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Making it relatively more humane can make that evil more tolerable and therefore more tempting to embrace. Our government launches attacks on foreign soil without regard for international or domestic law, it initiates hostilities against other governments at will, and it deals out death to countless people on the far side of the world even when they have no ability to cause the United States the least harm.

At the same time that it professes to take great care about how it fights an endless war that still kills civilians at an alarming rate, our government expands its war to an increasing number of countries to fight a constantly growing list of enemies and tramples international law underfoot. We must recognize that the war itself is wrong and work to terminate it. Daniel Larison is a contributing editor and weekly columnist for Antiwar. He is former senior editor at The American Conservative.

Follow him on Twitter. Skip to content The effort to make war more humane has had the regrettable and foreseeable effect of making war more tolerable and therefore much easier to perpetuate. Click here to hide comments. Private messages My forums Cheat book Go to control panel.

Username: Password: Register. Activate account! My forums Cheat book Go to control panel. Prev question. Next question. Back to questions list. Top cheats View all. Cheat Codes by cGub. Crimes of War Question and Answers :. Best answer. The Treaty of Versailles from was one of the first documents to discuss war crimes, and the authors attempted to create a list of offenses that would qualify.

They had great difficulty agreeing on what should or should not be criminalized during a time of war, and only found even more dissension as they attempted to decide on proper forms of punishment. The idea of establishing an International Court of Justice was brought up, but not accepted by the majority of the participants. The subject of war crimes was addressed in much greater detail following World War II. Members of the Allied Forces set up international tribunals at Nuremberg and Tokyo to deliver judgment on the criminal acts perpetrated during the war.

These tribunals laid down the principles which remain the foundation for international criminal law today. Today, most war crimes are now punishable in two ways: death or long term imprisonment.



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