List of Acronyms
Preface
1. Understanding Targeted Killing and Drones
The Language of Killing
Targeted Killing Today
Drones: Their Nature and Use
Remote Killing
Legal, Policy, and Moral Concerns
2. The Distant Contexts of the Debate
Targeted Killing in the Classical World
Targeted Killing and Ancient Israel
Tyrannicide in the Christian Tradition
Assassination
3. The Proximate Context: Israel and the Intifada
Israeli Public Debate
The High Court of Justice
Takeaways from the Israeli Experience
4. The Immediate Context: The U.S. War on Terrorism
The Obama Administration’s Policy
A Public Killing
A Public Hearing
Speaking in Public
The President’s Speech
How Does an Individual Become a Target?
How Is a Targeted Killing Implemented?
Summing Up
5. The Future Context: Addressing the Moral Issues
Discrimination
Imminence
Death and Harm to Civilians
Last Resort
Strategic Success
Perpetual War
Bad Precedents
Drones and Democracy
Final Thoughts
Notes
Index
Kenneth R. Himes, OFM,is associate professor of moral theology at Boston College. He is the author or coeditor of several books, including Christianity and the Political Order, Modern Catholic Social Teaching, and Responses to 101 Questions on Catholic Social Teaching. He regularly contributes to publications such as America and Theological Studies.
No single book can do everything, of course, and this one achieves
much. Himes shakes readers awake to some of the most pressing
issues surrounding drones and the ethics of targeted killing
today.
*Studies in Christian Ethics*
Ken Himes' latest book, Drones and the Ethics of Targeted
Killing...represents what I hope will be the first of many steps
toward re-shaping the discussion of the ethics, legality, and
wisdom of contemporary military operations. . . .I recommend the
book...because Himes is asking all the right questions. In the hard
ethical work that lies before us, Drones and the Ethics of Targeted
Killing represents a necessary and timely contribution.
*Journal of Military Ethics*
Kenneth Himes has provided a balanced, well-researched, and
readable guide to the issues. His central purpose is to bring just
war theory to bear on the targeting of individuals who are not on
active battlefields. An associate professor of theology at Boston
College, Himes dedicates the book to the students he’s taught over
the years, and that is fitting: it is the sort of book one would
expect from a fair and dedicated teacher because it explains
complex topics clearly and presents both sides of fraught moral
debates.
*The Christian Century*
In grappling so prudently with the ethics of new technologies that
intersect with very old moral quandaries regarding the
justification of targeted killing, H[imes] produces a veritable
masterpiece of ethical analysis. . . .In meeting the challenge of
adapting established principles to new global conditions that may
alter our evaluation of the use of force, it is hard to imagine a
more insightful guide than H[imes].
*Theological Studies*
The chapters taken individually on the Christian tradition, the use
of the just war tradition in public debate, US government policy in
favour of drone use and ethical reflections on the US government’s
use of drones each stand alone as solid introductions to their
respective fields of enquiry.
*Theology*
Himes’ approach is well organized, well researched, and clear. . .
.Himes consistently asks and pursues the right questions. His book
belongs in college libraries and on course syllabi.
*Horizons: The Journal of the College Theology Society*
Himes has written a broadly designed, strategically precise, and
morally insightful analysis of two major issues in U.S. policy:
targeted killings and drones. Both topics yield intense debate in
the United States and around the world; the intensity of the debate
at times obscures the issues or fails to provide sufficient breadth
of analysis. Himes’s work provides a remedy. Two principal
characteristics of this work are its lucidity and fairness in
addressing contested questions. Himes draws in detail on technical
and strategic literature and combines this with moral and legal
analysis. While much of the book is focused on the wars since 9-11,
Himes recognizes that both of his topics will extend into the
future because of the nature of contemporary conflicts. The book
deserves a wide audience and is guaranteed a long shelf life.
*J. Bryan Hehir, Parker Gilbert Montgomery Professor of the
Practice of Religion and Public Life, Harvard Kennedy School of
Government*
The ethics of war is often accused of neither anticipating future
fighting technologies nor keeping up with current developments in
arms and tactics. Although I wish this book had been around at
least a decade ago, it is definitely better a tad late than never!
With Drones and the Ethics of Targeted Killing, Kenneth R. Himes
provides the most up-to-date and thorough treatment of drones and
their use for targeted killings. The book displays historical
breadth—probing the ethics of various types of targeted killing,
including tyrannicide and assassination—from the ancient world to
the present day. It also possesses depth—exploring the nature and
use of drones, with particular and detailed attention given to
Israel and the Intifada and the U.S. policy of using drones in its
war against terrorists. For anyone interested in a careful moral
evaluation, offered by one of today's leading ethicists, of drone
usage as a kind of targeted killing, this is a must-read.
*Tobias Winright, Hubert Mäder Chair of Health Care Ethics, Saint
Louis University*
In his analysis of the emerging discourse of targeted killing,
Kenneth R. Himes carefully examines the blurring of categories
traditionally used for the justification of political killings—the
paradigm of law enforcement and the just war tradition. This book
will serve as an important source for anybody interested in the
history and political-ethical context of killing in the political
sphere.
*Hille Haker, Richard A. McCormick, SJ, Chair of Catholic Moral
Theology, Loyola University Chicago*
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