To receive the full scores (five points), you should (1) post your answer to the topic question with supporting details (four points), and (2) critically engage with other classmates (one point). The scores will be decided based on the quality of your arguments (relevancy, persuasiveness, and creativeness) and comments (relevancy and persuasiveness).
Compare and contrast different perspectives in the realist and liberal traditions. Apply the theory to a real-world problem. (CLO 2 and 3)
International
“T
“bis book purports t
o
present a theory o
f international politics. T
he test by
1 w
hich such a theory m
ust be judged is not a priori and abstract but em
pirical
and pragm
atic. T
he theory, in oth
er
w
ords, m
ust be judged not by som
e precon-
ceived abstract principle or concept unrelated to reality, but by its purpose: to
bring order and m
eaning to a m
ass o
f phenom
ena that w
ithout it w
ould rem
ain
disconnected and unintelligible. It m
ust m
eet a dual test, an em
pirical and a log-
ical one: do the facts as they actually are lend them
selves to the interpretation the
theory has put upon them
, and do the conclusions at w
hich the theory arrives fol-
low
w
ith logical necessity from
its prem
ises? In short, is the theory consistent w
ith
the facts and w
ithin itself?
T
he issue this theory raises concerns the nature o
f all politics. T
he history o
f
m
odem
political thought is the story o
f a contest betw
een tw
o schools that diff
er
fundam
entally in their conceptions o
f the nature o
f m
an, society, and politics.
O
ne believes that a rational and m
oral political order, derived from
universally
valid abstract principles, can be -achieved here and now
. It assum
es the essential
goodness and infinite m
alleability o
f hum
an nature, and blam
es the failure of the
social order to m
easure up to the rational standards on lack o
f know
ledge and
understanding, obsolescent social institutions, or the depravity o
f certain isolated
individuals or groups. It trusts in education, reform
, and the sporadic use of force
to rem
edy these defects.
T
he other school believes that the w
orld, im
perfect as it is from
the rational
point o
f view
, is the result o
f forces inherent in hum
an nature. To im
prove the
w
orld one m
ust w
ork w
ith those forces, not against them
. This being inherently a
w
orld o
f opposing interests and o
f conflict am
ong them
, m
oral principles can
never be fully realized but m
ust at best be approxim
ated through the ever tem
–
porary balancing o
f interests and the ever precarious settlem
ent o
f conflicts. This
school, then, sees in a system
o
f checks and balances a universal principle for all
pluralist societies. It appeals to historical precedent rather than to abstract princi-
ples and aim
s at the realization o
f the lesser evil rather than o
f the absolute good.
3
5
4
A
R
ealist Theory of International P
olitics
T
his theoretical concern w
ith hum
an nature as it actually is, and w
ith the
historical processes as they actually take place, has earned for the theory presented
here the nam
e o
f realism
. W
hat are the tenets o
f political realism
? N
o system
atic
exposition o
f the philosophy o
f political r
ealism
can be attem
pted here;
it
w
ill suffice to single out six fundam
ental principles, w
hich have frequently been
m
isunderstood.
SIX PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL REALISM
1. Political realism
believes that politics, like society in general, is governed by
objective law
s that have their roots in hum
an nature. In order to im
prove society
it is first necessary to understand the law
s by w
hich society lives. T
he operation o
f
these law
s being im
pervious to our preferences, m
en w
ill challenge them
only at
the risk o
f failure
.
R
ealism
, believing as it does in the objectivity o
f the law
s o
f politics, m
ust
also believe in the possibility of developing a rational theory that reflects, how
ever
im
perfectly and one-sidedly, these objective law
s. It believes also, then, in the pos-
sibility o
f distinguishing in politics betw
een truth and opinion-betw
een w
hat is
true objectively and rationally, supported by evidence and illum
inated by reason,
and w
hat is only a subjective judgm
ent, divorced from
the facts as they are and
inform
ed by prejudice and w
ishful thinking.
H
um
an nature, in w
hich the law
s o
f politics have their roots, has not
changed since the classical philosophies o
f C
hina, India, and G
reece endeavored
to discover these law
s. H
ence, novelty is not necessariiy a virtue in political
theory, nor is old age a defect. T
he fact that a theory o
f politics, if there be such
a theory, has never been heard o
f before tends to create a presum
ption against,
rather than in favor of, its soundness. C
onversely, the fact that a theory o
f poli-
tics w
as developed hundreds or even thousands o
fyears ago-as w
as the theory of
the balance o
f pow
er-does not create a presum
ption that it m
ust be outm
oded
and obsolete. A
theory o
fpolitics m
ust be subjected to the dual test o
freason and
experience. To dism
iss such a theory because it had its flow
ering in centuries past
is to present not a rational argum
ent but a m
odernistic prejudice that takes for
granted the superiority o
f the present over the past. To dispose o
f the revival
o
f
such a theory as a “fashion” or “fad” is tantam
ount to assum
ing that in m
atters
political w
e can have opinions but no truths.
For realism
, theory consists in ascertaining facts and giving them
m
eaning
through reason. It assum
es that the character o
fa foreign policy can be ascertained
only through the exam
ination o
f the political acts perform
ed and o
f the foresee-
able consequences o
f these acts. T
hus w
e can find out w
hat statesm
en have actu-
ally done, and from
the foreseeable consequences o
f their acts w
e can surm
ise
w
hat their objectives m
ight have been.
Y
et exam
ination o
f the facts is not enough. To give m
eaning to the factual
raw
m
aterial o
fforeign policy,
w
e m
ust approach political reality w
ith a kind o
fra-
tional outline, a m
ap that suggests to us the possible m
eanings o
f foreign policy.
S
ix P
rinciples o
f P
olitical R
ealism
In other w
ords, w
e put ourselves in the position o
f a statesm
an w
ho m
ust m
eet a
certain p
roblem
o
f foreign policy under certain circum
stances, and w
e ask our-
selves w
hat the rational alternatives are
from
w
hich a statesm
an m
ay choose w
ho
m
ust m
eet this problem
under these circum
stances (presum
ing alw
ays that he acts
in a rational m
anner), and w
hich o
f these rational alternatives this particular
statesm
an, acting under these circum
stances, is likely to choose. It is the testing o
f
this rational hypothesis against the actual facts and their consequences that gives
theoretical m
eaning to the facts o
f international politics.
2.
T
he m
ain signpost that helps political realism
to find its w
ay through the
landscape o
f international politics is the concept o
f interest defined in term
s o
f
pow
er. T
his concept provides the link betw
een reason trying to understand inter-
national politics and the facts to be understood. It sets politics as an autonom
ous
sphere o
f action and understanding apart from
other spheres, such as econom
ics
(understood in term
s o
f interest defined as w
ealth), ethics, aesthetics, or religion.
W
ithout such a concept a theory o
f politics, international or dom
estic, w
ould be
altogether im
possible, for w
ithout it w
e could not distinguish betw
een political
and nonpolitical facts, nor could w
e bring at least a m
easure o
f system
ic order to
the political sphere.
W
e assum
e that statesm
en think and act in term
s ofinterest defined as pow
er,
and the evidence o
f history bears that assum
ption out. T
hat assum
ption allow
s us
to retrace and anticipate, as it w
ere, the steps a statesm
an-past, present, or future-
has taken or w
ill take on the political scene. W
e look over his shoulder w
hen he
w
rites his dispatches; w
e listen in on his conversations w
ith other statesm
en; w
e
read and anticipate his very thoughts. T
hinking in term
s o
f interest defined as
pow
er, w
e think as he does, and as disinterested observers w
e understand his
thoughts and actions perhaps better than he, the actor on the political scene, does
him
self
.
T
he concept
o
f interest defined as pow
er im
poses intellectual discipline
upon the observer, infuses rational order into the subject m
atter o
f politics, and
thus m
akes the theoretical understanding o
f politics possible. O
n the side o
f the
actor, it provides for rational discipline in action and creates that astounding con-
tinuity in foreign policy w
hich m
akes A
m
erican, B
ritish, or R
ussian foreign policy
appear as in intelligible, rational continuum
, by and large consistent w
ithin itself,
regardless o
f the different m
otives, preferences, and intellectual and m
oral quali-
ties o
f successive statesm
en. A
realist theory o
f international politics, then, w
ill
guard against tw
o popular fallacies: the concern w
ith m
otives and the concern
w
ith ideological preferenc
es.
To search for the clue to foreign policy exclusively in the m
otives of states
–
m
en is both futile and deceptive. It is futile because m
otives are the m
ost illusive
o
f psychological data, distorted as they are, frequently beyond recognition, by the
interests and em
otions o
f actor and observer alike. D
o we really
know
w
hat our
ow
n m
otives are? A
nd w
hat do w
e know
o
f the m
otives of others?
Y
et even if w
e had access to the real m
otives o
f statesm
en, that know
ledge
w
ould help us little in understanding foreign policies and m
ight w
ell lead us
astray. It is true that the know
ledge o
f the statesm
an’s m
otives m
ay give us one
7
6
A
R
ealist T
heory of International P
olitics
am
ong m
any clues as to w
hat the direction o
f his foreign policy m
ight be. It can-
not give us, how
ever, the one clue by w
hich to predict his foreign policies. H
istory
show
s no exact and necessary correlation betw
een the quality
o
f m
otives and the
quality o
f foreign policy. T
his is true in both m
oral and political term
s.
W
e cannot conclude from
the good intentions o
f a statesm
an that his foreign
policies w
ill be either m
orally praisew
orthy or politically successful. Judging his
m
otives, w
e can say that he w
ill not intentionally pursue policies that are m
orally
w
rong, but w
e can say nothing about the probability o
f their success. Ifw
e w
ant to
know
the m
oral and political qualities o
f his actions, w
e m
ust know
them
, not his
m
otives. H
ow
often have statesm
en been m
otivated by the desire to im
prove the
w
orld and ended by m
aking it w
orse? A
nd how
often have they sought one goal,
and ended by achieving som
ething they neither expected nor desired?
N
eville C
ham
berlain’s politics of appeasem
ent w
ere, as far as w
e can judge,
inspired by good m
otives; he w
as probably less m
otivated by considerations o
f
personal pow
er than w
ere m
any other B
ritish prim
e m
inisters, and he sought to
preserve peace and to assure the happiness of all concerned. Y
et his policies helped
to m
ake the Second W
orld W
ar inevitable and to bring untold m
iseries to m
illions
of people. Sir W
inston C
hurchill’s m
otives, on the other hand, w
ere m
uch less
universal in scope and m
uch m
ore narrow
ly directed tow
ard personal and nation
al
pow
er, yet the foreign policies that sprang from
these inferior m
otives w
ere cer-
tainly superior in m
oral and political quality to those pursued by his predecessor.
Judged by his m
otives, R
obespierre w
as one o
f the m
ost virtuous m
en w
ho ever
lived. Y
et it w
as the utopian radical
ism
o
fthat very virtue that m
ade him
kill those
less virtuous than him
self, brought him
to the scaffold, and destroyed the revolu-
tion
o
f w
hich he w
as a lead
er.
G
ood m
otives give assurance against deliberately bad policies; they do not
guarantee the m
oral goodness and political success o
f the policies they inspire.
W
hat is im
portant to !m
ow
, if one w
ants to understand foreign policy, is not pri-
m
arily the m
otives o
f a statesm
an but his intellectual ability to com
prehend the
essentials o
f foreign policy, as w
ell as his political ability to translate w
hat he has
com
prehended into successful political action. It follow
s that, w
hile ethics in the
abstract judges the m
oral qualities o
f m
otives, political theory m
ust judge the
political qualities of intellect, w
ill, and action.
A
realist theory of international politics w
ill also avoid the other popular fal-
lacy o
f equating the foreign policies of a statesm
an w
ith his philosophic or political
sym
pathies, and o
f deducing the form
er from
the latter. Statesm
en, especially under
contem
porary conditions, m
ay w
ell m
ake a habit ofpresenting their foreign policies
in term
s o
f their philosophic and political sym
pathies in order to gain popular sup-
port for them
. Y
et they w
ill distinguish w
ith L
incoln betw
een their “official duty,”
w
hich is to think and act in term
s o
f the national interest, and their ”personal w
ish,”
w
hich is to see their ow
n m
oral values and political principles realized throughout
the w
orld. Political realism
does not require, nor does it condone, indifference to
political ideals and m
oral principles, but it requires indeed a sharp distinction
betw
een the desirable and the possible-betw
een w
hat is desirable everyw
here and at
all tim
es and w
hat is possible under the concrete circum
stances o
f tim
e and place.
Six P
rinciples o
f P
olitical R
ealism
It stands to reason that not all foreign policies have alw
ays follow
ed so rational,
objective, and unem
otional a course. T
he contingent elem
ents o
fpersonality, prej-
udice, and subjective preference, and o
fall the w
ealm
esses o
fintellect and w
ill that
flesh is heir to, are bound to deflect foreign policies from
their rational course.
E
specially w
here foreign policy is conducted under the conditions o
f dem
ocratic
control, the need to m
arshal popular em
otions to the support of foreign policy
cannot fail to im
pair the rationality o
f foreign policy itself. Y
et a the.0ry o
f foreign
policy that aim
s at rationality m
ust for the tim
e being, as it w
ere, abstract from
these irrational elem
ents and seek to paint a picture o
fforeign policy that presents
the rational essence to be found in experience;w
ithout the contingent deviations
from
rationality that are also found in experience
.
D
eviations from
rationality that are not the result of the personal w
him
or the
personal psychopathology o
f the policym
aker m
ay appear contingent only from
the
vantage point ofrationality but m
ay them
selves be elem
ents in a coherent system
of
irrationality. The possibility o
f constructing, as it w
ere, a counter-theory of irrational
politics is w
orth exploring
.
W
hen one reflects upon the developm
ent of A
m
erican thinking on foreign
policy, one is struck by the persistence o
f m
istaken attitudes that have survived-
under w
hatever guises-both intellectual argum
ent and political experience. O
nce
that w
onder, in true A
ristotelian fashion, has been transform
ed into the quest for
rational
understanding,
the
quest yields
a conclusion
both com
forting and
disturbing: w
e are here in the presence o
f intellectual defects shared by all o
f us
in different w
ays and degrees. T
ogether they provide the outline o
f a kind o
f
pathology o
f international politics. W
hen the hum
an m
ind approaches reality
w
ith the purpose o
f taking action, o
f w
hich the political encounter is one o
f the
outstanding instances, it is
often led astray by any of four com
m
on m
ental
phenom
ena: residues o
f form
erly adequate m
odes o
fthought and action now
ren-
dered obsolete by a new
social reality; dem
onological interpretations of reality
that substitute a fictitious reality-peopled by evil persons rather than seem
ingly
intractable issues-for the actual one; refusal to com
e to term
s w
ith a threatening
state o
f affairs by denying it through illusory verbalization; or reliance upon the
infinite m
alleability o
f a seem
ingly obstreperous reality
.
M
an responds to social situations w
ith repetitive patterns. T
he sam
e situa-
tion, recognized in its identity w
ith previous situations, evokes the sam
e respons
e.
T
he m
ind, as it w
ere, holds in readiness a num
ber o
f patterns appropriate for dif-
ferent situations; it then requires only the identification o
f a particular case to
apply to it the preform
ed pattern appropriate to it. T
hus the hum
an m
ind follow
s
the principle o
f econom
y o
f effort, obviating an exam
ination de novo of each in-
dividual situation and the pattern o
f thought and action appropriate to it. Y
et
w
hen m
atters are subject to dynam
ic change, traditional patterns are no longer
appropriate; they m
ust be replaced by new
ones reflecting such change. O
therw
ise
a gap w
ill open betw
een traditional patterns and new
realities, and thought and
action w
ill be m
isguided.
O
n the international plane it is no exaggeration to say that the very structure
ofinternational relations-as reflected in political institutions, diplom
atic procedures,
9
8
A
R
ealist Theory of International P
olitics
and legal arrangem
ents-has tended to becom
e at variance w
ith, and in large m
easure
irrelevant to, the reality o
f international politics. W
hile the form
er assum
es the
“sovereign equality” of all nations, the latter is dom
inated by an extrem
e inequality
o
fnations, tw
o o
fw
hich are called superpow
ers because they hold in their hands the
unprecedented pow
er o
f total destruction, and m
any o
f w
hich are called “m
in-
istates” because their pow
er is m
inuscule even com
pared w
ith that o
f the traditional
nation-states. It is this contrast and incom
patibility betw
een the reality o
f interna-
tional politics and the concepts, institutions, and procedures designed to m
ake
intelligible and control the form
er that have caused, at least below
the great-
p
ow
er
level, the unm
anageability o
f international relations, w
hich borders on anarchy.
