Bill Vallicella at Maverick Philosopher posts an excerpt from the 1942 George Orwell essay “Pacifism and the War” (link via Bill at Bill’s Comments) in which Orwell accuses the pacifists of his day of being “objectively pro-fascist.”
Orwell writes:
Pacifism is objectively pro-Fascist. This is elementary common sense. If you hamper the war effort of one side you automatically help that of the other. Nor is there any real way of remaining outside such a war as the present one. In practice, ‘he that is not with me is against me’. The idea that you can somehow remain aloof from and superior to the struggle, while living on food which British sailors have to risk their lives to bring you, is a bourgeois illusion bred of money and security.
Now, there are (at least) two kinds of pacifists. Some pacifists believe that non-violence will, on balance, bring about better consequences than violence. According to this view, non-violent means stand a better chance of achieving our objectives than violent ones, and without the costs associated with violence. These are the kinds of pacifists that Orwell derisively (and accurately, for all I know) characterizes as believing “that one can somehow ‘overcome’ the German army by lying on one’s back.”
Whether or not pacifism “works” in this sense is an empirical question that will, presumably, have different answers in different situations. Did the pacifism of Ghandi and Martin Luther King “work”? Would violent methods have been preferable? Would non-violent methods have “worked” against the German army?
Putting this question to one side, there is another form of pacifism, the kind of pacifism that holds that violence is wrong irrespective of the consequences. For this kind of pacifist, it is worse to be guilty of committing violence than to have violence committed against oneself (it is, obviously, possible to simultaneously hold that pacifism is right and it will work better than force). This kind of pacifism accepts, in principle, that pacifism might not “work,” but that it is nevertheless right.
So, is this kind of pacifism “objectively pro-Fascist”? That is, is it responsible for hindering a just cause, and therefore deplorable? Well, if it is, then it seems to me that the same could be said of just war theory. After all, just war theory, in its classic form, holds that there are certain jus in bello criteria (criteria for the just prosecution of a war) that cannot be violated, no matter how expedient it might be to do so. For instance, it is usually held by theorists of just war that it is always wrong to intentionally target civilians (not that this has stopped many governments from doing just that). But, clearly, there are cases where a war effort would be hindered by refraining from targeting civilians. So, is just war theory also “objectively pro-Fascist”? (or “objectively pro-Communist,” “objectively pro-Islamist,” etc.)
Necessarily, moral rules restrain our actions. So long as we recognize these restraints, there is always the possibility they will conflict with our goals. Even a good cause does not, at least according to most moral theories, give us carte blanche in pursuing victory. Pacifism and just war ethics agree that committing a grave evil is worse than even defeat.