•  595
    Some proponents of a ban on Autonomous Weapon Systems (AWS) believe adopting these would lower the threshold for war, and is thus morally undesirable. This paper argues against that thesis. First, removing a single constraint on warmaking does not automatically make war more likely. Analysis of the causal input of other more potent restraints shows this holds true for just a fraction of potential conflicts. Secondly, AWS adoption would also impact other restraints on war in ways that are complex…Read more
  •  444
    Autonomous weapon systems (AWS) – military robots able to select and engage targets with lethal force on their own – are a subject of voluminous ethical debates, with many calling for a universal ban on AWS. One of the most prominent arguments for such a ban is based on the threat of anti-personnel AWS – killer robots – to terrorist groups and totalitarian regimes. As these weapons would be ideal for terrorist or oppressive ends, and as having such ends realized is very bad indeed, this would be…Read more
  •  246
    Critics of the Ukrainian use of cluster munitions (CMs) fail to acknowledge several key details of the case: Ukraine’s lack of alternatives, use in own, already heavily mined territory, the existential threat the country is facing or the fact the less harmful class of CMs is being used in finite and pre-determined amounts as a stop-gap measure. Given these circumstances, standard arguments against CM use fail to convince. The case of Ukraine’s CM use also showcases several weaknesses of the cont…Read more
  •  453
    Bring Them Home: Creating Humane & Enforceable POW Parole System
    Journal of Military Ethics 23 (3): 182-200. 2024.
    Allowing prisoners of war (POW) to be released on parole ceased to be practiced in early XX century, although for centuries it was quite common in European warfare. In this article I argue there are several powerful moral reasons to reinstate POW parole: the well- being of POW and their families, but also a chance to address the previously intractable problem of surrender to aircraft and autonomous weapons. I also argue that there are no good moral reasons not to allow POW to accept parole, and …Read more
  •  528
    Bring Them Home: Creating a Humane and Enforceable POW Parole System
    Journal of Military Ethics 23 (3): 182-200. 2025.
    There are several strong moral reasons for restoring the practice of parole for prisoners of war (POWs), that is, allowing them to spend their POW internment in a neutral country or in their own country provided they abstain from any military activity. This article makes an ethical case for parole, while discussing thoroughly theoretical as well as practical arguments against its reintroduction. The article suggests ways to create a reliable, internationally recognized way of paroling POWs. It c…Read more
  •  528
    Burden of Proof in the Autonomous Weapons Debate
    Ethics and Armed Forces 2024 (1): 34-42. 2024.
    The debate on the ethical permissibility of autonomous weapon systems (AWS) is deadlocked. It could therefore benefit from a differentiated assignment of the burden of proof. This is because the discussion is not purely philosophical in nature, but has a legal and security policy component and aims to avoid the most harmful outcomes of an otherwise unchecked development. Opponents of a universal AWS ban must clearly demonstrate that AWS comply with the Law of Armed Conflict (LOAC). This requires…Read more
  •  591
    Just War Theory debates discussing the principle of the Moral Equality of Combatants involve the notion of Invincible Ignorance; the claim that warfi ghters are morally excused for participating in an unjust war because of their epistemic limitations. Conditions of military deployment may indeed lead to genuinely insurmountable epistemic limitations. In other cases, these may be overcome. This paper provides a preliminary sketch of heuristics designed to allow a combatant to judge whether or not…Read more
  •  1649
    AWS compliance with the ethical principle of proportionality: three possible solutions
    Ethics and Information Technology 25 (1): 1-13. 2023.
    The ethical Principle of Proportionality requires combatants not to cause collateral harm excessive in comparison to the anticipated military advantage of an attack. This principle is considered a major (and perhaps insurmountable) obstacle to ethical use of autonomous weapon systems (AWS). This article reviews three possible solutions to the problem of achieving Proportionality compliance in AWS. In doing so, I describe and discuss the three components Proportionality judgments, namely collater…Read more
  •  623
    The 2016-17 Iraqi offensive that recaptured the city of Mosul from the Islamic State have demonstrated the inability of contemporary armed forces to retake urban areas from a determined and ruthless enemy without either suffering debilitating casualties or causing thousands of civilian deaths and virtually destroying the city itself. The enemy’s willingness to refuse civilian evacuation via a humanitarian corridor and effectively take the inhabitants hostage is all it takes to impose this tragic…Read more
  •  625
    Beyond Deadlock: Low Hanging Fruit and Strict yet Available Options in AWS Regulation
    Journal of Ethics and Emerging Technologies 2 (32): 1-14. 2022.
    Efforts to ban Autonomous Weapon Systems were both unsuccessful and controversial. Simultaneously the need to address the detrimental aspects of AWS development and proliferation continues to grow in scope and urgency. The article presents several regulatory solutions capable of addressing the issue while simultaneously respecting the requirements of military necessity and so attracting a broad consensus. Two much stricter solutions – regional AWS bans and adoption of a no first use policy – are…Read more
  •  669
    Please contact me at [email protected] if you are interested in reading a particular chapter or being sent the entire manuscript for private use. The thesis offers a comprehensive argument in favor of a regulationist approach to autonomous weapon systems (AWS). AWS, defined as all military robots capable of selecting or engaging targets without direct human involvement, are an emerging and potentially deeply transformative military technology subject to very substantial ethical controversy.…Read more
  •  1296
    Spare Not a Naked Soldier: A Response to Daniel Restrepo
    Journal of Military Ethics 21 (1): 66-81. 2022.
    In his recent JME article Daniel Restrepo argues that both legal and ethical rules should protect the so-called Naked Soldiers, combatants engaged in activity unrelated to military operations and unaware of the imminent danger threatening them. I criticize this position from several angles. I deny the existence of any link between vulnerability and innocence, and claim ignorance of deadly threats does not give rise to a morally distinguished type of vulnerability. I argue that actions not contri…Read more
  •  1536
    Punishing Robots – Way Out of Sparrow’s Responsibility Attribution Problem
    Journal of Military Ethics 19 (4): 285-291. 2020.
    The Laws of Armed Conflict require that war crimes be attributed to individuals who can be held responsible and be punished. Yet assigning responsibility for the actions of Lethal Autonomous Weapon...
  •  957
    Arguments from human dignity feature prominently in the Lethal Autonomous Weapons moral feasibility debate, even though their exists considerable controversy over their role and soundness and the notion of dignity remains under-defined. Drawing on the work of Dieter Birnbacher, I fix the sub-discourse as referring to the essential value of human persons in general, and to postulated moral rights of combatants not covered within the existing paradigm of the International Humanitarian Law in parti…Read more