Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction

In this paper, I examine the moral purpose/s of the military, and the role of ‘warfighter,’ in the light of emerging forms of conflict. First of all, I describe the conventional view for the moral purpose of the military as an institution whose sole purpose is to fight wars. I demonstrate the way i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ford, Shannon
Format: Conference Paper
Published: 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/89639
_version_ 1848765263048081408
author Ford, Shannon
author_facet Ford, Shannon
author_sort Ford, Shannon
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In this paper, I examine the moral purpose/s of the military, and the role of ‘warfighter,’ in the light of emerging forms of conflict. First of all, I describe the conventional view for the moral purpose of the military as an institution whose sole purpose is to fight wars. I demonstrate the way in which conventional thinking about military ethics presupposes that it is merely a ‘blunt instrument’ of the state whose moral purpose is to engage in hostile force against belligerents during war. Then I argue that this conventional ‘warfighting’ approach to describing the moral purpose of the military is too narrow because it fails to acknowledge the necessary role played by military capabilities in non-war contexts. Using examples from cybersecurity and counter-terrorism, I demonstrate my point that the conventional warfighting view gives insufficient ethical guidance for the use of military capabilities in non-war contexts. Finally, I argue that the purpose of the military should be conceived more broadly than as mere warfighters. I suggest that the moral purpose of the military is to protect and preserve the “life” of the political community it serves. And I argue that our thinking about military ethics should be revised toward that end in order to best restrain uses of military force.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T11:32:28Z
format Conference Paper
id curtin-20.500.11937-89639
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:32:28Z
publishDate 2013
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-896392022-11-21T03:27:13Z Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction Ford, Shannon In this paper, I examine the moral purpose/s of the military, and the role of ‘warfighter,’ in the light of emerging forms of conflict. First of all, I describe the conventional view for the moral purpose of the military as an institution whose sole purpose is to fight wars. I demonstrate the way in which conventional thinking about military ethics presupposes that it is merely a ‘blunt instrument’ of the state whose moral purpose is to engage in hostile force against belligerents during war. Then I argue that this conventional ‘warfighting’ approach to describing the moral purpose of the military is too narrow because it fails to acknowledge the necessary role played by military capabilities in non-war contexts. Using examples from cybersecurity and counter-terrorism, I demonstrate my point that the conventional warfighting view gives insufficient ethical guidance for the use of military capabilities in non-war contexts. Finally, I argue that the purpose of the military should be conceived more broadly than as mere warfighters. I suggest that the moral purpose of the military is to protect and preserve the “life” of the political community it serves. And I argue that our thinking about military ethics should be revised toward that end in order to best restrain uses of military force. 2013 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/89639 restricted
spellingShingle Ford, Shannon
Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction
title Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction
title_full Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction
title_fullStr Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction
title_full_unstemmed Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction
title_short Cyberpower and the Inadequacy of the "Warfighting" Distinction
title_sort cyberpower and the inadequacy of the "warfighting" distinction
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/89639