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After the fallout of Operation Gothic Serpent in Somalia (estimated 300-500 killed), the US decided not to intervene in the Rwandan genocide (estimated 500,000-1,000,000 killed). Was the ‘you live and you learn’ approach justified? Interventionism will always bare this inevitable question and the matter of civil liberties and accountability will remain disputed. If operations do not succeed is it worth defending others, when it is our troops on the ground? Well, one way to minimize casualties and resources is through the use of small, elite SOF units.
The use of special operations forces will always remain on blurred lines.
Thomas Aquinas’ Just-war theory inspired a set of three criteria:
1.
The action must be last resort
2.
There must be a great chance of success
3.
The damage the act causes must be proportionate to
the injury or injustice that caused it
Do we use SOF or not? That depends...
“The world is flat, except when it is round” – Fredric Manget
Photo Credit: Reform
“The world is flat, except when it is round” – Fredric Manget
Photo Credit: Reform
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