GIThruster wrote:BTW, genocide goes back into pre-history and has been practiced all around the world, usually for economic reasons but sometimes for idealogical. You know about the Jews coming out of 400 years slavery in Egypt and taking back their land--though the record is they refused to commit genocide. Do you know the stories of the Irish slaughtering whole tribes for their cattle? The Pictish and Viking raids upon the Irish? The Kenyan Maasai slaughtering indiscriminantly as they drifted nomadically? The Sumi Naga head hunters of India who killed on sight until they were converted by Christian missionaries? The cannibalism in Liberia, and Congo, and Irian Jaya and a dozen other places around the world?
Actually, genocide in the strict dictionary definition (killing of the gens/cultural unit) is the normal human method of war. The way the West has fought war ever since the Peace of Westphalia in 1648 is very constrained, very artificial, and dying.
Traditional method. What I call "Carthaginian Rules." Ever see the Pitt/Bana movie "Troy?" The way Bana's Hector describes the fall of Troy to his wife is spot-on:
City looted and sacked;
Every male of 12 years or older killed;
Infants thrown from the walls;
Women raped;
Women and children enslaved, and scattered to the four winds.
The advantage of Carthaginian Rules? The defeated polity is entirely wiped out as a cultural entity. Individuals will biologically survive, but the defeated culture will never threaten you again. It is gen-ocide, not in terms of killing a cultural group to the last individual (i.e. the Nazi "tainted blood" obsessions), but in terms of cultural continuity. The endless bleeding of a civilian-supported people's war cannot happen, because the enemy people cease to exist.
The one alternative settlement under Carthaginian Rules is that the victor allows the defeated enemy to survive - as a client. Much as Rome defeated and then integrated the Latin League during and after the Social War. But this is an act of supreme mercy and power by the victor - the slave master graciously consenting to free the slave. The defeated party is never again in any sense an equal to the victor. Carthage was granted this mercy after the Second Punic War; and ground into the sands of modern Tunisia after the Third.
The alternative. Westphalian Rules. Developed in the aftermath of Europe's Wars of Religion. What the Israeli scholar Martin van Creveld calls Trinitarian warfare. The state declares war and negotiates victory or surrender. The army fights war, subject to the commands of the state. And the people, the third leg of the trinity, stay out of war. If the people agree to remain aloof from war, they will not engage in partisan attacks once their army is defeated and their state surrenders. In return, the people are given several guarantees:
1) the victor will not overly alter the laws or traditions of the defeated nation;
2) the lives, liberty and personal security of the people of the defeated nation will be guaranteed after the surrender;
3) the defeated people will be allowed to retain most of their personal property after their state surrenders.
Yes, these rules are often violated, but in Western nations, and civilized nations that have adopted Westphalian Rules, the violators are brought to account by the legal processes of their own, victorious armies. I.e. American soldier-rapists in a defeated Germany being hung for their crimes. Compare this to Carthaginian War, where the women are among the foremost prizes desired and the first taken (see the character Briseis in "Troy").
These conditions remove the high risks and rewards of Carthaginian Rules warfare. War is no longer fought for the greatest of rewards (total control of the lives, fates, and wealth of the defeated enemy), and it no longer poses the greatest of risks (not just your own life or the lives of your family, but the existential survival of all you hold dear). This is why Westphalian Rules are traditionally so harsh on partisans. If the people refuse to abide by the surrender of their state, there can be no peace. The conflict can not end in negotiated surrender and victory between the belligerent states.
Westphalian Rules started dying during WW2, when the Allies accepted and encouraged the work of partisans in Europe. Many of the Nazis' acts were horrendous, but their treatment of partisans was (mostly) right in line with Westphalian tradition - i.e. line the partisans up against a wall, and shoot them. Eisenhower's unexecuted "Werewolf" Order in occupied Germany was along the same traditional Westphalian lines; mass reprisals for partisan activity - i.e. strongly encourage the defeated people to suppress the partisans hiding in their midst. When the Soviets started backing irregulars in "wars of national liberation" c.1950 or so, the West had no grounds to object. And recognition of the partisan was made explicit in the 1977 Protocols to the Geneva Convention (which the US is not signatory to).
The 1977 Protocols are the death knell of Westphalian Rules. And the only alternative is Carthaginian Rules. Even for all its brutality, in the broad strokes WW2 was
fought in a manner far more civilized than the wars of the year 1600 and earlier. The endless bleeding in places like Afghanistan and Iraq today is a result of Westphalian armies fighting Carthaginian adversaries and being unable to figure out how to bring about a peace congruent with the Westphalian expectations of non-genocide and enduring comity between former belligerents. The unfortunate truth of the matter is that no such settlement is possible if even one of the belligerents refuses to follow the demands of Westphalian Rules warfare.