International terrorism
and the different governm
ent reactions to it, the involve-
m
ent o
f foreign governm
ents in the Lebanese civil w
ar, the m
ilitary oper~tions o
f
the U
nited States in Southeast A
sia, and the m
ilitary intervention o
f the Soviet
U
nion in E
astern E
urope cannot be explained or justified by reference to traditional
concepts, institutions, and procedures.
A
ll these situations have one characteristic in com
m
on. T
he m
odem
fact
o
f interdependence requires a political order that takes that fact into account
,
w
hile in reality the legal and institutional superstructure, harking back to the
nineteenth century, assum
es the existence o
f a m
ultiplicity o
f self-sufficient,
im
penetrable, sovereign nation-states. T
hese residues o
f an obsolescent legal and
institutional order not only stand in the w
ay o
f a rational transform
ation o
f in-
ternational relations in light o
f the inequality
o
f pow
er and the interdependence
o
f interests, but they also render precarious, if not im
possible, m
ore rational
policies w
ithin the defective fram
ew
ork o
f such a system
.
It is a characteristic o
f prim
itive thinking to personalize social problem
s.
T
hat tendency is particularly strong w
hen the problem
appears not to be suscep-
tible to rational understanding and successful m
anipulation. W
hen a particular
person or group o
f persons is identified w
ith the recalcitrant difficulty, that m
ay
seem
to render the problem
both intellectually accessible and susceptible to solu-
tion. T
hus belief in Satan as the source o
f evil m
akes us “understand” the nature
o
f evil by focusing the search for its origin and control upon a particular person
w
hose
physical
existence
w
e
assum
e.
T
he
com
plexity
o
f political
conflict
precludes such sim
ple solutions. N
atural catastrophes w
ill not be prevented by
burning w
itches; the threat o
f a pow
erful G
erm
any to establish hegem
ony over
E
urope w
ill not be averted by getting rid o
f a succession o
f G
erm
an leaders. B
ut
by identifying the issue w
ith certain persons over w
hom
w
e have-or hope to
have-control w
e reduce the problem
, both intellectually and pragm
atically, to
m
anageable proportions. O
nce w
e have identified certain individuals and groups
ofindividuals as the source o
f evil, w
e appear to have understood the causal nexus
that leads from
the individuals to the social problem
; that apparent understand-
ing suggests the apparent solution: elim
inate the individuals “responsible” for it,
and you have solved the problem
.
Superstition still holds sw
ay over our relations w
ithin society. T
he dem
ono-
logical pattern o
f thought and action has now
been transferred to other fields o
f
hum
an action closed to the kind o
f rational enquiry and action that have driven
Six P
rinciples o
f P
olitical R
ealism
superstition from
our relations w
ith nature. A
s W
illiam
G
raham
Sum
ner p~t it, “T
he
am
ount o
f superstition is not m
uch changed, but it now
attaches to poht1cs, not to
religion.”
1 T
he num
erous failure
s o
f the U
nited States to recognize and respond to
the polycentric nature o
f C
om
m
unism
is a prim
e exam
ple of this defect. T
he corol-
lary o
f this indiscrim
inate opposition to C
om
m
unism
is the indiscrim
inate support
of governm
ents
and
m
ovem
ents
that profess
and
practice
anti-C
om
m
unism
.
A
m
erican policies in A
sia and L
atin A
m
erica have derived from
this sim
plistic
position. T
he V
ietnam
W
ar and our inability to com
e to term
s w
ith m
ain!and C
hina
find here their rationale. So do the theo1y and practice o
f countennsurgency,
including large-scale assassinations under the Phoenix program
in V
ietnam
and the
actual
or attem
pted assassinations
of individual statesm
en. Signs
of a sim
ilar
approach have been evident m
ore recently in C
entral A
m
erica.
T
he dem
onological approach to foreign policy strengthens another patho-
logical tendency, w
hich is the refusal to acknow
ledge and cope effectively w
ith a
threatening reality. T
he dem
onological approach has shifted our attention and
concern tow
ard the adherents o
f C
om
m
unism
-individuals at hom
e and abroad,
political m
ovem
ents, foreign governm
ents-and aw
ay from
the real threat: the
pow
er o
f states, C
om
m
unist or not. M
cC
arthyism
not only provided the m
ost
pervasive A
m
erican exam
ple o
f the dem
onological approach but w
as also one o
f
the m
ost extrem
e exam
ples o
f this kind o
f m
isjudgm
ent: it substituted the largely
illusory threat o
f dom
estic subversion for the real threat of R
ussian pow
er.
Finally, it is part o
f this approach to politics to believe that no problem
s-
how
ever hopeless they m
ay appear-are really insoluble, given w
ell-m
eaning, w
ell-
financed, and com
petent efforts. I have tried elsew
here to lay bare the intellectual
and historical roots o
f this belief;2 here I lim
it m
yself to pointing out its persist-
ent strength despite m
uch experience to the contrary, such as the V
ietnam
W
ar
and the general decline o
f A
m
erican pow
er. This preference for econom
ic solu-
tions to political and m
ilitary problem
s is pow
erfully reinforced by the interest
s
o
f potential recipients o
f econom
ic support, w
ho prefer the obviously profitable
transfer o
f econom
ic advantages to painful and risky diplom
atic bargaining.
T
he difference betw
een international politics as it actually is and a rational
theory derived from
it is like the difference betw
een a photograph and a painted
portrait. T
he photograph show
s everything that can be seen by the naked eye; the
painted portrait does not show
everything that can be seen by the naked eye, but
it show
s, or at least seeks to show
, one thing that the naked eye cannot see: the
hum
an essence o
f the person portrayed.
Political realism
contains not only a theoretical but also a norm
ative elem
ent.
It know
s that political reality is replete w
ith contingencies and system
ic irra-
tionalities, and points to the typical influences they exert upon foreign policy. Y
et
it shares w
ith all social theory the need, for the sake o
f theoretical understanding,
to stress the rational elem
ents o
f political reality; for it is these rational elem
ents
‘”M
ores o
f the Present and Future,” in l¼
r and O
ther Essays (N
ew
H
aven, C
T
: Y
ale U
niversity Press,
1911), p. 159.
2Scientific M
an ¼
rsus Power Politics (C
hicago:
U
niversity o
f C
hicago Press, 1946).
1
0
A
R
ealist Theory of International P
olitics
that m
ake reality intelligible for theory. Political realism
presents the theoretical
construct o
f a rational
foreign
policy
that experience
can
never com
pletely
achieve.
A
t the sam
e tim
e political realism
considers a rational foreign policy to be
good foreign policy; for only a rational foreign policy m
inim
izes risks and m
axi-
m
izes benefits and, hence, com
plies w
ith both the m
oral precept o
fprudence and
the political requirem
ent o
f success. Political realism
w
ants the photographic pic-
ture o
f the political w
orld to resem
ble as m
uch as possible its painted portrait.
A
w
are o
f the inevitable gap betw
een good-that is, rational-foreign policy and for-
eign policy as it actually is, political r
ealism
m
aintains not only that theory m
ust
focus upon the rational elem
ents o
f political reality but also that foreign policy
ought to be rational in view
o
f its ow
n m
oral and practical purposes.
H
ence, it is no argum
ent against the theory here presented that actual for-
eign policy does not or cannot live up to it. T
hat argum
ent m
isunderstands the
intention o
f this book, w
hich is to present not an indiscrim
inate description o
f
political reality but a rational theory o
f international politics. Far from
being in-
validated by the fact that, for instance, a perfect balance o
f pow
er policy w
ill
scarcely be found in reality, it assum
es that reality, being deficient in this respect,
m
ust be understood and evaluated as an approxim
ation to an ideal system
o
fbalance
o
f pow
er.
3. R
ealism
assum
es that its key concept o
f interest defined as pow
er is an
objective category that is universally valid, but it does not endow
that concept w
ith
a m
eaning that is fixed once and for all. T
he idea o
finterest is indeed o
fthe essence
o
f politics and is unaffected by the circum
stances o
f tim
e and place. T
hucydides’
statem
ent, born o
f the experiences o
f ancient G
reece, that “identity o
f interests is
the surest o
f bonds w
hether betw
een states or individuals” w
as taken up in the
nineteenth century by L
ord Salisbury’s rem
ark that “the only bond o
f union that
endures” am
ong nations is “the absence o
fall clashing interests.” It w
as erected into
a general principle
o
f governm
ent by G
eorge W
ashington
:
A
sm
all lm
ow
ledge of hum
an nature w
ill convince us, that, w
ith far the great-
est part o
f m
ankind, interest is the governing principle; and that alm
ost every
m
an is m
ore or less, under its influence. M
otives of public virtue m
ay for a
tim
e, or in particular instances, actuate m
en to the observance o
f a conduct
purely disinterested; but they are not of them
selves sufficient to produce pre-
serving conform
ity to the refined dictates and obligations of social duty. F
ew
m
en are capable of m
aking a continual sacrifice of all view
s o
f private interest,
or advantage, to the com
m
on good. It is vain to exclaim
against the depravity
o
f hum
an nature on this account; the fact is so, the experience o
f every age
and nation has proved it and w
e m
ust in a great m
easure, change the constitu-
tion o
f m
an, before w
e can m
ake it otherw
ise. N
o institution, not built on the
presum
ptive truth o
f these m
axim
s can succeed. 3
3The W
ritings o
fGeorge W
ashington, edited by John C
. Fitzpatrick (\V
ashington, D
C
: U
nited States
Printing O
ffice, 1931-44), V
ol. X
, p. 363.
Six P
rinciples o
f P
olitical R
ealism
11
It w
as echoed and enlarged upon in the tw
entieth century by M
ax W
eber’s
observation:
Interests (m
aterial and ideal), not ideas, dom
inate directly the actions of
m
en.
Y
et the “im
ages of the w
orld” created by these ideas have very often served as
sw
itches determ
ining the tracks on w
hich the dynam
ism
o
f interests kept
actions m
oving. 4
Y
et the kind o
f interest determ
ining political action in a particular period o
f
history depends upon the political and cultural context w
ithin w
hich foreign pol-
icy is form
ulated. T
he goals that m
ight be pursued by nations in their foreign
policy can run the w
hole gam
ut o
f objectives any nation has ever pursued or
m
ight possibly pursue.
T
he sam
e observations apply to the concept o
f pow
er. Its content and the
m
anner o
f its use are determ
ined by the political and cultural environm
ent. Pow
er
m
ay com
prise anything that establishes and m
aintains the control o
fm
an over m
an.
T
hus pow
er covers all social relationships that serve that end, from
physical vio-
lence to the m
ost subtle psychological ties by w
hich one m
ind controls another.
Pow
er covers the dom
ination o
fm
an by m
an, both w
hen it is disciplined by m
oral
ends and controlled by constitutional safeguards, as in W
estern dem
ocracies, and
w
hen it is that untam
ed and barbaric force that finds its law
s in nothing but its
ow
n strength and its sole justification in its aggrandizem
ent.
Political realism
does not assum
e that the contem
porary conditions under
w
hich foreign policy operates, w
ith their extrem
e instability and the ever-present
threat o
f large-scale violence, cannot be changed. T
he balance o
f pow
er, for in-
stance, is indeed a perennial elem
ent o
f all pluralistic societies, as the authors o
f
The Federalist papers w
ell knew
; yet it is capable o
f operating, as it does in the
U
nited States, under the conditions o
f relative stability and peaceful conflict. If
the factors that have given rise to these conditions can be duplicated on the in-
ternational scene, sim
ilar conditions o
f stability and peace w
ill then prevail there,
as they have over long stretches o
f history am
ong certain nations.
W
hat is true o
f the general character o
f international relations is also true o
f
the nation-state as the ultim
ate point o
f reference o
f contem
porary foreign policy.
W
hile the realist indeed believes that interest is the perennial standard by w
hich po-
litical action m
ust be judged and directed, the contem
porary connection betw
een
interest and the nation-state is a product o
f history and is therefore bound to dis-
appear in the course o
f history. N
othing in the realist position m
ilitates against the
assum
ption that the present division o
f the political w
orld into nation-states w
ill be
replaced by larger units o
f a quite different character, m
ore in keeping w
ith the tech-
nical potentialities and the m
oral requirem
ents o
f the contem
porary w
orld.
T
he realist parts com
pany w
ith other schools o
f thought before
the
all-
im
portant question o
fhow
the contem
porary w
orld is to be transform
ed. T
he realist
is persuaded that this transform
ation can be achieved only through the w
orkm
anlike
4M
arianne W
eber, M
ax W
eber (T
iibingen: J.C
.B
. M
ohr, 1926), pp. 347-48. See also M
ax W
eber,
G
esam
m
elte Aufsiitze zttr Religionssoziologie (T
iibingen: J.C
.B
. M
ohr, 1920), p. 252.
12
A
R
ealist Theory of International P
olitics
m
anipul_ation o
fthe perennial forces that have shaped the past as they w
ill the future.
T
he ~eahst cat:1:ot be p~rsuaded that w
e can bring about that transform
ation by con-
frontm
g a political reality that has its ow
n law
s w
ith an abstract ideal that refuses to
take those law
s into account.
4. Political realism
is aw
are o
f the m
oral significance o
f political action. It is
also aw
are o
f the ineluctable tension betw
een the m
oral com
m
and and the re-
qui:em
ents o
f suc_cessful political action. A
nd it is unw
illing to gloss over and
obhtera~e ~
at tension and thus to obfuscate both the m
oral and the political issues
by m
aking 1t appear as though the stark facts o
f politics w
ere m
orally m
ore satis-
fying than they actually are, and the m
oral law
less exacting that it actually is.
R
ealism
m
aintains that universal m
oral principles cannot be applied to the
actions o
f states in their abstract universal form
ulation but that they m
ust be fil-
tered through the concrete circum
stances o
f tim
e and place. T
he individual m
ay
say for him
self, “Fiat justitia, pereat m
undus (Let justice be done, even if the w
orld
perish),” but the state has no right to say so in the nam
e o
f those w
ho are in its
care. B
oth individual and state m
ust judge political action by universal m
oral prin-
ciples, such as that o
f liberty. Y
et w
hile the individual has a m
oral right to sacri-
fice him
self in defense o
f such a m
oral principle, the state has no right to let its
m
oral disapprobation o
f the infringem
ent o
f liberty get in the w
ay o
f successful
political action, itself inspired by the m
oral principle o
f national survival. T
here
can be no political m
orality w
ithout prudence, that is, w
ithout consideration o
f
the political consequences o
f seem
ingly m
oral action. R
ealism
, then, considers
prudence-the w
eighing o
f the consequences o
f alternative political actions-to be
the suprem
e virtue in politics. E
thics in the abstract judges action by its con-
form
ity w
ith the m
oral law
; political ethics judges actton by its political conse-
quences. C
lassical and m
edieval philosophy knew
this, and so did L
incoln w
hen
he said:
I do the very best I know
how
, the very best I can, and I m
ean to keep doing
so until the end. Ifthe end brings m
e out all right, w
hat is said against m
e
w
on’t am
ount to anything. Ifthe end brings m
e out w
rong, ten angels sw
ear-
ing I w
as right w
ould m
ake no difference.
5. Political realism
refuses to identify the m
oral aspirations o
f a particular
nation w
ith the m
oral law
s that govern the universe. A
s it distinguishes betw
een
truth and opinion, so it distinguishes betw
een truth and idolatry. A
ll nations are
tem
pted-and few
have been able to resist the tem
ptation for long-to clothe their
ow
n particular aspirations and actions in the m
oral purposes o
f the universe. To
know
that nations are subject to the m
oral law
is one thing, w
hile to pretend to
know
w
ith certainty w
hat is good and evil in the relations am
ong nations is quite
another. T
here is a w
orld o
f difference betw
een the belief that all nations stand
under the judg
m
ent o
f G
od, inscrutable to the hum
an m
ind, and the blasphe-
m
ous conviction that G
od is alw
ays on one’s side and that w
hat one w
ills oneself
cannot fail to be w
illed by G
od also.
T
he lighthearted equation betw
een a particular nationalism
and the coun-
sels o
f Providence is m
orally indefensible, for it is that very sin o
f pride against
Six P
rinciples o
f P
olitical R
ealism
1
3
w
hich the G
reek tragedians and the biblical prophets have w
arned rulers and
ruled. T
hat equation is also politically pernicious, for it is liable to engender the
distortion in judgm
ent that, in the blindness of crusading frenzy, destroys nations
and civilizations-in the nam
e o
f m
oral principle, ideal, or G
od him
self
O
n the other hand, it is exactly the concept o
f interest defined in term
s o
f
pow
er that saves us from
both that m
oral excess and that political folly. For if
w
e
look at all nations, our ow
n included, as political entities pursuing their respective
interests defined in term
s o
f pow
er, w
e are able to do justice to all o
f them
. A
nd
w
e are able to do justice to all o
f them
in a dual sense: w
e are able to judge other
nations as w
e judge our ow
n and, having judged them
in this fashion, w
e are then
capable o
f pursuing policies that respect the interests o
f other nations w
hile pro-
tecting and prom
oting those o
f our ow
n. M
oderation in policy cannot fail to
reflect the m
oderation o
f m
oral judgm
ent.
