Arguments for and against
The traditional view is that soldiers are obligated to obey superior orders to participate in a war, even when this is against their conscience. The moral culpability for fighting an unjust war, in this view, is visited entirely on the leaders and not on ordinary soldiers who are entirely innocent (see moral equality of combatants). Arguments for this view include those based on social contract theory which posit that citizens should obey their state's decision to go to war, the argument that individual soldiers are ill-placed to determine whether a war is just. In 1539, Francisco de Vitoria argued: Those who reject the moral equality of combatants regardless of whether they are fighting for a just or unjust cause argue that individual soldiers have an obligation to refuse to fight an unjust war if they can do so without suffering death or other grave harms. John Rawls argues that selective objection should be allowed as it may prevent the government from continuing an unjust war.Historical examples
During the first several years of the United States participation in the Vietnam War, selective conscientious objection based on just war theory was widespread among Catholic war resisters as well as Jews, nonreligious men, and those of other faiths. Despite its strong grassroots support, selective conscientious objection was unacceptable to the state as it was feared that allowing conscripts to pick and choose what wars they would fight in would undermine national defense. During theLegal recognition
Legally, courts in most countries have distinguished between blanket objection and selective objection, allowing only the former. Soldiers have a right and a responsibility to refuse to commit war crimes, but the right to refuse to fight an illegal war is not widely recognized. In the United States, the 1971 '' Gillette v. United States'' found that to be recognized as a conscientious objector, one must refuse all wars. International law scholarReferences
{{reflist Conscientious objection Anti-war movement Military ethics Civil disobedience