But, it's also obvious that the destruction of value can sometimes lead to increased production of value.
Destabilizing a non-optimal state of equilibrium through a destructive act can often result in a much more optimal state of equilibrium.
In the canonical example, imagine that the shop is badly kept — that the owner isn't really invested in maintaining it or running it well.
His child breaks the window, and he fixes it, and suddenly in contrast with the new pane he sees how shoddy his shop is and decides to get his act together.
It might even be much better for the world economy, long-term.
[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Car_Allowance_Rebate_System
I'd wager that the vast majority of Londoners living during the war did not see a net benefit from their neighborhoods being destroyed.
Whether or not future generations reaped a benefit at their expense is a utilitarian exercise for your imagination, but one example doesn't invalidate the economic principle (destroying resources is usually harmful, not helpful).