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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Military_humanism
rdfs:label
Military humanism
rdfs:comment
Military humanism is the use of force and violence to further a humanitarian cause. Although it can easily be disputed whether or not furthering a humanitarian cause is the real intention behind such an action, the theoretical descriptive guideline still applies. The U.S.-led North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) intervention in the Balkans is the most well-known case, and brought the term to prominence.
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dbc:Military_sociology
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1597708
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dbc:Military_sociology dbr:Humanitarian dbr:Kosovo dbr:Noam_Chomsky dbr:1999_NATO_bombing_of_the_Federal_Republic_of_Yugoslavia dbr:Balkans dbr:North_Atlantic_Treaty_Organization dbr:Military_Association_of_Atheists_&_Freethinkers
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dbo:abstract
Military humanism is the use of force and violence to further a humanitarian cause. Although it can easily be disputed whether or not furthering a humanitarian cause is the real intention behind such an action, the theoretical descriptive guideline still applies. The U.S.-led North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) intervention in the Balkans is the most well-known case, and brought the term to prominence. The concept is most widely explored in Noam Chomsky's book The New Military Humanism: Lessons from Kosovo (1999) in which he argues that NATO's 1999 bombing of Kosovo was not conducted for humanitarian reasons but to further the military hegemony of western democratic powers such as the United States.
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