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Ethical and Moral Leadership in the Military. Saving Private Ryan Case Study. Part 1. From the Beachhead to the Village. Leadership Authority and Responsibility. Were the Orders by Capt Miller: Ethical? Within the Limits of Authority? Related to Military Duty? Clear and Unequivocal?
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Ethical and Moral Leadership in the Military Saving Private Ryan Case Study
Part 1 From the Beachhead to the Village
Leadership Authority and Responsibility • Were the Orders by Capt Miller: • Ethical? • Within the Limits of Authority? • Related to Military Duty? • Clear and Unequivocal? • Received and Understood?
Article 1 of the Geneva Convention states: Persons taking no active part in hostilities, including members of armed forces who have laid down their arms and those placed hors de combat by sickness, wounds, detention, or any other cause, shall in all circumstances be treated humanely, without any adverse distinction founded on race, color, religion or faith, sex, birth or wealth, or any other similar criteria. The Law of Armed Conflict states: NONCOMBATANTS -- These people include medical personnel, chaplains, POWs, wounded and sick, shipwrecked, parachutists escaping disabled aircraft, and civilians. NONCOMBATANTS are NOT legal targets. A noncombatant poses no military threat to us. Therefore, there is no military necessity (principle I) in targeting them.
“Explain the math of this one to me—what’s the sense of risking the lives of the eight of us for just one guy?” -- Pvt. Reiban
Military Priorities • 1st – Mission • 2nd – Higher HQ • 3rd – Collateral Units • 4th – Unit Welfare • 5th – Individuals • 6th – Yourself • 7th – To Act Decisively • 8th -- Community
Mission vs. People Capt Miller (in response to Pvt. Reiban): “There’s a duty as soldiers. We have orders, we have to follow them and that supersedes everything else.”
A Leader’s Decision: for the People or for the Mission a. Group Egoism (to group) -- acts are judged according to whether their consequences are beneficial or harmful for the entire group (family, tribe, nation) to which they belong. Under any form of egoism, the costs and benefits to ‘others,’ outside of the group, or the leader are given subordinate status or are ignored entirely. b. Deontological (to duty) -- comes from the Greek word deon, or duty, since it emphasizes foundational duties or obligations. A moral obligation that a person has towards another person. Duties are actions that are due to someone else, such as paying money that one owes to a creditor.
Right vs. Right -- Right vs. Wrong “Many of the decisions made in combat are made on the basis of consequences…weighing the costs and benefits of various alternatives.” -- Dr. Larry Hinman
Part 2 From the Village to the Glider
Military Priorities • 1st – Mission • 2nd – Higher HQ • 3rd – Collateral Units • 4th – Unit Welfare • 5th – Individuals • 6th – Yourself • 7th – To Act Decisively • 8th -- Community
A Leader’s Rationalization Capt Miller: “When one of your men is killed, you tell yourself it happened to save the lives of 2, 3, 10 maybe 100 others…We’ve lost 94 men…I’ve saved the lives of maybe 10 times that. That’s how simple it is…that’s how you rationalize b/w mission and the man.” 1st Sgt. Horvath: “Sir, sometimes the mission is the man!” Capt Miller: “Well, this Ryan better be worth it—he better go home and cure some disease or invent a longer lasting light bulb or something.”
Chaplain (Col.) Maloney’s 3 Ethical Pressures Faced by Military Professionals 1) Rule-Oriented 2) Goal-Oriented 3) Situation-Oriented
Part 3 Moving out from the Glider to the Decision at the Bridge
Balancing Considerations An Unnecessary Risk? To The Mission? To The People?
Balancing Considerations “Sir, are you gonna let them kill him? Sir, this isn’t right!” – Cpl. Upham
Balancing Considerations An added twist with the decision: we later see the freed soldier returns to fight against them again
Balancing Considerations Disobeying Orders/Dissention When do you fire on your fellow soldier?
Summary • Officers Provide “Sanity Check” • Leadership Authority and Responsibility • Principle, Purpose, People • Blind Obedience is Dangerous • Illegal, Immoral, Unethical Orders • Dissention/Disobeying Orders • The End does not Always Justify the Means • Ethical Pressures • Balancing Considerations • Right vs. Right or Right vs. Wrong
APPENDIX OF CHARACTERS Captain Miller Private Ryan Sergeant Horvath Private Reiban Private Jackson • Medic Wade • Corporal Upham • Private Melish • Private Caparzo
Captain John Miller • Actor: Tom Hanks
Private James F. Ryan • Actor: Matt Damon
Sergeant First Class Horvath • Actor: Tom Sizemore
Private Reiban • Actor: Ed Burns • Threatens to walk • away from mission after • letting the POW go.
Private Jackson • Actor: Barry Pepper • Competent Sniper
T/4 Medic Wade • Actor: Giovanni Ribisi • Killed in attack on • radar station
Corporal Upham • Actor: Jeremy Davies
Private Melish • Actor: Adam Goldberg
Private Caparzo • Actor: Vin Diesel • Killed by sniper in the • village trying to save • the girl.