In an article entitled DefiningA Just War in the October 29 issue of The Nation, Richard Falkdeclares that "The war in Afghanistan ... qualifies in my understanding asthe first truly just war since World War II." Falk goes on to warn that thejustice of the cause may be "negated by the injustice of improper means andexcessive ends," but this caveat doesn't take away from his initialdeclaration. He didn't say that a unilateral U.S. military response to theevents of September 11 could be just, but that "the war" is just. Thissentence, coming as it does from one of the country's most prominent andrespected advocates of international peace and justice, will have, I'm afraid,profoundly deleterious consequences. "This is a just war," people willsay; "even Richard Falk says so." And his later points about the needfor following the legal and moral principles of necessity, proportionality,discrimination, and humanity will be largely ignored.