Publications
Armed Forces and Society, 31/2, Winter 2005, pp. 169-99.
Ethics and legitimacy in international affairs and security policy are discussed. It analyses by evaluation, the states attitude towards using force by military action. The Israel Defense Forces is used as case study. The rise to the fore of realist ontologies in international relations has meant that ethical issues have been associated more with evaluation than explanation. Yet ignoring the constitutive role of morality and ethics in structuring security policy choices leaves us without a complete understanding of the causes and consequences of international behavior. Accordingly, this article seeks to transplant the role of ethics from the realm of evaluative to empirical theory by introducing the idea of a security ethic, referring to the state's-and by extension the military's-normative attitudes toward the use of organized violence, including under what circumstances it is ethically permissible to use force at all, and the manner in which force can be justly employed in a given military operation. The article develops this framework by reference to the historical security outlook of the Israel Defense Forces.
Keywords: IDF; Security Ethics
Keywords: IDF; Security Ethics
The opinions expressed in INSS publications are the authors’ alone.