6. T
he difference, then, betw
een political realism
and other schools o
f
thought is real, and it is profound. H
ow
ever m
uch o
f the theory o
f political real-
ism
m
ay have been m
isunderstood and m
isinterpreted, there is no gainsaying its
distinctive intellectual and m
oral attitude to m
atters political.
Intellectually, the political realist m
aintains the autonom
y o
f the political
sphere, as the econom
ist, the law
yer, the m
oralist m
aintain theirs. H
e thinks in term
s
o
f interest defined as pow
er, as the econom
ist thinks in term
s of interest defined as
w
ealth; the law
yer, of the conform
ity o
f action w
ith legal rules; the m
oralist, o
f the
conform
ity of action w
ith m
oral principles. T
he econom
ist asks: “
H
ow
does this pol-
icy affect the w
ealth ofsociety, or a segm
ent ofit?” T
he law
yer asks: “Is this policy in
accord w
ith the rules oflaw
?” T
he m
oralist asks: “Is this policy in accord w
ith m
oral
principles?” A
nd the political realist asks: “H
ow
does this policy affect the pow
er of
the nation?” (O
r o
f the federal governm
ent, of C
ongress, of the party, o
fagriculture,
as the case m
ay be.)
T
he political realist is not unaw
are o
fthe existence and the relevance ofstan-
dards o
f thought other than political ones. A
s political realist he cannot but sub-
ordinate these other standards to those o
f politics. A
nd he parts com
pany w
ith
other schools w
hen they im
pose standards of thought appropriate to other spheres
upon the political spheres. It is here that political realism
takes issue w
ith the
“legalistic-m
oralistic approach” to international politics. T
hat this issue is not, as
has been contended, a m
ere figm
ent o
f the im
agination but goes to the very core
o
f the controversy can be show
n from
m
any historical exam
ples. T
hree w
ill suf-
fice to m
ake the point. 5
In 1939 the Soviet U
nion attacked Finland. T
his action confronted France
and G
reat B
ritain w
ith tw
o issues, one legal, the other political. D
id that action vi-
olate the C
ovenant o
f the League o
f N
ations, and, ifit did, w
hat counterm
easures
5See the other exam
ples discussed in H
ans J. M
orgenthau, ”A
nother ‘G
reat D
ebate’: T
he N
ational
Interest o
f the U
nited States,” The Am
erican Political Science Review
, V
ol. X
LV
I (D
ecem
ber 1952),
pp. 979 ff. See also H
ans J. M
orgenthau, Politics in the 20th Century, V
oL 1, The D_edine ofpem
ocratic
Politics (C
hicago: U
niversity o
f C
hicago Press, 1962), pp. 79 ff; and abndged ed1t1on (C
hicago:
U
niversity o
f C
hicago Press, 1971), pp. 204 ff.
1
4
A
R
ealist T
heory of International P
olitics
should France and
G
reat B
ritain take? T
he legal question could easily be answ
ered
in the affirm
ative, for obviously the Soviet U
nion had done w
hat w
as prohibited
by the C
ovenant. T
he answ
er to the political question depends, first, upon the
m
anner in w
hich the R
ussian action affected the interests o
f France and G
reat
B
ritain; second, upon the existing distribution o
fpow
er betw
een France and G
reat
B
ritain, on the one hand, and the Soviet U
nion and other potentially hostile na-
tions, especially G
erm
any, on the other; and, third, upon the influence that the
counterm
easures w
ere likely to have upon the interests o
fFrance and G
reat B
ritain
and the future distribution o
f pow
er. France and G
reat B
ritain, as the leading
m
em
bers o
f the L
eague o
f N
ations, saw
to it that the Soviet U
nion w
as expelled
from
the L
eague, and they w
ere prevented from
joining Finland in the w
ar against
the Soviet U
nion only by Sw
eden’s refusal to allow
their troops to pass through
Sw
edish territory on their w
ay to Finland. Ifthis refusal by Sw
eden had not saved
them
, France and G
reat B
ritain w
ould shortly have found them
selves at w
ar w
ith
the Soviet U
nion and
G
erm
any at the sam
e tim
e.
T
he policy o
f France and G
reat B
ritain w
as a classic exam
ple o
f legalism
in
that they allow
ed the answ
er to the legal question, legitim
ate w
ithin its sphere, to
determ
ine their political actions. Instead o
fasking both questions, that oflaw
and
that o
f pow
er, they asked only the question o
f law
; and the answ
er they received
could have no bearing on the issue that their very existence m
ight have depended
upon. T
he second exam
ple illustrates the “m
oralistic approach” to international
politics. It concerns the international status o
f the C
om
m
unist governm
ent o
f
C
hina. T
he rise o
f that governm
ent confronted the W
estern w
orld w
ith tw
o
issues, one m
oral, the other political. W
ere the nature and policies o
f that gov-
ernm
ent in accord w
ith the m
oral principles o
f the W
estern w
orld? S
hould the
W
estern w
orld deal w
ith such a governm
ent? T
he answ
er to the first question
could not fail to be in the negative. Y
et it did not follow
w
ith necessity that the
answ
er to the second question should also be in the negative. T
he standard o
f
thought applied to the first-the m
oral-question w
as sim
ply to test the nature
and the policies o
f the C
om
m
unist governm
ent o
f C
hina by the principles o
f
W
estern m
orality. O
n
the other hand, the second-the political-question had to
be subjected to the com
plicated test o
fthe interests involved and the pow
er avail-
able on either side, and o
f the bearing o
f one or the other course o
f action upon
these interests and pow
er. T
he application o
f this test could w
ell have led to the
conclusion that it w
ould be w
iser not to deal w
ith the C
om
m
unist governm
ent
o
f C
hina. To
arrive at this conclusion by neglecting this test altogether and
answ
ering the political question in term
s o
f the m
oral issue w
as indeed a classic
exam
ple o
f the “m
oralistic approach” to international politics.
T
he third case illustrates strikingly the contrast betw
een realism
and the
legalistic-m
oralistic approach to foreign policy. G
reat B
ritain, as one o
f the guar-
antors o
fthe neutrality o
fB
elgium
, w
ent to w
ar w
ith G
erm
any in A
ugust 1914 be-
cause G
erm
any had violated the neutrality o
fB
elgium
. T
he B
ritish action could be
justified in either realistic or in legalistic-m
oralistic term
s. T
hat is to say, one could
argue realistically that for centuries it had been axiom
atic for B
ritish foreign policy
Six P
rinciples o
f P
olitical R
ealism
15
to prevent the control o
f the L
ow
C
ountries by a hostile pow
er. It w
as then not
so
m
uch the violation o
fB
elgium
‘s neutrality per se as the hostile intentions o
fthe vi-
olator that provided the rationale for B
ritish intervention. If the violator had been
another nation but G
erm
any, G
reat B
ritain m
ight w
ell have refrained from
inter-
vening. T
his is the position taken by Sir E
dw
ard G
rey, B
ritish foreign secretary
during that period. U
ndersecretary for Foreign A
ffairs H
ardinge rem
arked to him
in 1908: “IfFrance violated B
elgian neutrality in a w
ar against G
erm
any, it is doubt-
ful w
hether E
ngland or R
ussia w
ould m
ove a finger to m
aintain B
elgian neutrality,
w
hile if the neutrality o
f B
elgium
w
as violated by G
erm
any, it is probable that the
converse w
ould be the case.” W
hereupon Sir E
dw
ard G
rey replied: “T
his is to the
point.” Y
et one could also take the legalistic and m
oralistic position that the viola-
tion o
f B
elgium
‘s neutrality per se, because o
f its legal and m
oral defects and
regardless o
fthe interests at stake and o
fthe identity o
fthe violator, justified B
ritish
and, for that m
atter, A
m
erican intervention. T
his w
as the position that T
heodore
R
oosevelt took in his letter to Sir E
dw
ard G
rey o
fJanuary 22, 1915:
To m
e the crux of the situation has been B
elgium
. If E
ngland or France had
acted tow
ard B
elgium
as G
erm
any has acted I should have opposed them
, ex-
actly as I now
oppose G
erm
any. I have em
phatically approved your action as a
m
odel for w
hat should be done by those w
ho believe that treaties should be
observed in good faith and that there is such a thing as international m
orality.
I take this position as an A
m
erican w
ho is no m
ore an E
nglishm
an than he is
a G
erm
an, w
ho endeavors loyally to serve the interests of his ow
n country, but
w
ho also endeavors to do w
hat he can for justice and decency as regards
m
ankind at large, and w
ho therefore feels obliged to judge all other nations by
their conduct on any given occasion.
T
his realist defense o
f the autonom
y o
f the political sphere against its sub-
version by other m
odes o
fthought does not im
ply disregard for the existence and
im
portance o
f these other m
odes o
f thought. It rather im
plies that each should
be assigned its proper sphere and function. Political realism
is based upon a plu-
ralistic conception o
f hum
an nature. R
eal m
an is a com
posite o
f “econom
ic
m
an,” “political m
an,” “m
oral m
an,” “religious m
an,” etc. A
m
an w
ho w
as noth-
ing but “political m
an” w
ould be a beast, for he w
ould be com
pletely lacking in
m
oral restraints. A
m
an w
ho w
as nothing but “m
oral m
an” w
ould be a fool, for
he w
ould be com
pletely lacking in prudence. A
m
an w
ho
w
as
nothing but
“religious m
an” w
ould be a saint, for he w
ould be com
pletely lacking in w
orldly
desires. Recognizing that these different facets o
f hum
an nature exist, political real-
ism
also recognizes that in order to understand one o
f them
one has to deal w
ith
it on its ow
n term
s. T
hat is to say, if I w
ant to understand “religious m
an,” I m
ust
for the tim
e being abstract from
the other aspects o
f hum
an nature and deal w
ith
its religious aspect as if it w
ere the only one. Furtherm
ore, I m
ust apply to the reli-
gious sphere the standards o
f thought appropriate to it, alw
ays rem
aining aw
are o
f
the existence o
fother standards and their actual influence upon the religious qual-
ities o
fm
an. W
hat is true o
f this facet o
fhum
an nature is true o
f all the others. N
o
1 6
A
R
ealist Theory of International P
olitics
m
odern econom
ist, for instance, w
ould conceive o
f his science and its relations to
other sciences o
f m
an in any other w
ay. It is exactly through such a process o
f
em
ancipation from
other standards o
f thought, and the developm
ent o
f one ap-
propriate to its subject m
atter, that econom
ics has developed as an autonom
ous
theory o
f the .econom
ic activities of m
an. To contribute to a sim
ilar developm
ent
in the field o
fpolitics is indeed the purpose o
f political realism
.
It is in the nature o
f things that a theory o
f politics that is based upon such
principles w
ill not m
eet w
ith unanim
ous approval-nor does, for that m
atter, such
a foreign policy. For theory and policy alike run counter to tw
o trends in our cul-
ture that are not able to reconcile them
selves to the assum
ptions and results o
f a
rational, objective theory o
f politics. O
ne o
f these trends disparages the role o
f
pow
er in society on grounds that stem
from
the experience and philosophy of the
nineteenth century; w
e shall address ourselves to this tendency later in greater
detail. 6 T
he other trend, opposed to the realist theory and practice o
fpolitics, stem
s
from
the very relationship that exists, and m
ust exist, betw
een the hum
an m
ind
and the political sphere. For reasons that w
e shall discuss later,7 the hum
an m
ind
in its day-by-day operations cannot bear to look the truth of politics straight in the
face. It m
ust disguise, distort, belittle, and em
bellish the truth-the m
ore so, the
m
ore the individual is actively involved in the processes o
f politics, and particu-
larly in those o
f international politics. For only by deceiving him
self about the
nature o
f politics and the role he plays on the political scene is m
an able to live
contentedly as a political anim
al w
ith him
self and his fellow
m
en.
T
hus it is inevitable that a theory that tries to understand international pol-
itics as it actually is and as it ought to be in view
o
f its intrinsic nature, rather than
as people w
ould like to see it, m
ust overcom
e a psychological resistance that m
ost
other branches o
f learning need not face. A
book devoted to the theoretical
understanding of international politics therefore requires a special explanation
and justification.
6See pages 37 ff.
7See pages 101 ff.
UNDERSTANDING INTERNATIONAL POLITICS
D
ifferent Approaches
T
his book has tw
o purposes. T
he first is to detect and understand the forces th~t
determ
ine political relations am
ong nations, and to_ com
pr~hend th~ _w
ays m
w
hich those forces act upon one another and upon m
ternat1onal political rela-
tions and institutions. In m
ost other branches o
f the social sciences, this purpose
w
ould be taken for granted, because the natural aim
o
f all scientific undertakin~s
is to discover the forces underlying social phenom
ena and the m
ode of theu
operation. In approaching the study o
f international politics, one cannot take
this purpose for granted; it therefore requires special em
phasis. A
s D
r. G
rayson
K
irk has put it:
U
ntil recent tim
es the study of international relations in
the U
nited States
has been dom
inated largely by persons w
ho have taken one of three
approaches. First there have been the historians w
ho have considered interna-
tional relations m
erely as recent history, in w
hich the student is handicapped
by the absence of an adequate am
ount of available data. A
second group, the
international law
yers, have properly concerned them
selves prim
arily w
ith the
legal aspects of interstate relations, but they have seldom
m
ade a serious
effort to inquire into the fundam
ental reasons for the continuing incom
plete-
ness and inadequacy of this legal nexus. Finally, there have been those w
ho
have been less concerned w
ith international relations as they are than w
ith
the m
ore perfect system
w
hich these idealists w
ould like to build. O
nly
recently-and belatedly-have students undertaken to exam
ine the fundam
en-
tal and persistent forces of w
orld politics, and the institutions w
hich em
body
them
, not w
ith a view
to praise or to condem
n, but m
erely in an effort to
provide a better understanding of these basic drives w
hich determ
ine the
17
1
8
The S
cience of International P
olitics
foreign policies o
f states. T
hus the political scientist is m
oving into the inter-
national field at last. 1
Professor C
harles E. M
artin has taken up D
r. K
irk’s them
e by pointing to
the problem
w
hich faces the students and the teachers of international rela-
tions :nore than any other, nam
ely, that dualism
w
e have to face in m
oving in
tw
o different and opposite areas. I m
ean the area o
f institutions o
f peace
w
hich are rel~ted to the adjustm
ent of disputes and the area o
f
pow
er politics
and w
ar. Y
et, It m
ust be so. There is no escape from
it. … I think probably
one of the greatest indictm
ents of our attitude in teaching in the last tw
enty
years has been to w
rite off glibly the institution of w
ar and to w
rite off the
books the influence of pow
er politics. I think political scientists m
ake a great
1:1istake (n ~oin~ so: W
e should be the very ones w
ho are studying pow
er poli-
tJCs and Its 1m
phcat1ons and the situations grow
ing out of it, and w
e should be
the ones w
ho study the institution of w
ar. 2
.
D
efined in s~ch term
s, international politics as an academ
ic discipline is dis-
tm
ct from
recent history and current events, international law
, and political reform
.
International politics em
braces m
ore than recent history and current events.
T
he ob~erver is sur~ounded by_ the contem
porary scene w
ith its
ever-shifting
em
phasis and changm
g perspectives. H
e cannot find solid ground on w
hich to
stand, or objective standards o
f evaluation, w
ithout getting dow
n to fundam
entals
that are revealed only by the correlation o
f recent events w
ith the m
ore distant
past and the perennial qualities o
f hum
an nature underlying both.
International
politics
cannot be
reduced
to
legal
rules
and institutions.
!nternational politics operates w
ithin the fram
ew
ork o
f su~h rules and through the
m
strum
entality o
f such institutions. B
ut it is no m
ore identical w
ith them
than
A
m
erican politics on the national level is identical w
ith the A
m
erican C
onstitution
the federal law
s, and the agencies o
f the federal governm
ent.
