Nuclear War and Mass Destruction
Judaism prohibits military action that will result in a colossal number of
casualties.
By Michael Broyde
Excerpted and
reprinted with permission from "Fighting the War and the Peace:
Battlefield Ethics, Peace Talks, Treaties, and Pacifism in the Jewish
Tradition," originally published on jlaw.com.
The use of nuclear weapons as a weapon of mass destruction
is very problematic in Jewish law. In a situation of Mutually Assured
Destruction [i.e., one in which a country with nuclear capabilities would
retaliate to a nuclear attack with a nuclear attack of its own], it is clear
that the Jewish tradition would prohibit the actual use of such weapons if such
weapons were to cause the large scale destruction of human life on the earth as
it currently exists.
The Talmud (Shavuot 35b) explicitly prohibits the waging of
war in a situation where the casualty rate exceeds a sixth of the population.
Lord [Immanuel] Jakobovits [the former Chief rabbi of Great Britain], in an
article written more than thirty years ago, summarized the Jewish law on this
topic in his eloquent manner:
In view of this vital limitation of the law of
self-defense, it would appear that a defensive war likely to endanger the
survival of the attacking and the defending nations alike, if not indeed the
entire human race, can never be justified. On this assumption, then, that the
choice posed by a threatened nuclear attack would be either complete
destruction or surrender, only the second may be morally vindicated.
However, one caveat is needed: It is permissible to threaten
to adopt a military strategy that it is in fact prohibited to use, in order to
deter a war. While one injustice cannot ever justify another injustice,
sometimes threatening to do a wrong can prevent the initial wrong from occurring.
Just because one cannot pull the nuclear trigger does not
mean one cannot own a nuclear gun. It is important to understand the logical
syllogism that permits this conduct. It is prohibited--because of the
prohibition to lie--to threaten to use a weapon that is prohibited to actually
use. However, it can be clearly demonstrated that lying to save the life of an
innocent person is permissible. Thus, this lie becomes legally justifiable to
save one's own life too.
An example proves this point. If a person desired to kill an
innocent person and one cannot prevent that act by killing the potential
murderer, one could threaten this person by saying "if you kill this
innocent person, I will kill your children."
While, of course, one could not carry out the threat in
response to the murder, the threat itself would be a permissible deterrence
because lying to avoid a murder is permissible. Thus, this demonstrates that
threatening to do that which one cannot actually do is permissible to save a
life. The possession of nuclear weapons is simply an amplification of this
logical analysis.
The overemphasis of the seriousness of the minor prohibition
to tell an untruth at the expense of letting a person die is an example of an
ethical valuation that is completely contrary to the Jewish ethical norm. In
general, the under-emphasis of the biblical ethical mandate of "not
standing by while one's neighbor's blood is shed" is the hallmark of those
who adopt a system of pacifistic ethics and explains why such an ethical
direction is contrary to Jewish law.
If one could save a life by telling a lie, such a lie would
be mandatory in Jewish ethics.
The use of tactical (battlefield) nuclear weapons designed
solely to be used on the field of battle would, in circumstances where the
complete destruction of the combatants be permissible (such as after the proper
warning and peace seeking), be acceptable.
Rabbi Michael Broyde
is an associate professor of law at Emory University and the rabbi of the Young
Israel of Toco Hills, Atlanta.