the General’s handwriting end was prepared, probably during the year 1864, when the question of the treatment of prisoners of war was undergoing serious discussion, not only in Congress but in the public press. The paper has considerable value as expressing the views of one of the ablest international lawyers of his time in respect to the extent of the power of a government to resort to acts of retaliation in time of public war with a view to coerce the enemy into obedience to the accepted rules and usages of war. — G. B. Davis.
It should be remembered that General Halleck’s Article was written during the Civil War. If the life of the learned author had been prolonged and had the article been written at the present day, the language would, no doubt, have been more measured and restrained. — Editor-In-Chief.
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