‘
C
oncerning atte_m
pts to reform
international politics before m
aking an effort
to understand w
hat m
ternational politics is about, w
e share W
illiam
G
raham
Sum
ner’s view
:
The w
orst vice in political discussions is that dogm
atism
w
hich takes its stand
on great principles or assum
ptions, instead o
fstanding on an exact exam
ina-
tion o
f things as they are and hum
an nature as it is…. A
n ideal is form
ed of
som
e higher or better state o
f things than now
exists, and alm
ost unconsciously
the ideal is assum
ed as already existing and m
ade the basis of speculations
w
hich have no root…. T
he w
hole m
ethod o
f abstract speculation on politi-
cal topics is vicious. It is popular because it is easy; it is easier to im
agine a
new
w
orld than to learn to know
this one; it is easier to em
bark on specula-
tions based on a few
broad assum
ptions than it is to study the history of
1A
m
ericanjoum
al o
fInternational Law
, V
ol. 39 (1945), pp. 369-70.
2Proceedings o
fthe Eighth Conference o
fTeachers ofIntem
ational Law
and Related Subjects (W
ashington, D
C
:
C
arnegie E
ndow
m
ent for International Peace, 1946), p. 66.
U
nderstanding International P
olitics
19
states and institutions; it is easier to catch up a popular dogm
a than it is to
analyze it to see w
hether it is true or not. A
ll this leads to confusion, to the
adm
ission of phrases and platitudes, to m
uch disputing but little gain in the
prosperity of nations. 3
lim
itations to U
nderstanding
T
he m
ost form
idable difficulty facing a theoretical inquiry into the nature and
w
ays o
f international politics is the am
biguity
o
f the m
aterial w
ith w
hich the
observer has to deal. T
he events he m
ust try to understand are, on the one hand,
unique occurrences: they happened in this w
ay only once and never before or
since. O
n the other hand, they are sim
ilar, for they are
m
anifestations o
f social
forces. Social forces are the product o
f hum
an nature in action. T
herefore, under
sim
ilar conditions, they w
ill m
anifest them
selves in a sim
ilar m
anner. B
ut w
here
is the line to be draw
n betw
een the sim
ilar and the unique?
T
his am
biguity o
f the events to be understood by a theory o
f international
politics-it m
ay be pointed out in passing-is but a special instance o
f a general
im
pedim
ent to hum
an understanding. “A
s no event and no shape,” observes
M
ontaigne, “is entirely like another, so also is there none entirely different from
another: an ingenious m
ixture on the part o
fN
ature. ffthere were no sim
ilarity in our
faces, we could not distinguish m
anfrom
beast; ifthere were no dissim
ilarity, we could not
distinguish one m
anfrom
another. A
ll things hold together by som
e sim
ilarity; every
exam
ple is halting, and the com
parison that is derived from
experience is
alw
ays
defective and im
perfect. A
nd yet one links up the com
parisons at som
e corner.
A
nd so do law
s becom
e serviceable and adapt them
selves to every one o
f our
affairs by som
e w
rested, forced, and biased interpretation.”
4 It is against such
“w
rested, forced, and biased interpretation” o
f political events that a theory o
f
international politics m
ust be continuously on guard.
W
e learn w
hat the principles o
f international politics are from
com
parisons
betw
een such events. A
certain political situation evokes the form
ulation and execu-
tion o
fa certain foreign policy. D
ealing w
ith a different political situation, w
e ask our-
selves: how
does this situation differ from
the preceding one, and how
is it sim
ilar?
D
o the sim
ilarities reaffirm
the policy developed previously? O
r does the blending
o
fsim
ilarities and differences allow
the essence o
fthat policy to be retained w
hile, in
som
e aspects, it is to be m
odified? O
r do the differences vitiate the analogy altogether
and m
ake the previous policy inapplicable? If one w
ants to understand international
politics, grasp the m
eaning o
f contem
porary events, and foresee and influence the
future, one m
ust be able to perform
the dual intellectual task im
plicit in these ques-
tions. O
ne m
ust be able to distinguish betw
een the sim
ilarities and differences in tw
o
political situations. Furtherm
ore, one m
ust be able to assess the im
port o
f these
3″D
em
ocracy and R
esponsible G
overnm
ent,” The Challenge o
fFacts and O
ther Essays (N
ew
H
aven, C
T
:
Y
ale U
niversity Press, 1914), pp. 245-46.
4The Essays o
fM
ichel de M
ontaigne, edited and translated by Jacob Z
eitlin (N
ew
Y
ork: A
lfred A. K
nopf,
1936), V
ol. III, p. 270; M
ontaigne’s italics.
2
0
The S
cience of International P
olitics
sim
ilarities and differences for alternative foreign policies. Three series of events
taken at random
, w
ill illustrate the problem
and its difficulties.
‘
O
n Septem
ber 17, 1796, G
eorge W
ashington m
ade a speech in w
hich he bade
farew
ell t~ the nation, outlining the principles o
fA
m
erican foreign policy in term
s
o
fabstent10n from
E
uropean affairs. O
n D
ecem
ber 2, 1823, President M
onroe sent
a ~ess~ge ~o _C
ongress in w
hich he form
ulated the principles o
f A
m
erican foreign
policy m
sim
ilar term
s. In 1917, the U
nited States joined France and G
reat B
ritain
against G
erm
any, w
hich threatened the independence o
fboth. In 1941, the U
nited
~tates follow
ed a sim
ilar course of action. O
n M
arch 12, 1947, President T
rum
an,
:n a m
essage to C
ongress, reform
ulated the principles o
f A
m
erican foreign policy
m
term
s o
f the w
orldw
ide containm
ent o
f C
om
m
unism
.
In 1512, H
enry V
III o
fE
ngland m
ade an alliance w
ith the H
apsbu;gs against
France. In 151:5,_ he m
ade an alliance w
ith France against the H
apsburgs. In 1522
and 1542, he Jm
ned the H
apsburgs against France. In 1756, G
reat B
ritain allied
itself w
ith Prussia against the H
apsburgs and France. In 1793, G
reat B
ritain, Prussia,
and the H
apsburgs w
ere allied against N
apoleon. In 1914, G
reat B
ritain joined w
ith
France and R
ussia against A
ustria and G
erm
any, and in 1939 w
ith France and
Poland against G
erm
any.
N
apoleon, W
ilhelm
II, and H
itler tried to conquer the continent o
f E
urope
and failed.
A
re there w
ithin each o
f these three series o
f events sim
ilarities that allow
us
to form
ulate a principle o
f foreign policy for each series? O
r is each event so dif-
ferent from
the others in the series that each w
ould require a different policy? T
he
diffi~ulty in m
aking this decision is the m
easure o
f the difficulty in m
aking cor-
r~ct Jud_gm
~nts in (oreign policy, in charting the future. w
isely, and in doing the
nght thm
g m
the nght w
ay and at the right tim
e.
Should the foreign policy in W
ashington’s Farew
ell A
ddress be considered a
g~~eral principle_ o
f ~
~
rican
foreign policy, or did it stem
from
tem
porary con-
d1t1o~s and w
as its validity therefore lim
ited to them
? A
re the foreign policies o
f
W
ashington’s and M
onroe’s m
essages com
patible w
ith the T
rum
an D
octrine? To
state the problem
another w
ay, is the T
rum
an D
octrine a m
ere m
odification o
f a
gen~ral principle underlying W
ashington’s and M
onroe’s conception o
f foreign
affairs, or does the T
rum
an D
octrine constitute a radical departure from
the tradi-
tions. ~
f A
m
erican foreign p_olicy? Ifit does, is it justified in the light o
f changed
cond1ti?ns? G
ener_ally speaking, do the differences in the international position o
f
the_l-!111ted States m
1796, 1823, 1917, 1941, and 1947 justify the different foreign
policies form
ulated and executed w
ith regard to these different political situations?
W
hat are
the sim
ilarities and differences in the situations w
ith w
hich E
urope
confronted the U
nited States in 1917, 1941, and 1947, and to w
hat extent do they
require sim
ilar or different foreign policies on the part o
f the U
nited States?
W
hat is the m
eaning of those shifts in B
ritish foreign policy? H
ave they
grow
n from
the w
him
~nd perfidy of princes and statesm
en? O
r are they inspired
by the accum
ulated w
isdom
o
f a people m
indful o
f the perm
anent forces, tran-
scending any particular alignm
ent, that determ
ine their relations to the continent
o
f E
urope?
U
nderstanding International P
olitics
21
A
re the disasters that follow
ed in the w
ake o
f the three attem
pts at conti-
nental conquest so m
any accidents due to disparate causes? O
r does the sim
ilarity
in results point to sim
ilarities in the overall political situation, sim
ilarities that
convey a lesson to be pondered by those w
ho m
ight w
ant to try again? M
ore par-
ticularly, w
ere the policies the Soviet U
nion pursued in the afterm
ath o
f the
Second W
orld W
ar sim
ilar to those o
f N
apoleon, W
ilhelm
II, and H
itler? Ifthey
w
ere, did they call for policies on the part of the U
nited States sim
ilar to those
pursued in 1917 and 1941?
Som
etim
es, as in the case o
f the changes in B
ritish foreign policy, the answ
er
seem
s to be clear: that policy proceeded from
w
isdom
rather than from
w
him
.
M
ost o
f the tim
e, how
ever, and especially w
hen w
e deal w
ith the present and the
future, the answ
er is bound to be tentative and subject to qualifications. T
he facts
from
w
hich the answ
er m
ust derive are essentially am
biguous and subject to con-
tinuous change. To those m
en w
ho w
ould have it otherw
ise, history has taught
nothing but false analogies. W
hen such m
en have been responsible for the foreign
policies o
f their countries, they have achieved only disaster. W
ilhelm
II and H
itler
learned nothing from
N
apoleon’s fate, for they thought it could teach them
noth-
ing. T
hose w
ho have erected W
ashington’s advice into a dogm
a to be follow
ed
slavishly have erred no less than those w
ho w
ould dism
iss it altogeth
er.
T
he
M
unich settlem
ent o
f 1938 is another case in point. In retrospect, o
f
course, w
e all know
from
practical experience that it w
as a failure, and from
that
experience w
e have developed the theoretical categories that dem
onstrate that it
w
as bound to be a failure. B
ut I rem
em
ber very w
ell the consensus w
ith w
hich the
M
unich settlem
ent w
as approved at the tim
e of its conclusion by theoreticians
and practitioners o
fforeign policy and by the m
an in the street as w
ell. T
he M
unich
settlem
ent w
as then generally regarded as a great act ofstatesm
anship, a concession
m
ade to a w
ould-be conqueror for the sake ofpeace. E. H
. C
arr so regarded it then,
and A
J.P. T
aylor so regards it now
. T
he flaw
in that reasoning, w
hich few
people
w
ere-and perhaps could be-aw
are o
fat the tim
e, w
as again the neglect o
fthe con-
tingencies inherent in political prediction. T
hat w
hich reveals itself as a sim
ple
truth in retrospect either w
as com
pletely unknow
n in prospect or else could not
be determ
ined by anything but an uncertain hunch.
Take finally the contem
porary issue o
f nuclear w
ar.
From
tim
e to tim
e
A
m
erican policym
akers speak openly about “prevailing” in a nuclear w
ar. In this
they m
irror com
m
ents m
ade by R
ussian m
ilitary leaders-although not by Soviet
political leaders such as B
rezhnev, w
ho m
ore than once w
arned that a therm
onu-
clear w
ar w
ould be suicidal for both superpow
ers. Particularly in the 1980s, as
C
old W
ar tensions m
ounted again, voices in both countries echoed the belief that
victory in a nuclear w
ar w
as not unthinkable, provided augm
ented strategic forces
w
ere
form
ed through vastly increased defense expenditures. It is possible to
develop a theory o
f nuclear w
ar that assum
es nuclear w
ar to be just another kind
o
f violence, greater in m
agnitude but not different in kind from
the types of vio-
lence w
ith w
hich history has acquainted us. It follow
s from
this assum
ption that
nuclear w
ar is going to be m
uch m
ore terrible than conventional w
ar, but not nec-
essarily intolerable, provided w
e take the m
easures that w
ill enable at least som
e
2
2
The S
cience of International P
olitics
~
f us to survive it. In other w
ords, once one starts w
ith this theoretical assum
p-
tion o
f the nature and the consequences o
f nuclear w
ar, one can logically arrive at
the conclusion that the foreign policy o
f the U
nited States does not need to lim
it
itself to trying to avoid nuclear w
ar but that the U
nited States m
ust also prepare
to survive it. A
nd then it becom
es perfectly legitim
ate to raise the question, pro-
vided 100 m
illion A
m
ericans w
ere to be killed in a nuclear w
ar and nine-tenths o
f
the econom
ic capacity o
f the U
nited States w
ere to be destroyed, o
f how
w
e
enable the surviving A
m
ericans to rebuild the U
nited States w
ith the rem
aining
one-tenth o
f econom
ic capacity.
T
he contingent elem
ent in this theory o
f nuclear w
ar is its utter uncertainty,
and this uncertainty is typical o
f all levels o
ftheoretical analysis and prediction in
th~ field o
f politics, dom
estic and international. E
ven if one w
ere to accept all its
es’.1m
ates o
f deaths and m
aterial destruction and o
f the rate o
f m
aterial recovery,
this theory w
ould have to be uncertain about the hum
an reactions to the kind o
f
hum
an
and m
aterial
devastation
that nuclear w
ar
is
likely
to
bring
about.
O
bviously, if a highly com
plex hum
an society could be visualized to operate like
a prim
itive ant society, its recuperative ability could be taken for granted. If one-
half o
f the ants o
f one anthill have been destroyed together w
ith nine-tenths o
f
the m
aterial o
f the anthill, it is safe to conclude that the rem
aining ants w
ill start
all over again, building up the anthill and reproducing until the next catastrophe
forces them
to start all over again.
B
ut a hum
an society does not have this type o
f m
echanical recuperative
ability. Societies have a breaking point as do individuals, and there is a point
beyond w
hich hum
an endurance does not carry hum
an initiative in the face o
f
such unprecedented m
assive devastation. O
nce that point is reached, civilization
itself w
ill collapse. T
he exact location o
f that point in the scale o
f hum
an reactions
is beyond theoretical understanding. \V
hat w
e are left w
ith are hunches that m
ay
or m
ay not be confirm
ed by experience.
T
he first lesson the student o
f international politics m
ust learn and never
forget is that the com
plexities o
f international affairs m
ake sim
ple solutions and
trustw
orthy prophecies im
possible. H
ere the scholar and the charlatan part com
–
pany. K
now
ledge o
f the forces that determ
ine politics am
ong nations, and o
f the
w
ays by w
hich their political relations unfold, reveals the am
biguity o
f the facts o
f
international politics. In every political situation contradictory tendencies are at
play. O
ne o
f these tendencies is m
ore likely to prevail under certain conditions.
B
ut w
hich tendency actually w
ill prevail is anybody’s guess. T
he best the scholar
can do, then, is to trace the different tendencies that, as potentialities, are inherent
in a “certain” international situation. H
e can point out the different conditions
that m
ake it m
ore likely for one tendency to prevail than for another and, finally,
assess the probabilities for the different conditions and tendencies to prevail in
actuality.
T
hus w
orld affairs have surprises in store for w
hoever tries to read the
future from
his know
ledge o
fthe past and from
the signs o
f the present. In 1776,
W
ashington declared that “the Fate o
f our C
ountry depends in all hum
an prob-
ability, on the E
xertion o
f a Few
W as not until seven years later U olitics that the W f Independence cam ritish prim m f m tic decrease in the personnel o ritish navy) and held out hope for m reductions to com nquestionably there never w e in the f this country w the situation o urope w ight m sonably expect fifteen years o om nly tw m f E as engulfed in w G ritain w hus w f alm w f a century. W ord G e ritish foreign secretary in 1870, he w ed by the perm retary that “he had never, during his long experience, know foreign affairs, and that he w are o portant question that he ord G ith.” O e day Prince L o ohenzollern-Sigm n o w f the Franco-Prussian W eeks before the ussian R f M enin told a group o Z e old people w f the ing revolution.” Less than a year later, the decisive battles o ussian evolution began under his leadership. hen the prophecies o en fare so ill, w e expect from the predictions o inds? In how any books w affairs before the First W ar, w m ars to be possible or at least o as there even an inkling o hat w com as any book w een the tw orld w have helped one anticipate w ould be like in the ninth f the century? W orld W w orld w ho could have know w orld w hat it w 1980? W e place in those w ould tell us w tom and the day after w hat the year 2000 w 5 In the m and ore C Intelligence A ere criticized for their failure to w m akers inated in the Shah oflran’s ouster. President C – anding the highest authorities in W f otherw and responsible people? T er lies in the nature of the em aterial ith w he observer is confronted w ul- f factors, the totality o hich shape the future. In order to foresee the
5T f prophecies in international affairs is strikingly dem com itted by the experts w f the next w he history o forecasts, from achiavelli to G . Fuller, is the story oflogical deductions, plausible in selves, that had no connection w f the actual historical developm G in 1923 that the decisive w orld W w ation o ar (N Y utton, 1923). 2 The S future, the observer w all these factors, their dynam m hat he actually know
is but a sm
all fragm f the total. H ust guess-and only the future w w ho chose rightly am any possible guesses. hus, w m rong. f blam inately, one ought to ask oneself tw C e the outbreak o answ ative, w nited States have done about it ? he answ his is probably w the intelligence com unity paid less attention to Iran than it m in the first place. f econom ed to be the ost precise o ealth, is quanti- ilarly incapable o ination f a large num f forecasts o m N for f about 40 percent. 6 In O 1966 the Prudential Life Insurance C pany predicted that in 1967 consum expenditures w ents w am ctober 1967 it scaled its estim f consum expenditures dow f alm ing f the revised estim ate o m he C f E ic A ated the th o N for the sam UNDERSTANDING THE PROBLEM T f this book. N f poli- f international politics in the final decades o tw l- action and to pursue know n sake. International politics as for the U ost o f arding, but hardly calling into question the nation’s ve1y he existence and destiny o nited States w ore estic events o ivil W policies leading up to, and evolving from exican W m W oosevelt corollary to the M octrine. 7
6V arnow n Appraisal o ic Forecasts (N Y ational B f conom esearch, 1967). his corollary is found in the m fT oosevelt to C ecem that m ed the right o nited States to intervene in the dom f the atin A erican countries. For the text, see R artlett, editor, The Record o erican D acy: ocum istory o erican Foreign Relations, 4 ew ork: A . nopf, 1964), p. 539.
