Against Preventive War

The distinction between preemptive and preventive war is not semantic. It is essential.

“Preemptive war” means you face an imminent attack and strike first to preempt it. “Preventive war” means an adversary possesses the capability to threaten you in the future and you attack now to prevent that eventuality from materializing.

Preemptive war may, in narrow circumstances, be justified. Preventive war cannot.

The moral and legal distinction between them turns on imminence. If an attack is truly imminent, i.e. the adversary has mobilized forces, missiles fueled, orders issued, the necessity of self-defense may be “instant, overwhelming, leaving no choice of means.” In such circumstances, striking first is not aggression but defensive timing.

Preventive war, by contrast, is based not on imminent action but on projected capacity. It rests on the claim: “They may attack someday; therefore we attack now.”

Capability is measurable. Intent is not. And intent is the hinge.

There are many reasons a state might increase military capacity including for deterrence, prestige, internal politics, or alliance signaling. To treat capability alone as grounds for war is to collapse defense into speculation.

The moment we substitute projected intent for observable aggression, the category of self-defense dissolves.

Preventive war has a fatal defect: it is not falsifiable. If you claim an enemy would have attacked you in five years, there is no counterfactual world in which that claim can be tested. If they never attack, you say your war prevented it. If they would not have attacked, you can never know.

Preemption can be evaluated. Was the attack truly imminent? Were forces mobilized? Were orders issued? Prevention cannot. It rests on predictions about political decisions that have not yet been made. That epistemic asymmetry is not a minor flaw. It makes preventive war uniquely vulnerable to abuse.

Any principle of war must survive reciprocity. If the United States claims the right to wage preventive war because another state’s growing capacity might someday threaten it, then that principle is available to all states.

Under such a doctrine, for example, Russia may attack Ukraine because it fears future NATO integration, China may strike Taiwan because it fears permanent separation, or China might even justify striking the United States on the theory that American military supremacy poses an enduring future threat. The issue becomes not whether those claims are true but that the logic licenses them.

Unless one argues that the United States alone may exercise preventive force preventive war becomes a universal permission slip for aggression. That is a claim incompatible with any rule-based international order.

The strongest argument in favor of a doctrine of preventive war arises in the context of nuclear weapons. If an adversary is approaching nuclear capability, publicly expresses hostility, and possesses delivery systems, must one wait for imminence? The answer is difficult but difficulty does not erase principle.

The nuclear age compresses timelines; it does not abolish the distinction between capability and imminent use. A state nearing nuclear capability is not the same as a state preparing nuclear launch. The former is a strategic challenge; the latter is an act of aggression in preparation.

If nuclear capability alone justifies preventive war, then every nuclear state would be permanently justified in attacking every rising power. That is not stability. It is permanent war.

Preventive war transforms war from a response to aggression into a tool of anticipatory power management. It shifts the burden of proof from “They are about to attack” to “They might someday become dangerous”. That shift is fatal to any rule-bound order.

The doctrine is elastic enough to justify any use of force, and therefore constrains none.

The deeper principle is simple. War is justified only in response to aggression or imminent attack. The threshold must be high because the costs are irreparable. If we lower the threshold to projected future threat, we convert war from defense into strategic speculation. Preemptive war, narrowly defined and rigorously constrained, may be tragic but necessary. Preventive war is structurally indistinguishable from aggression.

And once that distinction collapses, so does the moral architecture that distinguishes defense from conquest.

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