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Technoviking said:OK, "ethical". Are we talking Utilitarianism? Kantianism? Egoism? Consequentialism? Hedonism? Stoicism? Deontologicalism?
Not really uniquely any of the above, IMHO (not having a Philosophy Degree...). Military ethics may draw elements from other sources, but as befits a set of professional ethics they are unique to us. The best explanation I've read of what military ethics are, and how they function in action, is found in great detail in the book "The Warrior's Way", written by Dr Richard Gabriel (available from CDA as a CF publication). (You are probably familiar with him: a former US Army officer, he has been writing and lecturing on the subject of military ethics since the Vietnam era. I first heard him speak at a Bde Officers Study in Wainwright back in the 1980's. I've since heard him speak several times at CFC when I was working there, and had the pleasure of chatting with him. He is quite far from an airy-fairy intellectual, or an ivory-tower philosopher) I think this series of extracts lays it out pretty much the way I understand it to work (author's italics):
"...It is also clear that different professions require different precepts to guide ethical behaviour. A list of precepts of what one ought to do as a military professional would differ significantly from a list of precepts of what one ought to do as a member of the legal or medical profession...One of the primary characteristics of a profession is that it requires the observance of special values and behaviour not generally sharetd by the larger society or even by other professions...Ethics is, therefore, a social enterprise more concerned with what a soldier does (actions) than what he or she is (character) and inevitably concerns what one does or fails to do to another person or group of persons...But neither consequences nor intentions are, by themselves, sufficient to make an action ethical or unethical. Thus, a soldier may resort to torture in order to obtain information that he/she believes might save lives. In doing so, the soldiers intentions might be good, but the means chosen and the consequences of his/her actions are not..."
So, ethics is not just about what you think or believe: it's about what you do, especially when you find yourself in a situation in which regulations are lacking, unclear or conflicting, or personal beliefs clash with how you understand the situation. I joined the Army about a decade before you did, and I've served continuously since then. I don't know about your experience, but I'm very sure that in my time I've seen people do wrong things, counsel (or order) others to do wrong things, and I've done things that I knew then or that I realize now, many years later, were unethical. If the people involved (including me), had a more strongly developed sense of professional military ethics I believe that most of these things would never have happened. I don't need to be convinced of the value of professional military ethics, even if I lack the academic background to fully appreciate the philosophical derivation of some aspects of them.
We need them, we've got them, and we should live by them.
Cheers