U roblem f International Peace Tw e have com por- f dom nited States. First o U om f this w o m erful et, in com ith its actual and potential com not so pow f its policies upon its posi- ong the nations. From f the C ar to the beginning o Second W ar, it m hat policies the U ith atin A erican neighbors, C he self-sufficiency o ow ith the operation o fpow ade the nited States im une to the boundless am frustration that goes w he U in stride w pted or afraid. N it stands outside the enclo- f its continental citadel, taking on the w f the political w or foe. It has becom T f being very pow nipotent, is aggravated by the f the w the m o hose center w urope, has been orldw w outside E Furtherm oral unity o orld, w W ost o o incom patible system f thought and action, com here for the allegiance f m odern technology has m ar resulting in he preponderance o elem tem ade the preservation o orld ely difficult but has also increased the risks inherent in w point w ar becom w nited States holds a position o inant pow hence o ost responsibility, the understanding of the forces that m international politics and o ine its course has becom the U than an interesting intellectual occupation. becom To reflect on international politics from f the contem porary U s that confront m e. W es the prom f the f the U er am ers has been the ain concern o m o w ars to w ar w eapons, the preservation of e the prim f all nations. o concepts o pow hese tw f w in the final decades o entieth century, w ula- f destructive pow o had before. In a w hose m f sovereign nations er, peace can be m o devices. O m o hich m er 2 The S on the international scene-that is, the balance o er. T f ative lim o , inter- orality, and w f these devices, as er indefinitely w peaceful bounds, three further questions m ered: W value o ain current proposals for the m M hat is the value o ing the interna- f sovereign nations into a supranational organization, such as a orld state? A hat m for action be like that is m o to the problem present? W ER? International politics, like all politics, is a struggle for pow hatever the ulti- ate s f international pow is ays im ediate . en and peoples m ately seek freedom pow hey m s o econom hey m ill m its ow opm f hum hey m nonpolitical m ith other nations or inter- ut w eans f international politics, they do so by striving for pow he C anted to dom oodrow ilson w m orld safe for dem azis w astern E to G an colonization, to dom urope, and to conquer the w they all chose pow ere actors on the scene o international politics. 2 o conclusions follow this concept ofinternational politics. First, not s w 1T f political pow f the m s o cal science. T f any concept used in political science is determ a m um f the phenom political activity. T f political pow ing of international politics, m f one adopted to operate in the unicipal politics. T eans em uch m ly cir- scribed than are those em 2For som arks on pow ionel R Econom fW ondon: Jonathan C 2 3
P
olitical P er nature. M ally undertaken w o er, nor do they norm er o . any legal, econom anitarian, and cultural activities are o hus ally engaged in international politics w extradition treaty w hen it exchanges goods and services w other nations, w ith other nations in providing relief from ural catastrophes, and w otes the distribution o ents orld. In other w ent o tional politics is but one am any types o hich a nation can par- Second, not all nations are at all tim e extent involved in inter- he degree o ent m ay from m nited States and the Soviet U the m 1m m ent o Sw uxem V plete noninvolvem fL onaco. Sim extrem f particular countries. Spain in the six- as one o ain active participants in the er on the international scene but plays today only a m in it. T e is true o ustria, Sw itzerland. O the other hand, nations such as the U nion, and C today m ore deeply involved in international politics than they w even tw fnations to international politics has ic quality. It changes w f pow hich m nation into the forefront o er struggle or m f the abil- ay also change under the im f cultural ations, w ay m – erce, to those o er. T f countries to be involved to a greater or er prom rnold W they occupied positions at opposite extrem f a spectrum w he called the pole o er to the pole o Its N s l hen w f pow f this book, w ind not m pow edium or color; or over the m f production or consum self in the f self-control. W e speak o er, w ean m m f other m y political pow e refer to the m tions of control am een the latter and Political pow een those w those over w it is exercised. It gives the form the latter through the effect that the form inds. T derives from f benefits, the fear o and the respect or love for m ay be exerted through orders,
W olitical P er? threats, the authority or charism f a m f an office, or a com f any In view f this definition, four distinctions m ade: betw er een pow een usable and unusable pow betw ate anq ill egitim er. he secretary of state w f the U conduct o m s his ut he has no pow eans at ith w pose his w f the president. H suade but he cannot com he president, on the other hand, has pow the secretary of state; for he can im ill upon the latter by virtue o authority o ise o f disadvantages. er m force in the sense of the act~al f physical violence. T fphysical violence in the form f pohc_e prisonm ent, or w ent o tics. W es an actuality, it signifies the abdication o pow ilitary or pseudom particular, arm ost im rial factor m er o es an actuality _m ar, it signifies the substitution o ilitary for political pow he actual exe_m of physical violence substitutes for the psychological relation betw o m ds, hich is o f political pow een tw ies, one o hich is strong enough to dom ove1:1ents. It is for f physical violence the psychological elem the political relationship is lost and that w ust distinguish betw ilitary and er . . T fnuclear w akes it necessary to distm sh betw usable and unusable pow contrast to the experience of all of prenuclear history, an increase in m pow er. T threat of all-out nuclear violence im f total destruct10n. A it can still be a suitable instrum f foreign policy w that cannot reply in kind. T ed w eapons can assert er over the other nation by saying: “E ill des:roy he situation is different if the nation so threatened can respond by saym “Ifyou destroy m ith nuclear w ill be destroyed !n turn.” H m w f the other, both nations can afford to ption that both w . ption that the nations concerned m a- ar that the threat of ar is credible and has indeed been used by the U Soviet U nion during the Suez risis of 1956, by the U erlin C f 1961, and by both rab-Israeli W f 1973. Y hile here the threat o 32
Political P
ow ent o f that force rem ~ional; ~or the th:eatened force w f fluencm f the other side but for the irrational purpose o the other side w f one’s ow T agnitude o pared w ited f the political purposes that are the proper object o ders nuclear force unusable as an instrum f foreign policy. It can be rational ith destruction through the f nuclear force m ill; it w to actually destroy the other side, thereby inviting one’s ow ~rast,_ c~nventional force is usable as an instrum fforeign policy; for by inflict- g lim age w m a suitable instrum ill. . _at~ po:ver-that is, pow hose exercise is m Justified-m gm illegitim er. Pow ith oral ~r legal authority m naked pow he p ow f ho searches m f a search w different from er o ho perform e action by virtue o his holding a gun. T evant for the conduct o egitim er, w m ore effective than ate pow hich cannot be so justified. T m r has a better chance to influence the w f its objects than equiva- ate pow er exercised in self-defense or in the nam f the nited N er exer- f international law ologies, as w f endow ith the f legitim W f the expectation o benefits, the fear o en or institu- binations, form f all dom the im f these factors for international politics is less obvious but no here has been a tendency to reduce political pow cat10n o ith successful threats o ith f charism hat neglect, as w in good m f prestige as an independent elem national politics. Y ithout taking into account the charism f a m as N itler, or o the governm U onstitution, evoking trust and love through w ills o m it them ill o an or institution, it is im to understand certain phenom f international politics that have been par- inent in m es. 3See C W er? T portance that charism o letter that John D orker fo_r ~rotestant u~ity, w i ·n 1632 to the B m hom oe, explam g the decl111e o . er o ustavus A fSw G any:
The increase of his authority is the ground of his abode; and love is the ust be through love; for it cannot be through er; for his pow n subjects but in strangers’. not in ~is oney, but in theirs; not in their good w ere necessity as thm stand now ixt him ; therefore if the necessity be not so urgent eans be show od (w uch an as by him oney and the pow and the assistance w w him authority is lost, and his abode w hich w first is gone…. 4
T fthe U er over the executive branch f the governm em f that he leader o er so long as he is able to m the actions o em ill. W ical pow f an industrialist, a labor leader, or a lobbyist in so far as his p~erer- f public officials. T nited States exerts political er over Puerto R s o nited States are observe~ by hen w f the political pow m States in C m e have in m ity of the actions o C m ents w ishes o ent o nited hus the statem has or w er over B alw is able, or w through ‘s m . .. hatever the m f a foreign policy, such as the acqm o f raw aterials, the control of sea lanes, or territorial changes, they ays entail control o f others through influence over their m T hine frontier as a century-old objective o the political objective to destroy the desire of G any to attack Fran~e ?Y m ing it physically difficult or im erm reat B ow its predom orld politics throughout the nineteenth ce_nt~ry to f m reat B 4G estin, N bout Church U psala: A quist and W p. 208. T odernized. . . he exam ctton betw al pow ere soC1al fact, _as f the lobbyist, and political pow the sense oflegit1m dent o nited States. B f the U al er, how ay be. 3 3 P too strong) or unnecessary (because it strength w ith m other nations to oppose it. he political objective o ilitary preparations of any kind is to deter other using m aking it too risky for them he o ilitary preparations is, in other w ake the actual appli- f m y to desist the use of m he political objective o ar itself is not per se the f enem ies but a change in the ind o y that w ake him ill o T henever econom ilitary policies are een, say, ic policies that are undertaken for their ow ic policies ents o hose econom purpose is but the m f controlling the policies o T f Sw ith regard to the U first category. T ic policies o nion w nations o astern E any econom cies o nited States in L m sia, and E he distinction is o great practical im ake it has led to m in policy and public opinion. ic, financial, territorial, or m n n term ically or financially hat effects has acquisition o the econom f the nation acquiring it? W f a change ilitary policy for education, population, and the dom ? he decisions w ade exclusively in term f such W ever, the objectives o er w objectives m arily from f view f their contribution er. A ic policy that cannot be justified in purely eco- ic term ight nevertheless be undertaken in view f the political policy pur- he insecure and unprofitable character o ay ent against it on purely financial grounds. B ent is ever unw ay be from f view serves the political policies o ay o ic ill w tional position to such an extent as to outw expected. O ight be rejected. In such a case, w decides the issue is not purely econom – f the political chances and risks involved-that is, the probable effect o these policies upon the pow f the nation. hen the U Poland that lie in the shadow f the R rm arily eco- ic or financial. It is rather to enable such countries to m ard a degree
The D f P ow . fl ow f the Soviet U of indepf~ndenct: ~ :n :;:c ; financial institutions is p~stponed w m oans h’ t £ r hum U ~ ~ a one. •
1
d ov1e
·
m f Pola~d, options th~t pre;ent it; ~~::d ~~e;olitical objectives that in the the econom }r; ~r nd as a sovereign state-how uch its : ~ s~ t~ :l ;:t~:~ a; ;orce it to accept the position o geog~ap
h
S viet U or , t e aim w the sphere o o 1· it Soviet influence . and m ic po icy tow h” l sing the leverage of the U pow entral and E urope w I e m States in the area.
THE DEPRECIATION OF POLITICAL POW . . 1 T er bem 1st_1~gu:s g e em olitics hile o _ati~ni~ r:1 ~ rJfairs, i~ is fre- ze h lars and even states- ents o , . W
q
s· f the N ars, ever larger gro~ps m le en . ce er on the m at1ona scene orld have been persua e . .d nt that is bound to disappear once phenom 1stonca acc1 . d porary. . .’
•
· e to it have been ehm ate the peculiar hB1sto~c co;~ tta~t t~:v:o~;:~i~~n for colonies w T y
e_ ieve”
. as his advice to the Em uld .of necessity disappear.6 d m attonal con ict an ar w . govem en s, an C ere convm ::~ ~ :e neut harm ong nations an t I ,, said C “w ay lt “A e ‘ S . r . ‘ ho offer to becom probably see the test ‘no fore1g~ po 1~1cs,,/f p l~arx and his follow
the representativ~s of fre~ co~s~~uen~1es. d o:r T
hey m 1
~~ ~
::;~ ::h st:~ or;o~ . l (L obert H ard, 1830).
b
. anapate Your on b n the barriers that separate nations; those 7″Free trade! W hf, ;,cl and jealousy w and then hich nestle the feelings o n o . cl cl I ae w it ch burst their boun s, an b “one and the sam es lm ea~ ~ I ep. 79· Political W ew ork: D ppleton, ondon: M At l , enry A orth, quoted in John M f 0 ol. II, p. 110; letter o , 154 oston: _R ill thus be declared, their solidarity rec- ress the tanffs and t e 248 l”ty ed.” O pletes (Paris, 1867), V . ze e1r equa 1 · h L”b 195 cl’ . C ales Short H fEnglzs , p. ‘-<.Yote
1n
. e 3 P er w ~n~nt peace. D y liberals every- here shared the conv1ct10n that pow ar w fan obso- o ent and that the victory o ocracy and constitutional ent over absolutism ould assure the victory o tional harm anent peace over pow ar. O school o oodrow ilson w ost eloquent and m spokesm In recent tim er can be elim ~r?m ith the great attem 1zm orld, such as the L f N nited N hus ordell H .S. secretary o the oscow onference, w ork for the U ations, that the international organization w ean the end o er politics and usher era o r. Philip N aker, then B m fstate, declared in 1946 in the H fC m ritish gov- ent w ined to use the institutions o nited N pow ethods o ocracy, the w fthe people 11 W e shall have m 12 them it is sufficient to state that the struggle for pow versal m e and space and is an undeniable fact o denied t~~t throughout historical tim fsocial, econom cal cond1tto-:1s, states have m er. E anthropologists have show itive peoples seem
the desire for pow
er, nobody has yet show their state o ind and the con- hich they live can be re-created o a w ide scale so as to elim inate the struggle for pow the international scene. 13 It w even self-destructive to free one or the other o f the earth from desire for pow hile leaving it extant in others. If the desire for pow be abolished everyw orld, those w ight be cured w ply s to the pow f others. he position taken here m draw the past are unconvincing and that to draw alw been the m f the enem f progress and reform T ents and institutions have alw existed in the past, it does not necessarily follow ust alw future. T ever, different w e deal not w m an but w ental biopsychological hich in tum he drives to live, to propagate, and
10N iork Tim ovem 11H fC m ebates (Fifth Series, 1946), V 12See Part E 13 For an illum f this problem alcolm ggression: A f V and Law ol. 57, N The D 37
to dom m en. 14 T · I conditions that m ay . . h’l w certam am f these 1 e t encourage others. T ples only from f ~ow ost n killing as a m f attaining pow 1thm cieties encourage the killing o ies in that struggle for pow ~:ar. D er am low ocracies consider active participation 1~ th~ com political pow here a ~onopolis~ic orgam f econ~1:11c petition for econom er 1s absent, and m pet1t1ve ic system anifestations o ic pow outlaw hile others are encouraged. O vokm f ocqueville, states that “the passions o m f a poht1- f a com ercial, nature. In that w a1tm f l h’ pow s en t m . . . egardless o ent aga:nst ~he er on the internation~l scen_e_1s a m accident m the nature o estic politics. T f ith its dom oth d_om international politics are a struggle for pow odified onlY_ by the_ d1ffer~nt con- hich this struggle takes place in the dom the m tional spheres. he tendency to dom ent o an asso- the fam local political organizations, to the state. O the fam flict betw other-in-law gle for pow f an established pow to establish a new s such it foreshadow ternatlon- een the policies o f im . f er betw ant hat er they already have or seek to attain great~r pow om betw ell as labor disputes betw ployers and ployees, are frequently fought not only, and som es not even prim for econom is, for pow hole politica~ life o f a dem ocratic nation from uous struggle for er. In pe;iodic elections, in voting in legislative assem suits
I4Z that the drive to dom als, s~ch as chickens onkeys, w f \~1ll and the ~b1hty to dom W llee, A al Life and Social G altim illiam ilkens, 1932), and The Soaal nim ew ork: W . N f. also the theones of K orenz and the . 15JvI. O em rganization o ew ork: M illan, 1902), ol. II, p. 592. 3 P er before courts, in adm easures-in all these en try to m er over other m he hich legislative, judicial, executive, and adm are_ reached are subject to pressures and counterpressures by “pressure groups” g to defend and expand their positions o er. A f the D Scrolls puts it:
W er? O ho w property plundered unjustly? Yet, is there a single nation that has not r w orld w has not plundered the property of another? \V . “O e know hucydides, “and o en w It 1s a necessary law f their nature that they rule w r, as olstoy put it, “the very process o inating another’s w as in itself a pleas- 6lokhov.” 17 nd in the w fJohn o T en to seize princely or royal pow m ho 1s w ted by tyranny is rare or nonexistent. In com on ho oppresses a w on force; and yet it is not over a people as a w an can play the ill even in the m the w an w er In view f this ubiquity o er in all social relations f social organization, is it surprising that international poli- f necessity pow nd w struggle for pow ere but an accidental and ephem f interna- hen it is a perm ent o f estic politics?
