This book features a critique of key philosophical doctrines that
dominate the Iraq war debate: just war theory, humanitarian
intervention, democratic realism, and preventive war doctrine. The
author evaluates each doctrine and argues that the failure of
philosophical discourse on the war derives from misunderstanding the
ontological nature of new wars and ignoring the spread of global
capitalism that fuels contemporary war violence. He then develops an
alternative philosophical approach to the analysis of war that argues
for giving greater import to distinctive features of contemporary
warfare. This approach offers a model for thinking through the
philosophical dilemmas introduced by new wars.