Like any good conservative I accept that things are paradoxical. The defence of civilisation involves doing uncivilised things. It is the reason we maintain an army in the first place.Wokko wrote:We thoroughly condemn the London Blitz but shy away from the firebombings of German cities, the nuclear bombings and the absolutely horrendous incendiary attacks on Japanese cities made out of wood and paper. You could add to that the "Rape of Nanking" vs the "Rape of Berlin and Eastern Germany".
Just like the Japanese we prefer to gloss over our role in terrible war crimes, deluding ourselves that they were necessary.
War is a unique moral context, in which many normal moral rules are relaxed, at the same time as actors are placed under the greatest possible pressure. The level of restraint shown by the Allied Armies in WW2 in the face of an enemy that recognised few boundaries - including initiating area bombing in London - was probably as much as could be expected.
What is essential is that an act taken in war has a legitimate military objective. The (in both senses) rape of Berlin by the Soviet Army had no military purpose - it was a combination of carnal lust and (understandable) revenge. I am not sure it was a war crime in the sense that we usually mean the term (ie an officially sanctioned act). I'd need to read Antony Beevor's excellent book on the subject again.
I am less certain about the bombing of German cities. It was horrible, but at the time it was widely believed to have a military objective and to hasten the end of the war. In Japan, at nuclear scale, it was, of course.
Finally, I think it is important that potential aggressors know that the democracies will respond with overwhelming force and determination to acts of aggression, without being stricken by liberal hand-wringing. It was, after all, the lynch-pin of our nuclear policy. That policy was arguably made more credible by what was done to Germany and Japan. That said, I dread to think how the liberals and bien-pensants who seem so widespread in our society today would ever deal with a real threat to our freedom.