ROOTS OF TIU DEPRECIATIOPJ Of Pf!llUflCIU he depreciatio~ o er plays on the international scene grow
tw
o roots. O f international relations that dom better part o ay over m four think- he other is the particular political and intellectual cir- stances that have determ f the U fA erica to f the w 16T ook V, § 105. eo T ar and Peace, B ight, C L f Salisbury, Policratictts, translated by John D ew . K V II, p. 17.
Two R epreciation o olitical P er N enturv Philosophy he nineteenth century w f pow tic experience. T f this experience w m o iddle classes by the aristocracy. B ination w ical dom f any kind, the political philosophy of the nineteenth century e to identify the opposition to aristocratic politics w o fter the defeat of aristocratic governm oped a system f indirect dom hey replaced the trad1t10nal d1v1s1?n m the governing and the governed classes, and the m ethod o characteristic o ith the invisible chains o IC ence. T ic system ork o ingly equalitari- fpow he nineteenth as unable to see the political nature o hey ed to be essentially different from hat had gone, so far, under the nam f herefore politics in its aristocratic-that is, open_ ~nd violent-:form as ith politics as such. T er-m es- ell as in international affairs-appeared to be only a historical accident, ith autocratic governm ith the disap- f autocratic governm The Am This identification o er politics w ent found support m ents in that experience: f the A erican experim m continent from orld conflict during the nineteenth century, and anitarian pacifism perialism f A erican political ideology. hat the severance o ith the B row as m to signify the initiation o m w ent e o urope is clearly stated in W Farew ddress: “E f prim hich to us have none, ote relation. H ust be engaged in frequent controversies, f w ence, therefore, it ust be unw plicate ourselves, by artificial ties, in the ordinary vicis- f her politics, or the ordinary com f her friend- ities.” In 1796, E er politics w there w er politics but the one engaged in by the princes o urope. he toils o uropean am or or caprice” w only m f the international struggle for pow f m he retreat from E ed by W gton, ean retreat from er politics as such. et A erican aloofness from uropean tradition of pow as ore than a political program ertain sporadic exceptions notw w f the nineteenth century. T 4 P er fact w f deliberate choice 11 . riters m ‘. e f the ob1ect1v: conditions o position the hand o od dt e uniiqueness o m . ic una terably p h m ell l B rescn e f ut m ‘bl W ~ resp~ns1
conditions and a foreign pol1·c
h . size tdhe _con1unct10n o . C g Its en s f g geographic conditions to attain those W h. e t o detac~ed and distant situation” and asked· ‘~ – m peculiar a situation?” W h. · orego the advantages o · f A erican f. 1· close, John B rote to A d L “ O ore1gn po icy to a re n your co t grow g m ay henceforth know f n m w ay and you anxious . :,var. N nations.”19 m m g W the o From f the N th A · orld w the st I ent, the citizens o ew range f the t l f E A ernat10~a for pow part o _pe, sia. Sm o hat w ~ :::to/cy ena?led t~em appeared to A ericans as a ?. a passm ordained. A orst they w anet~t cond1t10n, self-chosen as w con m atch th • . e w g ~ pow hshed everyw ould fall and :hen, w fem w e gam O pow To ent h. A erica’s m hrou hout t_ is’ go~ as to f ~~:~:da(:~::i~~s: :~ ::!::to ~ ;::t:i:i:it~::;z1 ~ e~ ~ cal philosophy o C ffess1v~, ~bstenti~m ulation, as in the politi- hus w ay .”d a otion o es- o m I contm orld generally, than w d o r exam W nited States I h , a,e o sh-A · , this perialist and . l encan w ed to em 1 ea ill’ h s essence· d . 1· 1am ra
um
ner an pena ism are a I dem . 1· gran t on . pena ism ar w b pnnc1ples, and interests o m
. e
~st tra 1t101:1s, f E er politics w f th.e A o1;1panng dt. _e tendencies
~~ot~1~;:v!~h ~ e :::~ t~ :~ ~ ~ ~ ::;~ irrevocably com itted A erica to the pam – encan W in revolution and w sam as engulfing E 19Q erle C r· Th • S om · m truggle 1636-1936 (N Y W orton, onquest o nited States b
..
Y niversity Press, 1940), V ssays ofW G Sum ew The S f P ontem topianism 41
T ed o nature of foreign affairs com ith specific elem m ence to create the belief that involvem er politics is not inevitable but een pow and other kinds o er. THE SCIENCE OF PEACE: CONTEM A w f thought-still influential in political and isdom f a rationalist approach to international politics. This school o w ay call “scientific utopianism ; like the sources o self-deception as to the persistence o er discussed above, the scien- urope and in A erica. In this case, how f class dom ination nor geographical accident gave rise to utopian hopes for a “science o peace.” Instead, the fantastic progress o to assum e kinds o ethods, applied to individual and collective an behavior, could yield progress tow hat H arcuse and others f hum T odern science o the assum orld is ents necessary for the harm f all m to detect those elem ony of interests, law f eco- ics, free trade, and m m to apply them here prom discover them f apparent conflict. it is the atavism f pow torts the harm A Sm , as w – ental harm m f self-regarding, com ic behavior. Selfish pursuits led ealth for all through the w overned by arket operates to dispose all for the best. N century liberalism iraculous in its eans to establish harm ong states. O rational principles w ere considered capable of prom en f reason, they m eet on that com on ground, dis- ula acceptable to all. W es fully aw real interests, they w identical, that w tries, and that conflict is m 4 Political P C ong nations are due, then, to m ents arising from !ack o f political passions. E 1gnora_nce and em ould solve international conflicts as easily and rationally as has so any problem the sciences. roudhon w ong the first to glorify the blessings o national field:
7:ruth is everyw ith itself: science represents the unity o an- f religion or authority, is taken in each , the sovereign arbiter of interests, w ent ~unti~g to nothing, all the law ill be in harm N ill no longer exist in the political m f the ;_ there w an, o hatever race or colour he m be, “‘.ill actually be a native o niverse; the right o ill here. In the sam ay in w national territory the m authority, each nation of the globe w anity and in its natural arm ill reign am ithout diplo- acy nor council; nothing shall from on disturb it.21
“T fthe pacifist,” according to C .M sonable. H fhis ow aking his e that other m ay be brought to use theirs…. ruth, in fact, w in out, ifpeople are only given a sufficient chance to find it.”22 as w e confidence in the pow freason that C ed in 1941 en in the U ritish ent w pion the U f the tw it.”23 _Pol~tical hist~ry, then, becom fscientific problem ?f sc1e_nt1fic n-but m ignorant and pass1?ned hu_m om ea, the prob- o ternat10nal affa1rs resolved itself into a problem f know “~alour o ledge o an ill be able to act successfully o the international scene. ‘ T e can and w com rote the fam ertha von Suttner, “w f ill ha~e-replaced present-day statecraft, w iH 1Slat1ve and political P er … w the truth stnve to attam prehending all 21 “Idee generale de la revolution au dix-neuviem euvres com (1868), p. 300; see also uerre et la paix (Paris: E. D 22<'Pacifism
: Its Personal and Social Im
plications,” in G ooch, In Pursuit o ondon: ethuen, 1933), pp. 61, 63. nion N w ew ork: H rothers, 1941), p. 197.
The S eace: C porary U
43
T e S f has already arrived as far as the m sion o ledge is concerned, according to R ynd. “T he w is already fairly com f com nationalism perialism w ar. T of w ore than m others, has engaged the attention o several disciplines, and here fairly unequivocal know edge exists. T ar are know ide group o thoughtful students. B ent of w because social science shrinks from m m f an issue here the problem lack of know hat ill to m they hold w ay as disparate bits of s~holarsh_ip. e know ar and its causes to present these findm t eanings, and propose action in a w ill hold this dam evidence steadily and authoritatively before the eyes of the hum citizen. 24
It w ge o eason to replace the old m f pow secret diplom ar by a new erritorial claim eignty over national m f raw aterials, the struggle for arkets, disarm ent, the relation betw peaceful change, and the peaceful organization_ o orld in gen~ral-these are s, to be solved tem ing to the distribution o er am g nat10ns and its possible bal- hey are “technical” problem hich reason w solution in each case. hus the nineteenth century developed a “science o branch o ledge. Scores o ere published bearing this title. ne even received first prize in a scholarly com he concept o~ a “~at- hich had had a strategical and political, but not a sc1ent1fic, as construed by the apoleon in the sense o frontier. In the seventies and eighties o in G ritain discussed seriously the problem f the “scientific frontier,” that a frontier that corresponds to reason and that, consequently, m fr~ntiers in this geographical region scientifically incorrect. In his speech at ansion H ovem israeli justified the Second A ar as “a haphazard and not a scientific one.”
24K ledge.for W niversity Press, 1939), p. 241. ouis B 44 ow he search for such a “scientific” frontier started in the second half o eighteenth century w f partitions and annexations o tory, the relative value o f territory to be distributed w ined ber and quali- fpopul~t10n, and the l:ke. Follow ongress o ienna, upon f M ch, appointed a special statistical com ission· it w charged w dard o ber, _quality, and type o he delim f territory f m atical exercise. T f the “good frontier,” t~e l~st de~ad~s o erm ith regard ussia s terntonal aspirat10ns, had a som hat sim he idea pted to introduce science into foreign trade, build- g m ~he theory an~ pra~tice o anifesta- f the rat10nahst approach to international problem ill o m hich sovereign; over territory is to m ajor L tific di~ar~am eopolitics” endeavoured to put foreign policy as a w on a sc1ent1fic basis. as onl_r a~ter the Firs~ :<7orld W
ar that this tendency to reduce political
proble1:ns to. ~c1ent1fic propos1t10ns w eason is at last m depende~t ~gency,” w ord A artw the conduct o en. T ing o self to be _t~e m f nature, his m ork rationally instead f supers_t1t10usly. he~ ing an the phenom aro~nd him s his ~onclusions. From om ind begins to be dependent agency o fluence. It can now p_ol_i’.ical_ force, w f 1hzat10n. urm begun to influence public 27
. hus _began w f the scientific approach ternatlonal affam ague onferences and hundreds o aller peace congresses, governm – barked on a program f feverish activity unprecedented in recorded ith the purpose o s through scien- ethods. T en~s,_ th~ L f N vied ‘:”1th one another m zm ternational conferences, in encouraging g and research, and in publishing hundreds o es to cure the ills f hum ay. W itnessed w to find a scientific solution for the problem f the postw orld. T 26 For details see C upuis, Le Principe d’equilibre et le Concert Europeen (Paris: Perrin et C pp. 38 ff, 60 ff. : Its M ask,” in Pursuit o The S 4 the latest, but probably not the last, m f this m trend. 28 O agic form w echanically applied, w for the uncertainties and risks o tion. H ever, w agic fo~m ~le, rational, echanical; w ith is com ational, m A pelled, in order to present at leas~ ~he sem of scientific solutions, to sim f international politics and to rely hat one m ethod o . he abolition o ar is obviously the fundam confrontm international thought. To solve the problem ust clearly first deter1:1ine ~ts hat m m f causes involved-causes that have their roots in the in_ner- ost recesses of the hum ere it possible to reduce all those m com ulation-the solu- f the problem f w ould no longer seem possible. Thi~ is w foreign policy has been trying to do since its very inception; and sm of the League o ations m ould take it for lack o a statesm edy . A nants o the great single cause m ar m this w ay w ent everyw liberals w e w sition w ed dow ore special rem particular situations. T e have seen, B and the B 1tes pom to the struggle for colonies as the m ar; they advocated abstention colonial policy as a rem ar. For others tariffs w f all free trade w O ould abolish secret treaties and secret diplom popular control o _od_ern w grow f im , w f the contrad1ct1ons of m oly capitalism ence, let us do aw ith capitalism arxists w w ill no longer have w is peace.
28C harles A eard, A erica (N Y lfred A. K “In line w interests, the study o and diplom as encouraged m institutions oflearning. O n acy-cold, scholarly rerform ere ented by courses o international relations, i’: w i:hasis w orld pe~ce and eans o oting it. B phlets, and articles on pacification w naen, published, idely circulated, often w f subventions from ferences w eldom college presidents, professors, clergym ong w en_ enJoyed such p_nvileges and arked consideration at the hands o era o usefulness and distinction had been opened for them f great affairs, and they m m f its opportunities.” 4 Political P ~e sam ode o estic politics. A social evils stem our ignorance o s o ics; the “single tax” takes f those law ill solve all social problem ur econom is f JO t because the governm ore than it collects; balance the ic problem ill be solved. B root o ith the acquisition o problem ill be solved. E erson, in “N E eform this kind o O en should go to farm an oney w the m as in our diet, that w nation. These m unleavened bread, and w entation…. O attacked the system al m ing; and an over brute nature; these abuses polluted his food …. orld w and a society for the protection of ground w s, slugs, and m as ithout delay. W eop- esm , ofphrenology, and their w ries of the C iracles! O the law erchant, of the m an, of the thers attadced the institution of m evils. O selves to the w eetings for orship; and the fertile form ianism ong the elder puri- ed to have their m f thi: new .29
In the dom ever, the “m f the single cause” has been f rather lim portance; for here, except in periods f collective insanity, im ediate personal experience reveals the absurdity o approach; and the pressure o being istaken for the savior. he utopian internationalist, on the other hand, has no direct contact w the international scene. H over the ithout ever risking collision w fpolitics. H ho w proclaim s for the U ould soon learn from personal experience the enorm f the social and political problem any attem y contrast, proclam f the s “everyw orld” is sufficiently general to avoid contact ith historical realities and political facts. he reform ithout responsibility finds in the arm fm tional thought w hat one panacea is frequently inconsistent ith an?ther need not t~ouble him abstract1011 from ultitude o 29 R aldo E erson, Ess,rys: Second Series (B oughton M The S 4 “single cause,” is as good as the next one. Since, ~rtherm “single cause” derives from g t? the bett~r- f hum a fixed resolve to m a defim ;olitical situation in a definite w f orld and any general plan to rem w involved. ence, the great hunting ground for the “single cause_” and _the “scientific ula” to rem hile their great season as the tw een the w ars. 30 International society is not organ- f legal s o and nin_eteenth:century philos- e the scientific form g pacifist and N Prize w . Fried propounded it at the beginning of the century, has been f a w f thought. O ould look to m edies. re not w ith arm et us prohibit or at least reduce arm en_ts, ar w ill be less likely. O , ould com edies, defending the com grounds” -as the only appropriate one. T adic~l-Socialist Party am establishm f perm hereas the French Socialists reversed the ore to the exclusive scientific v~lue of. the form through arbitration and disarm ent.” French foreign policy has been especially es that, like the “plan B “plan T erriot,” or the “plan Paul-B in one legal form s of E In other quarters, especially since the crisis o f ic field. R national trade, the lack o m pow ar, so the argum hen let us find a scien:ific for- ula for reciprocal trade agreem m for the floating o ill be peace. Faced by the im rialistic aspirations of the thirties, it w henever nations cannot ill try to change it by w change, scientifically defined, w ake w for their investm ere responsible for our involvem orld W let us outlaw e shall thus escape participation in the next ore recently, it has been “discovered” that national sovereignty is respon- ar; it follow f national sovereignties in a w eration or at least in a federation o ocracies is a scientific solution to o ar and peace. T ays in search of :he scientific ula, but an obstinate reality again and again m the fallacy o orrow 30See K . T pson, Ethics, Functionalism Values (B ouge: L niversity Press, 1979), pp. 35-45. Political P er 8 T f international relations resulted in the substitution o supposedly scientific standards for genuine political evaluations; in som this w pede, if not entirely destroy, the ability to m ligent political decisions at all. Pow ever lim that international politics recognizes as suprem he test to w political decisions m easure in w decisions affect the distribution o er. T ichelieu, H ilton atter), or D ould ask before they acted on as: does this decision increase or decrease the pow f he question o Since for him f international affairs am f sci- s, correctly or incorrectly handled by inform isinform officials, the suprem er but truth. T o er then becom the scientific attitude, w causes and rem e do not like the w and change things by changing the cause. T there is alw ething to analyze, to understand, and to reform H w odern m ake the belief in the all- bracing pow f science the controllingforce o ere again, er is to be found in the general prem frationalistic philosophy, seem ingly verified in its universal assum estic experience. T f in the dom ing of the political, and a idening o as open ination. O erly had been seen as the er w approached in a dispassionate, atter-of.fact w astered in accordance w feco- ics, adm . First the natural sciences and religion had freed selves from ination and had established their autonom hen , by conquering the state, freed an ever-increasing dom direct ination; finally, liberalism ed to expel even politics from realm f the state and to m om erce and industry ere the first to w y under reason. T hich for the physiocrats as still a political program ers o day, w dam ith already a system f scientific truths verified by experi- plications o hich no reasonable m tribunals w posed o der justice according to the principles o ntiquated and arbitrary s favoring certain political groups m ay for scientific devices ould secure full and equal representation for all citizens. T system f governm basis. T s are increasingly prepared by com ittees o w to be influenced largely by scientific instead o T inistration, and insurance becom finally, there is no field o ental activity that w proper area for the application of”political science.”
