With the publication of -Air Theory for the Twenty-first Century," Colonel John Wardenushered in a new era of wartime targeting. No longer are warfighters limited, as in years past, toan ad hoc, haphazard system of selecting wartime targets. Rather, Warden presents the warfighter with a unique tool-the five-ring system theory-that dramatically improves the warfighter's ability to systematically identify wartime targets.However, for all of its acclaim, little has been written about Warden's five-ring system theory. Even less ...
Read More
With the publication of -Air Theory for the Twenty-first Century," Colonel John Wardenushered in a new era of wartime targeting. No longer are warfighters limited, as in years past, toan ad hoc, haphazard system of selecting wartime targets. Rather, Warden presents the warfighter with a unique tool-the five-ring system theory-that dramatically improves the warfighter's ability to systematically identify wartime targets.However, for all of its acclaim, little has been written about Warden's five-ring system theory. Even less has been written about the legal and moral implications of using Warden's theory to identify wartime targets. In this book: (1) briefly examine Warden's theory in lightof prevailing law and norms of expected behavior; (2) find that Warden's five-ring system theorysidesteps major issues; namely it fails to account for the legal and moral constraints of wartimetargeting and, in doing so, increases the warfighter's potential to run afoul of international law, domestic law, and norms of expected behavior; and (3) conclude, as a result, that such targetingshould not be done without due consideration to the legal and moral issues surrounding thecomplex process of targeting.
Read Less