Care for the Enemy:
You are a deployed medical professional providing aid to those injured on the battlefield. After a series of mortar blasts, many people are critically injured and require immediate medical attention. While most of the people arriving are friendly forces, some are adversaries. On the bed in front of you is an adversary leader that goes by the name Bandit, who recently led an attack that killed hundreds of American troops. Their vital signs are unstable, and they will likely go into cardiac arrest and die without intervention. There is also a coalition partner in the room that has a more stable, but still life-threatening injury. Your oath and the Geneva Conventions calls you to render aid to any human that requires medical attention, but you know that if Bandit is saved, they will likely bring harm to others again in the future. What do you do?