The S 4 T f the scientific m hich the m ind w led by its perception of the liberal experience, w dom here, how echanism f political pressure and atic check on doctrinaire excess. In the international echanism here, therefore, that the belief in the lim er o ula has e particularly prolific-and particularly ineffective. For it is here that the hatsoever w that determ f events. E ill, therefore, either follow their course as though all those proposals by international com issions o and other rationalist-utopian devices had never been invented. O w ill then produce effects unfore- oters and frequently disastrous to them against Italy during the Italo-E ar. Y e irony, this school pts to m f being “practical”; it ith disdain the rare attem understanding o ining political reality rather than on the ideal f abstract reason. 31
31A es L er could w e final du droit international,” par/:e, IX ever, nglish utilitarianism hole, are o ject I know the practical point o .” C eard, A Am early every evil that w e ithin the span o enty years. It w then that this schem based upon som isconceptions respecting the nature and propensities of m this explanation is invalid, that internationalists had not adopted the correct ‘approach’ to the goal selves. T age o orld had not corresponded w exactness to its realities or their m f technique. T and som f them adness o en and nations, but this w fession that their form ises and actions had been founded upon errors o event the verdict w e, unless all the blam as to be laid on A ericans as the w greatest scapegoats.”
eeks.” Y
\
nderstanding International P
23
ar o
e to an end. In February 1792, B
e
inister Pitt justified the reduction o
ilitary expenditures (particularly a dras-
f the B
ore
e by declaring: “U
as a tim
history o
hen from
f E
e m
ore rea-
f peace than at the present m
ent.” O
o
onths later the continent o
urope w
ar. Less than a year later
reat B
as involved. T
as initiated a period o
ost continuous
arfare that lasted nearly a quarter o
hen L
ranville becam
B
as inform
anent undersec-
n so great a lull in
as not aw
f any im
[L
ranville] should have to deal w
n that sam
eopold
f H
aringen accepted the crow
f Spain, an event that three
eeks later led to the outbreak o
ar. Six w
R
evolution o
arch 1917, L
f young socialists in
urich: “W
ill probably not live to see the decisive battles o
com
f the R
R
W
fgreat statesm
hat can w
f lesser m
m
ritten on international
orld W
hen com
on opinion held great w
im
f short duration, w
f w
as to
e? W
ritten in the period betw
o w
ars that could
hat international politics w
decade o
ho could have guessed at the beginning ofW
ar II
hat the political w
ould be like at its end? W
n in 1945
hat the w
ould be like in 1955, or in 1960 w
ould be like in 1970 or
hat trust then shall w
ho today w
hat
orrow
ill bring or w
ill be like?
1979
intelligence com
unity,
m
particularly the
entral
gency, w
arn A
erican policym
of the upheavals that culm
arter him
self took the unprecedented step ofpublicly reprim
the intelligence field for their lack of foresight.
hat accounts for this failure of foresight on the part o
ise intelligent
he answ
pirical m
w
hich these individuals had to deal. T
ith a m
titude o
f w
he fallibility o
onstrated by the fantastic errors
m
ho have tried to forecast the nature o
ar. T
f these
M
eneral J.F.C
them
ith the contingencies o
ent.
eneral Fuller, for instance, foresaw
eapon of the Second W
ar
ould be gas! See 77Je Reform
fW
ew
ork. E. P. D
4
cience of International P
olitics
ould have to know
ics, their
utual actions and reactions, and so forth. W
s and can know
ent o
e m
ill show
ong the m
T
ith regard to Iran the intelligence com
unity guessed w
Instead o
ing it indiscrim
o questions:
ould one have pinpointed in tim
f popular discontent? If the
er is in the affirm
hat could the U
T
er to the second question is, at best: very little. T
hy
m
ight have done
It is sobering to note that the science o
ics, presum
m
f the social sciences because its central concept, w
tative by definition, is sim
f reliable prediction. An exam
o
ber o
f year-to-year changes in the A
erican G
P
the years 1953-63 established an average error o
ctober
om
er
ould rise by 31 billion dollars and inventory investm
ould
ount to 7.5 billion dollars. In O
ate o
er
n to 27 billion dollars, an error o
ost 15 percent, assum
the correctness o
ate; it reduced its estim
f inventory invest-
ents to 7 billion dollars. T
ouncil o
conom
dvisors overestim
grow
f the G
P
e year by about 12 percent.
OF INTERNATIONAL PEACE
hese questions lead us to the secondary purpose o
o study o
tics, and certainly no study o
f the
entieth century, can be disinterested in the sense that it is able to divorce know
edge from
ledge for its ow
is no longer, as it w
nited States during m
f its history, a series o
incidents, costly or rew
existence and destiny. T
f the U
ere m
deeply affected by the dom
f the C
ar than by the international
, the M
ar, the Spanish-A
erican
ar, and the R
onroe D
iktor Z
itz, A
fShort-Tenn Econom
ew
ork: N
ureau o
E
ic R
7T
essage o
heodore R
ongress on D
ber 6, 1904. In
essage he proclaim
f the U
estic affairs o
L
m
uhl J. B
fAm
iplom
D
ents and Readings in the H
fAm
th ed. (N
Y
lfred A
K
nderstanding the P
o
25
o facts peculiar to our tim
pletely reversed the relative im
tance o
estic and international policies for the U
f all, the
nited States is at the m
ent o
riting one of the tw
ost pow
nations on earth. Y
parison w
petitors, it is
erful that it can afford to ignore the effect o
tion am
the end o
ivil W
f the
orld W
attered little w
nited States pursued w
regard to its L
m
hina, or Spain. T
f its
n strength, in conjunction w
fthe balance o
er, m
U
m
bition born of success and the fear and
ith failure. T
nited States could take success and failure
ithout being unduly tem
ow
sures o
hole o
orld as friend
e dangerous and vulnerable, feared and afraid.
he risk o
erful, but not om
second fact: a threefold revolution in the political structure o
orld. First,
ultiple-state system
f the past, w
as in E
replaced by a w
ide, bipolar system
hose centers lie
urope.
ore, the m
f the political w
hich has distinguished
estern civilization during m
f its history, has been split into tw
–
s o
peting everyw
o
en. Finally, m
ade possible total w
universal destruction. T
f these three new
ents in con-
porary international ‘politics has not only m
f w
peace extrem
ar to the
here all-out nuclear w
es a self-defeating absurdity. Since in this
orld situation the U
f predom
er, and
f forem
old
f the factors that determ
e for
nited States
m
ore
It has
e a vital necessity.
the vantage point o
–
nited States, then, is to reflect upon the vital problem
A
erican foreign policy in our tim
hile at all tim
otion o
national interests o
nited States as a pow
ong pow
m
f A
erican foreign policy, in an age that has seen tw
orld w
and has learned how
age total w
ith nuclear w
peace has becom
e concern o
It is for this reason that this book is planned around the tw
f
er and peace. T
o concepts are central to a discussion o
orld politics
f the tw
hen an unprecedented accum
tion o
er gives to the problem
f peace an urgency it has never
orld w
oving force is the aspiration o
for pow
aintained only by tw
ne is the self-regulatory
echanism
f the social forces, w
anifests itself in the struggle for pow
6
cience of International P
olitics
f pow
he other consists o
norm
itations upon that struggle, in the form
f international law
national m
orld public opinion. Since neither o
they operate today, is likely to keep the struggle for pow
ithin
ust be asked and answ
hat is the
f the m
aintenance of international peace?
ore particularly, w
f the proposal for transform
tional society o
w
nd, finally, w
ust a program
indful
f the lessons of the past and endeavors to adapt them
s of the
HAT IS POLITICAL PDW
1
er. W
m
aim
o
politics,
er
alw
the
m
aim
Statesm
ay ultim
, security, prosperity, or
er itself. T
ay qefine their goals in term
f a religious, philosophic,
ic, or social ideal. T
ay hope that this ideal w
aterialize through
n inner force, through divine intervention, or through the natural devel-
ent o
an affairs. T
ay also try to further its realization through
eans, such as technical cooperation w
national organizations. B
henever they strive to realize their goal by m
o
er. T
rusaders w
free the holy places from
ination by the Infidels; W
W
anted to
ake the w
ocracy; the N
anted to open E
urope
erm
inate E
orld. Since
er to achieve these ends, they w
f
Tw
from
every action that a nation perform
ith respect to another nation is of a political
he concept o
er poses one o
ost difficult and controversial problem
f politi-
he value o
ined by its ability to explain
axim
o
ena that are conventionally considered to belong to a certain sphere of
hus the coverage of a concept o
er, to be useful for the understand-
ust be broader than the coverage o
field of m
he political m
ployed in the latter are m
ore narrow
cum
ployed in international politics.
e significant rem
er in relation to international politics, see L
obbins, The
ic Causes o
ar (L
ape, 1939), pp. 63 ff.
9
0
ow
any such activities are norm
ithout any consideration
fpow
ally affect the pow
f the nation undertaking them
M
ic, hum
f this kind. T
a nation is not norm
hen it concludes an
ith another nation, w
ith
hen it cooperates w
nat-
hen it prom
f cultural achievem
throughout the w
ords, the involvem
f a nation in interna-
ong m
factivities in w
ticipate on the international scene.
es to the sam
national politics. T
f their involvem
ay run all the w
the
axi~u1:1 at pr~sent attained by the U
nion; through
m
um
volvem
f such countries as
itzerland, L
bourg, or
enezuela; to the com
ent o
iechtenstein and M
ilar
es can be noticed in the history o
teenth and seventeenth centuries w
f the m
struggle for pow
arginal role
he sam
f such countries as A
eden, and Sw
n
nited States, the Soviet U
hina are
uch m
ere fifty or
enty years ago. In short, the relation o
a dynam
ith the vicissitudes o
er, w
ay push a
f the pow
ay deprive a nation o
ity to participate actively in it. It m
pact o
transform
hich m
ake a nation prefer other pursuits, for instance com
m
fpow
he tendency o
lesser extent in the struggle for pow
pted A
olfers to observe that
es o
extending from
hat
f pow
f indifference.
ature: Frmmr Distiru::th:m
\X
e speak o
er in the context o
e have in m
an’s
er over nature; or over an artistic m
, such as language, speech, sound,
eans o
ption; or over him
sense o
hen w
f pow
e m
an’s control over the
inds and actions o
en. B
er w
utual rela-
ong the holders of public authority and betw
the people at large.
er is a psychological relation betw
ho exercise it and
hom
er control over certain actions of
er has on the latter’s m
hat effect
three sources: the expectation o
f disadvantages,
en or institutions. It m
hat Is P
ow
31
a o
an or o
bination o
of these.
o
ust be m
een pow
and influence, betw
er and force, betw
er, and
een legitim
ate pow
T
ho advises the president o
nited States on the
f A
erican foreign policy has influence if the president follow
advice. B
er over the president; for he has none of the m
his disposal w
hich to im
ill upon that o
e can per-
pel. T
er over
pose his w
f the
f his office, the prom
f benefits, and the threat o
Political pow
ust be distinguished from
exercise o
he threat o
o
action, im
ent, capital punishm
ar is an intrins~c e!em
f ??h-
hen violence becom
f political
er in favor of m
ilitary P?”‘.er. _In internat!onal politics in
ed strength as a threat or a potentiality is the m
portant 1:11-at_e-
aking for the political pow
f a nation. If it becom
w
f m
er. T
se
een tw
m
w
f the essence o
er, the physical relation betw
o bod-
f w
inate the other’s m
this reason that in the exercise o
ent of
e m
een m
political pow
.
.
he availability o
eapons m
gm
een
er. It is one of the paradoxes of the nuclear age that, in
ilitary
er is no longer necessarily conducive to an increase in politica! pow
he
plies the threat o
s such,
ent o
hen addressed to a nation
he nation arm
ith nuclear w
pow
ither you do as I say, or I w
you.” T
g:
e w
eapons, you w
ere ~he
utual threats cancel each other out. Since the nuclear destruction of one nation
ould call forth the nuclear destruction o
disregard the threat on the assum
ill act rationally. .
It is only on the assum
ight act m
tionally by destroying each other in an all-out nuclear w
nuclear w
nited States and the
nion against each other, for instance by the Soviet U
C
nited States during the B
risis o
during the A
ar o
et w
f force can be used
er as a rational instrum
fforeign policy, the actual use o
ains irra-
ould be used not for the political purpose o
m
~ the :”ill o
f destroying
ith the attendant assurance o
n destruction.
hus the m
f its destructiveness, as com
ith the lim
character o
fforeign policy, ren-
ent o
under certain condi~ions to threaten the other side w
use o
order to change the other side’s w
ould be irrational
n destruction. In con-
ent o
m
ited dam
ith com
ensurate risks to oneself, one can use it indeed as
ent for changing the other side’s w
.
Finally, legitim
er w
orally or legally
ust be distm
shed from
ate pow
er exercised w
m
ust be distinguished from
er. T
er o
t~e police officer w
e by virtue o
arrant is qualitatively
the pow
f a robber w
s the sam
f
he distinction is not only philosophically valid but also rel-
f foreign policy. L
ate pow
hich can invoke a
oral or legal justification for its exercise, is likely to be m
equivalent illegitim
er, w
hat is to say, legiti-
ate_ po’:~
ill o
lent illegitim
er. Pow
e o
U
ations has a better chance to succeed than does equivalent pow
cised by an “aggressor” nation or in violation o
. Political ide-
e shall see, serve the purpose o
ing foreign policies w
appearance o
acy.
hile it is generally recognized that the interplay o
f
f disadvantages, and the respect or love for m
tion~, in ever-changing com
s the basis o
estic politics,
portance o
les~ real. T
er to the actual appli-
f force, or at least to equate it w
f force and w
persuasion, to the neglect o
a. T
e shall see, 3 accounts
easure for the neglect o
ent in inter-
et w
a o
an, such
apoleon or H
f an institution, such as
ent or the
nited States C
hich the w
f
en subm
selves to the w
f such a m
possible
ena o
ticularly prom
odern tim
hapter 6.
hat Is P
olitical P
ow
33
he im
atic leadership and the response to it as l_ove
f the subject for the leader has for international politics is clearly rev~aled 111 a
urie, Scotch Presbyterian and w
rote
ritish A
bassador T
as R
m
f the
pow
f G
dolphus o
eden, then fighting for the Protestant cause 111
erm
ground of his authority; it m
pow
er is not in his ow
m
ill, but in m
gs
betw
and them
as it is; or if any other m
n by G
ho is able to do as m
by another m
) to avoid this necessity; the m
er
hich it yieldeth unto him
ill fall from
and so his
ill be no longer: for the Love w
as at
he president o
nited States exerts political pow
o
ent so long as his orders are obeyed by the m
bers o
branch. T
f the party has political pow
old
fthe m
bers of the party according to his w
e refer to the polit-
er o
ences influence the actiop.s o
he U
pow
ico so long as the law
f the U
the citizens of that island. W
e speak o
er of the U
ted
entral A
erica, w
ind the conform
f
entral A
erican governm
ith the w
f the governm
f the U
States. 5 T
ent that A
ants political pow
signifies
ays that A
ants to be able, to control certain actions of B
influencing B
ind.
