US warfare in Somalia and the trade-off between casualty-aversion and civilian protection |
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Authors: | Sebastian Kaempf |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Political Science and International Studies, The University of Queensland , Australia s.kaempf@uq.edu.au |
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Abstract: | This article examines the ways in which the two normative concerns of casualty-aversion and civilian protection influenced US military strategy in the particular context of the asymmetric conflict in Somalia in the early 1990s. The article critically evaluates US military operations through the prism of international humanitarian law and examines whether American forces started prioritizing casualty-aversion over the safeguarding of Somali civilians. Finally, by drawing on emerging moral guidelines (such as Michael Walzer's idea of ‘due care’), the article examines whether lower numbers of Somali civilian deaths could have been achieved if marginal increases to the risks faced by US soldiers had been accepted. |
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Keywords: | US warfare Somalia UNOSOM II asymmetric conflict casualty-aversion civilian protection international humanitarian law just war theory Abdi House Operation Michigan |
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