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War Guilt in the History of Thucydides

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2016

Peter J. Fliess*
Affiliation:
Louisiana State University

Extract

The fact that the question of war guilt has frequently followed in the wake of major wars has contributed little, if anything, to a clarification of the concept. The perplexing difficulties raised by it are amply illustrated by the unsuccessful attempts, made periodically at various ages and on various levels of civilization, to arrive at criteria permitting a differentiation between the bellum justum and the bellum injustum. States, unlike individuals, are not confronted with simple choices between obeying or violating the law. Determination of the initial violation of existing covenants sheds little, if any, light on the responsibility for commencing war. Nor is such responsibility necessarily incurred by launching the first attack. Nothing could be more futile than to equate this act with aggressive and unjust war. The initial attack may be a legitimate response to an existing situation, and a war of aggression, as St. Augustine already pointed out, a just war; nor is there any reason to assume that the party forced into the defensive is invariably innocent. If war guilt is to be more than a specious pretense for inflicting punishment upon the vanquished, it can be measured only in terms of the alternatives available to a state, and the choice has to be viewed in the light of historical, ethical, and political factors. The assessment of such guilt is a problem of extraordinary complexity. To confine it to formal legal considerations would result not only in gross injustice, but would tend to perpetuate international tensions.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Fordham University Press 

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References

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87 It is often contended — based primarily on 3.82.8 — that in Thucydides’ view the ultimate driving forces of politics anchored in human nature are greed (πλεονεξία) and ambition (φιλοτιμία). If that were so, any concern with moral questions in the study of Thucydides’ political views would be worse than futile. However, even the casual reader cannot fail to be struck by Thucydides’ deep moral concern in unfolding the course of the Athenian tragedy even though he fails to indulge in explicit moral judgments. No one studying his anthropology can, in fact, remain unaware of the derogatory connotation, attaching to his use of the term πλεονεξία with only one exception. Cf. 3.45.4, 82.8; 4.17.4, 21.2, 41.4, 92.2. The one exception occurs in Hermocrates’ speech, 4.61.5, who finds the πλεονεκτεῖν of the Athenians excusable. The reason for this merciful judgment may lie in the recognition by that wise statesman that in the eighth year of the war the demo-realization of the entire Hellenic world had progressed too far to permit a discussion of politics in moral terms. Although all powerful political structures are driven by a natural tendency to conquer, this phenomenon is not to be explained by πλεονεξία alone. Perhaps more basic is the natural desire to be free and independent. Independence can be assured only through the development and exercise of power over others. However, that power must be used with moderation lest it become ὓβριی (Cf. Erik Wolf, op. cit. [n. 17 supra] III 2.82). Hence, human action based on nothing but πλεονεξία seems to appear to Thucydides as a perversion of human nature and as something to be distinguished from empire (ὓρχἠ ἅΛΛων) pure and simple. Empire, like all rule, involves problems of protection and concern for the welfare of subjects. That Thucydides does, in fact, make such a distinction is suggested by the repeated references to Athens — even by Athenian leaders — as tyrannical (especially in 2.63.2 and 3.37.2), implying that ὰρχἡ is not necessarily or even normally identical with tyrannical rule. The mere grabbing of land and dominion to be exploited for one's own benefit without concern for the welfare of the subjects, that is, tyrannical rule, seems an expression of πλεονεξία, an aberration rather than a universal and irrepressible human trait.Google Scholar

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