In classical war theory, from Clausewitz to the beginning of the 20th century, the civilian population was primarily regarded as an object: a demographic and economic resource ("rear"), a source of recruitment for the army, and as a passive victim ("collateral damage") or a tool of pressure on the enemy. However, historical practice, especially since the era of total wars and national liberation movements, has shown that civilians often become subjects – active participants in resistance, bearers of legitimacy, and a key factor in achieving political goals of the conflict. This evolution reflects the shift from wars of cabinets and regular armies to ideological, networked, and hybrid wars.
Antiquity and the Middle Ages: Civilian population (urban inhabitants) often became the main object of violence (massacres, slavery) after the capture of a fortress. This was a tactic of intimidation and a form of payment for the troops. However, in peasant uprisings (Jacquerie, Hussite Wars), civilians themselves became subjects of armed resistance.
The Era of "Cabinet Wars" (17th–18th centuries): With the development of regular armies and the law of treaties (beginning of codification in the treatises of Hugo Grotius), the civilian population began to be distinguished as a protected category, although this was rarely observed in practice. War was considered the affair of professional armies.
Napoleonic and "total" wars (19th–20th centuries): A turning point. Napoleon introduced conscription – mass recruitment of civilians into the army, making them subjects in the form of soldiers. The First and especially the Second World Wars eroded the boundary between the front and the rear, leading to the concept of "total war," where the civilian population was deliberately targeted to undermine the enemy's will to resist (bombing of Dresden, Hiroshima, siege of Leningrad). Here, it was both an object of terror and a subject of the labor front.
Interesting fact: During World War II, in occupied Europe and the USSR, the civilian population became mass subjects of partisan movements and resistance. This forced the Nazis to apply severe punitive measures against civilians (such as the destruction of the villages of Katyń, Lidice), which, in turn, only strengthened the support for partisans. This paradox shows the duality of status: the attempt to suppress civilians as subjects of resistance turned them into objects of total destruction.
Theory of Just War (Jus ad bellum and Jus in bello): Within this framework, the civilian population is an object of protection. The principle of distinction requires a clear separation of combatants from non-combatants, and the principle of proportionality prohibits attacks where civilian casualties are disproportionate to military necessity.
Critical military theory and postcolonial studies: These approaches assert that Western humanitarian law often serves as an instrument that, while declaring the protection of civilians as objects, in fact legitimizes wars where they become the main victims. In anti-colonial wars (Algeria, Vietnam), the civilian population was a key subject of political struggle. The war was fought for "hearts and minds," and partisans ("fish in the sea of the people," according to Mao Zedong's metaphor) consciously blurred the boundary between combatant and civilian, making the population an active participant.
In 21st-century conflicts (Syria, Yemen, etc.), the status of the civilian population has become even more ambiguous:
Object of informational and cognitive war: The population is deliberately subjected to propaganda, misinformation, and psychological operations to demoralize or mobilize. Here, civilians are objects of manipulation, but their perception becomes a battlefield.
Object of humanitarian crises as a tactic: The creation of artificial hunger, blockade of humanitarian aid, destruction of hospitals and schools are used to achieve military and political goals (the strategy of "scorched earth"). The population is an object of pressure on the enemy.
Subject of digital resistance and voluntarism: Civilians become active subjects of cyberwar (hacktivists), provide digital support to the army, engage in crowdfunding, production of drones and equipment, documenting war crimes. This erodes the formal status of non-combatant.
The Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the Additional Protocols of 1977 represent an attempt to restore the status of the civilian population as a protected object. They prohibit:
However, the effectiveness of these norms depends on political will, asymmetry of conflicts, and the emergence of new technologies (cyberweapons, autonomous systems), which once again call into question the applicability of old principles of distinction.
Thus, the civilian population in modern war is both an object and a subject at the same time, and in exaggerated forms. It is:
History shows that attempts to reduce civilians to the status of passive objects of protection (as in ideal models of humanitarian law) often fail in the face of political reality, where war becomes a struggle for the survival of nations and identities. The future, perhaps, lies not in denying this duality, but in developing new legal and ethical frameworks that recognize the active role of civilians in self-protection and resistance, while ensuring them maximum possible protection from arbitrary violence. War has ceased to be the affair of soldiers alone; it has become a test for the entire society, making the question of the status of the civilian population one of the central issues in understanding the nature of conflicts in the 21st century.
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