Thanas wrote:Second, not one of the British cruisers indicated by any means that they were not still in combat. On the contrary, both tried to ram the sub and fired at it as well.
Uh, that's not correct. After Aboukir was torpedoed (the Captain believing she had hit a mine), both Cressy and Hogue had stopped to lower boats to rescue survivors from Aboukir. Hogue was then torpedoed in the process of rescuing survivors.
http://www.worldwar1.co.uk/cressy.htm
It was only after realizing that a submarine was still in their midst and actively shooting at them did both ships stop the rescue and engage once again in combat.
So if we are to apply the "no attacking of ships conducting rescue operations", Weddigen should not have torpedoed Hogue (2nd ship hit) at all, which then provoked Cressy (3rd ship hit) to drop the rescue operation and engage in combat.
In reality, Weddigen actually even maneuvered his submarine so he can get a better shot at the Hogue, which was using the crippled Aboukir as a shield while she conducted rescue operations (and Hogue could not have fired on the U-9 nor rammed her while Aboukir was between them). So it's pretty clear that Weddigen was out to bag all three cruisers regardless of humanitarian concerns, which he was well aware of. He'd have to be pretty deranged to think Cressy and Hogue were stopping to present themselves as targets for his benefit.
Even considering he had the legal right to attack, I think he should not have done so out of a moral duty.
The problem, as in all wars, is that the line is drawn at legality, not "moral duty". Because otherwise every soldier would simply cite their moral duty to "not kill fellow human beings" and there would be no war in the first place. Your own defense of Weddigen in fact hinges a lot on the legality of the matter, not its morality.
As bad as it may sound, soldiers are trained to follow what is legal, not necessarily what is moral. Because if you start injecting morality into the picture you start putting the very existence of soldiers into question.