Military Spades Rules

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Military fiction mainly deals with military operations, adventures, memoirs etc. By country's military wing - army, air force or navy. It has few sub-genres like military thriller, military historical fiction, military science fiction etc. Military fiction may have an angle of civilian intelligence agencies but the majority of plot revolves around military operations or situations. Duncan Blair, ‘To Whom Does a Military Commander Owe a Moral Duty?’, in David Whetham (ed.), Ethics, Law and Military Operations, (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2011), p202 David Whetham, ‘Killing Within the Rules’, Small Wars and Insurgencies, issue 18/4 December 2007, pp.721-733.

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Military doctors must treat people according to how wounded they are, not according to what side they are on.

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What do you think? Doctors are bound by additional regulations they must follow. Does it matter if the other side don’t respect the same rules?

Whilst military doctors are members of the military profession, they are also members of the medical profession, and therefore have additional rights and responsibilities to other members of the armed forces. Doctors must treat patients according to medical need, rather than any other reasons. They must resist pressure from others to treat patients according to tactical or strategic needs.

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While it may be difficult to accept, it is also irrelevant if the other side is respecting the rules or not – it is precisely those rules that we are fighting to uphold and it is therefore essential to avoid descending to the same moral level as those who break them.

‘The essential, and primary, moral duty is to the patient; no matter to which ethnic, religious or combat grouping they may belong. The patient’s autonomy may be compromised by the authoritarian constraints of the military but it is still beholden upon the physician to apply a firm moral code to ensure the best possible outcome for the patient.’ (Blair, 2011).

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Duncan Blair, ‘To Whom Does a Military Commander Owe a Moral Duty?’, in David Whetham (ed.), Ethics, Law and Military Operations, (Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke, 2011), p202

David Whetham, ‘Killing Within the Rules’, Small Wars and Insurgencies, issue 18/4 December 2007, pp.721-733.

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