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5 - Jus in Bello: Did the Union Fight the War Justly?

from PART ONE - LINCOLN THE POLITICIAN AND COMMANDER IN CHIEF

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2015

Thomas L. Carson
Affiliation:
Loyola University, Chicago
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Summary

Questions of jus in bello (literally “justice in war” – just means in fighting wars) are very crucial for an ethical assessment of Lincoln. The Union military's treatment of Confederate civilians has been widely criticized. The Civil War has often been characterized as a “total war” that imposed very harsh and ruthless treatment of Southern civilians on a very large scale. During the war Lincoln was commander in chief of the Army and Navy of the United States. In addition, he personally authorized and approved a new code of conduct for the U.S. military (formalized in the Lieber Code) that permitted much harsher treatment of civilians than some important Union leaders, most notably General McClellan, thought proper. In this chapter I argue that the Civil War was not a total war and that Lincoln's policies concerning the treatment of civilians during the war were largely, but not entirely, justified.

I. The Union Army's Treatment of Civilians

Early in the Civil War, both sides followed rules of war that required soldiers to give immunity to civilians and strictly respect the property of civilians, even when doing so hindered military operations. One notable example of how this worked in practice occurred after the Battle of Shiloh, when the Union Army moved very deeply into Confederate territory. Union General Halleck advanced on Beauregard's shattered Confederate army of 70,000, the most important Confederate military unit outside of Virginia at the time. Halleck had a chance to capture Beauregard's army if he laid siege to Corinth, Mississippi, but he refrained from doing that. Halleck allowed Beauregard's army an avenue of escape from the city because of his concern for the civilians in Corinth. General McClellan, who commanded the Army of the Potomac for more than a year early in the war, also wanted to fight a limited war.

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Lincoln's Ethics , pp. 191 - 217
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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