W
aterial objectives o
sit1on
f sources o
m
alw
f the actions o
inds.
he R
f French foreign policy points to
erm
ak-
possible for G
any to do so. G
ntam
ed
inant position in w
the calculated policy o
aking it either too dangerous (because G
ntam
w
as
unnar W
egotiations A
nity, 1628-1634 (U
lm
iksells, 1932),
he spelling has been m
.
. .
‘T
ples in the text illustrate also the distm
een pohtIC
er ~s m
in the case o
er m
ate authonty, that 1s, the i:rrn-
f the U
oth the president o
nited States and the lobbyist exercise poht1C
pow
ever different its source and nature m
5
4
olitical P
ow
er
as used w
oderation) for
T
f m
nations from
ilitary force by m
to do so. T
political aim
f m
ords, to m
cation o
ilitary force unnecessary by inducing the prospective enem
from
ilitary force. T
fw
conquest of territory and the annihilation o
y arm
m
f the enem
ill m
yield to the w
f the victor.
herefore, w
ic, financial, territorial, or m
under discussion in international affairs, it is necessary to distinguish betw
econom
n sake and econom
that are the instrum
f a political policy-a policy, that is, w
ic
eans to the end o
f another nation.
he export policy o
itzerland w
nited States falls into the
he econom
f the Soviet U
ith regard to the
fE
urope fall into the latter category. So do m
ic poli-
f the U
atin A
erica, A
urope. T
f
portance, and the failure to m
uch confusion
An econom
ilitary policy undertaken for its ow
sake is subject to evaluation in its ow
s. Is it econom
advantageous? W
f territory upon the population and
y o
hat are the consequences o
in a m
estic political system
T
ith respect to these policies are m
s o
intrinsic considerations.
hen, how
f these policies serve to increase the pow
of the nation pursuing them
ith regard to other nations, these policies and their
ust be judged prim
the point o
o
to national pow
n econom
nom
s m
o
sued. T
f a loan to a foreign nation m
be a valid argum
ut the argum
irrelevant if the loan, how
ise it m
a banker’s point o
,
f the nation. It m
f course be that the econom
or financial losses involved in such policies w
eaken the nation in its interna-
eigh the political advantages to be
n these grounds such policies m
hat
ic and financial considerations but a com
parison o
f
er o
W
nited States provides loans or assistance to countries such as
o
ed A
y, the purpose is not prim
nom
ove tow
epreciation o
olitical P
er
d
er o
nion. If the repay-
::i~
u
i:: o
ith
ent o
1
.
anitarian or charitable reasons
l.S. goRva~~~:~~s ~
r:;a
tp~;i~~ ~oo ke:p open certain options foSr t~etgUovn~1ornn-
,
dence on the
ent o
Such actions m
1~ sp
ever m
long ru~
~
:l~
~
0 m
f; s~tell~te
nion at least in the short run. In a w
ithm
ft . e
d Poland is to lim
of A
erican econom
ar
.
nited
er in C
astern E
crea
ER
d.
· h.
nt of international poli-
he aspiration for pow
g the
m
~
W
tic_s, as o~ all p
li\t’ intem
1:~:c~:c~f ;e;::;:a:~
:a~
th1s fact is genera y recogm
f
publicists
uently denied in the pronouncem
sc o
‘
h
. stem
the end o
apoleonic W
t. e
m
m
d d that the stru gle for pow
tem
w
h.
lg
.
enon a
e
.
1s a tem
.
m
.
:tlo~
as at the root
hus Jerem
ent am
loniesl” w
of all international. confl1c’.s.
anflc~pate ydour co
t
tem
w
o
h
m
h
bden7 and Proudhons w
ced that t e
::~
ti:~
~::j:r:u~~a/:he ;nl~g~~~~~~o~;;rt~~11 ;s~~:a~!e:r::~~~~::7e:~
ony am
m
fu
t·
obden
e m
r .
ther
t som
ture e ec 10n,
nationa l po JtlC
a oge
.
r d to those w
e
ers, capitalism
aintain that international
:~
e ~
gl:~
er on the international scene and
C
·
don· R
ew
6Em
onzis
.l.na dow
arners,
hat 1s 1t. W
rea a
h tr cl
hich every now
behind w
f p
e, rev_enge’. hable ‘cl,, “Free trade is the international law
f
cl
hole countnes w
oo ·
by
e llo
e cause.” See Spee
the A
ighty,” and free trade anti p
:;i)~
~
ritings (N
Y
. A
Richard Cobden (L
acfm
w
t · H
shw
orley, Life o
12 1842
1867), V
pn
‘
Richard Cobden (B
oberts Bhrothlel_rs, 188})~:-peop. les w
8″L
e a Janee o
l I
e_t uds suhpl;
ro~laim
euvres com
o . ‘ p.
ogm
t
P
z·
9 r,.
A
F B
A
istory o
z era zsm
.
.
•
,
6
olitical P
ow
ill bring about perm
uring the nineteenth centm
w
er politics and w
ere residues o
lete system
f governm
f dem
~overnm
and autocracy w
f interna-
ony and perm
er politics and w
f this liberal
f thought, W
W
as the m
ost influential
an.
es the conviction that the struggle for pow
inated
the international scene has been connected w
pts at organ-
g the w
eague o
ations and the U
ations. T
C
ull, then U
fstate, declared in 1943 on his return from
M
C
hich laid the groundw
nited N
new
ould m
f pow
in a new
f international collaboration. 10 M
oel-B
ritish
inister o
ouse o
om
ons that the B
ernm
as “determ
f the U
ations to kill
er politics, in order that, by the m
fdem
ill o
shall prevail.”
hile w
ore to say later about these theories and the expecta-
tions d_eriv~d from
,
er is uni-
tim
f experience. It cannot be
e, regardless o
ic, and politi-
et each other in contests for pow
ven though
n that certain prim
to be free from
n how
fm
ditions under w
n
orldw
–
er from
ould be useless and
f the peoples o
the
er w
er cannot
here in the w
ho m
ould sim
fall victim
er o
T
ight be criticized on the ground that conclusions
n from
such conclusions has
ays
ain stock in trade o
ies o
.
hough it is true that certain social arrangem
ays
that they m
ays exist in the
he situation is, how
hen w
ith social arrange-
ents and institutions created by m
ith those elem
drives by w
society is created. T
ew
es, N
ber 19, 1943, p. 1.
ouse o
om
ons D
ol. 419, p. 1262.
ight.
inating discussion o
, see M
Sharp, “A
Study o
alues
,” Ethics, V
o. 4, Part II (July 1947).
epreciation o
f P
olitical P
ow
er
inate are com
on to all m
heir relative strength is dependent upon
ay favor one drive and tend to repress another or that m
socia
.
d .
h
ithhold social approval from
m
festat1ons o
nves w
ey
hus, to take exam
the sp?e:e o
er, m
societies condem
eans o
er w
sooety,_ but all
f enem
er that 1s ~ailed
ictators look askance at the aspirations for political i::ow
ong :~etr fel-
citizens, but dem
petition f~r
er a civic duty. W
zat10~ o
activities exists, com
ic pow
_com
econom
s certain m
f the strugg~e for _econom
~r are
ed w
strogorsky, m
g the authonty .~
T
f the A
eric~n. people_ are_ not o
cal, but o
m
orld aw
g cult1vat1on, the love o
.
h
“ls
er aim
ess at m
an at t
gs.
. .
R
fparticular social cond1t10ns, the dec1S1ve ar~um
opinion that the struggle for pow
ere h1stoncal
ust be derived from
f dom
he esse1:ce o
international politics is identical w
estic counterpart. B
est1c and
er, m
ditions under w
estic and m
terna-
T
inate, in particular, is an elem
f all hum
ciations, from
ily, through fraternal and professional associations and
n
ily level, the typical con-
een the m
and her child’s spouse is in its essence a strug-
er, the defense o
er positi?n against ~he atte:npt
one. A
s the conflict on the m
al scene betw
f the status quo and the policies o
perialism
Social clubs, fraternities, faculties, and business organizations are scenes o
continuous struggles for pow
een groups that either w
keep w
pow
er. C
pet1t1ve contests
een business enterprises, as w
een em
em
etim
arily,
ic advantages but for control over each other and over others-that
er. Finally, the w
f a na_tion, pa~ticularly o
–
the local to the nat10nal level, 1s a contm
pow
blies, in law
oologists have tried to show
inate is found even i1_1 _anim
and m
ho create social hierarchies on t~e basis o
inate. See, e_.g.,
arder A
nim
rowth (B
ore: W
s a1:d W
Life efA
als (N
Y
. W
orton, 1938). C
onrad L
controversies concerning them
.
strogorsky, D
ocra91 and the O
fPolitical Parties (N
Y
acm
V
8
olitical P
ow
inistrative decisions and executive m
activities m
aintain or to establish their pow
en. T
processes by w
inistrative decisions
trym
f pow
s one o
ead Sea
hat nation likes to be oppressed by a stronger pow
r w
ants his
oppressed its neighbour? O
here in the w
ill you find a people that
here indeed?
.
f the gods w
,” to quote T
f m
e believe, that
o
herever they can.”16 O
T
f dom
ill w
ure, a habit, and a necessity to D
A
ords o
f Salisbury:
hough it_is not given t? all m
er, yet the
an w
holly untam
m
speech the tyrant is one w
hole people by a rulership based
hole that a m
tyrant, but he can do so if he w
eanest station. For if not over
hole body of the people, still each m
ill lord it as far as his pow
extends. 18
o
f the struggle for pow
a_nd _on all level_s o
tics 1s o
er politics? A
ould it not be rather surprising if the
er w
eral attribute o
tional politics w
anent and necessary elem
f all branches o
dom
T
f the r?le pow
s from
ne 1s the philosophy o
inated the
f the nineteenth century and still holds sw
uch o
ing on international affairs. T
cum
ined the relations o
nited States o
m
the rest o
orld.
hucydides, B
17L
olstoy, W
ook E
hapter X
18 John o
ickinson (N
Y
ork: A
lfred A
nopf, 1927),
ol. V
oots of the D
f P
ow
39
ineteenth=C
T
as led to its depreciation o
er politics by its ~o~es-
he distinctive characteristic o
as the dom
at1on
f the m
y identifying this dom
ith polit-
ination o
cam
ith hostility to any kind
f politics. A
ent, the n:1i?dle cl~s~~s d~vel-
o
ination. T
to
ilitary m
fop~n v10lence
f aristocratic rule, w
f econom
depend-
his econom
operated through a netw
f seem
an legal rules that concealed the very existence o
er relations. T
century w
f these legalized relations. T
seem
w
e o
politics. T
w
identified w
he struggle, then, for political pow
dom
tic as w
coincident w
ent and bound to disappear w
pearance o
ent.
erican EHperjence
f pow
ith aristocratic governm
in the A
erican experience. It can be traced to three elem
the uniqueness o
m
ent, the actual isolation of the A
erican
centers of the w
the hum
and anti-im
o
m
T
f constitutional ties w
ritish C
n w
eant
f an A
erican foreign policy distinct from
hat w
under the nam
f foreign policy in E
ashington’s
ell A
urope has a set o
ary interests, w
or a very rem
ence she m
the causes o
hich are essentially foreign to our concerns. H
m
ise in us to im
situdes o
binations and collisions o
ships or enm
uropean politics and pow
ere identical;
as no other pow
fE
“T
f E
bition, rivalship, interest, hum
ere the
anifestations o
er before the ~yes o
A
erica. T
uropean politics, as proclaim
ashm
could, therefore, be taken to m
pow
Y
m
the E
er politics w
m
. C
ithstanding, it
as an established political fact until the end o
his
0
olitical P
ow
as a result o
a
.
geography. Popular w
ight
shw
~s o
f
f G
h. sheehm
f A
enca’s geographic
, w
a
·b d
A
encan expansion as w
·
.
t e course o
as iso at10n
ore
b
ashington on, have been careful to e
ha .
_e o servers, from
. p
f geographic
y
oosm
Ill th r h
usm
d
.
ig
geography,
~
f. as
gton referred to “our
h
.
Y
f so
en t is penod o
m
·
d
right w
lfi
rew
.
ove:
f
h
m
illions m
nothin
en
e m
of’.e your
are
to abstain fro
. g o
one can assail you;
m
glm
ith
quarrels
f other
the shores o
m
.
W
atched
or
encan c?ntm
f the N
spectac e o
m
·
unfolding on the distant shores o
uro
fi .
s~ruggle
er
f the nineteenth century th . f.
/1ca, and A
ee for the better
f spectators, w
as actuallye~
eo~
_ to retain the role
m
er
g h1stoncal constellation
t w
opuldm
ell as naturally
ue to w
f
~layed by others. At best the tim
as close at hand ” /
a~
er poht1es
here, the final curtain w
it
ocracy es_t~b-
ould no longer be played.
e
er politics
aid in the achievem
f
l
m
ission. T
o
w
conce!ved
be part o
~
o
h
:t:rt::i:~
:;;:s~
ft~
:
fJohn C
st form
tic liberty. T
e m
oun, 1t is conce1_ved as the prom
f dom
.
ore to extend liberty b
.
ent and the w
ould b
y
u
p e ?ver_th1s
hen the U
1·n th
f
e _one by a thousand v1etones.”
e w
t e Spam
w
desert
anti-im
d
.d
m
ar, seem
.
ocrat1c
W
G
restated Its
“Expans1·on
.
‘
am
·
1m
d
h
ocracy … expansion and 1·
.
ons aug
.
m
are at w
ith th
d’ ·
f the A
erican people “20 C
o
uropean pow
ith the ideals o
m
::~
h
~
;t~~ats!~t~~::~: iit~
~
i~
~
?it1:~
:;
m
m
h
s
m
ar
ar.
e course t at w
urope
uoted in M
urti Peace and \¼
A
C
pany, 1936), p. 122:
e
encan
ew
ork: W
N
20<'The C
f the U
S ain,, E
ale U
ol. II, p. i9S: ‘
zlbam
raham
ner (N
H
aven, C
T
:
cience o
eace: C
porary U
hus the general conception the nineteenth century had form
f the
bined w
ents in the A
erican experi-
ent in pow
only a historical accident, and that nations have a choice betw
er politics
f foreign policy not tainted by the desire for pow
PORARY UTOPIANISM
ord should be said about a school o
intellectual circles today-that proffers a “scientific” alternative to the “perennial
w
” o
f thought
e m
” for lack of a better term
f
f political pow
tific interpretation has strong roots in nineteenth-century experience, both in
E
m
ever, neither the relations o
–
f
f the natural sciences led various thinkers
e that the sam
f m
hum
ard w
erbert M
have called “the pacification o
an existence.”
he m
f peace starts from
ption that the w
thoroughly accessible to science and reason and that it contains in itself all the ele-
m
onious cooperation o
ankind. It is for science
ents, variously defined as harm
s o
nom
odern com
unications; it is for law
w
they do not prevail spontaneously; and it is for negotiation and com
ise to
under the surface o
For such rationalism
o
er politics that conceals and dis-
ony of interests that is the true nature of international relations.
dam
ith, a founding father of classical liberalism
ell as of classical econom
ics, discovered such a fundam
ony of interests lying beneath the surface
anifestations o
petitive econom
to greater w
orkings of an “invisible hand.” G
an inner logic, the free m
ineteenth-
had no use for even such residual traces of the m
search for a m
onious relations am
nly strictly
ould do; all international conflicts w
satisfact01y solutions, either through com
ise or arbitration. Since all m
partake o
ust sooner or later m
m
covering that their conflicts are apparent rather than real and can all be solved by
a rational form
ere all nations at all tim
are of their
ould realize that apparently opposing interests are actually
hat is good for one country is of necessity good for all other coun-
erely the product of ignorance and error.
2
ow
er
onflicts am
aladjustm
f understandi~g and to the influence o
xcept for
_ot10n, reason w
as
1t
solved
m
s in
natural
P
as am
f science in the inter-
here identical w
f m
kind. If therefore science, instead o
country as social norm
ith the governm
am
s of the universe w
ony.
ationality or fatherland w
eaning o
term
ill only be birthplaces. M
f w
ay
f the U
f citizenship he w
acqurre everyw
e w
hich in a certain district of the
unicipality represents the nation and exercises its
ill represent hum
boundaries act for it. H
ony w
ong the nations, w
m
now
he duty o
.E
. Joad, “is above all things to be rea-
e should, that is to say, rely on the use o
n reason in m
appeal and he should assum
en m
T
ill w
It w
ith the sam
er o
larence Streit assert-
that “the really big m
nited States Senate and B
Parliam
ill cham
nion [o
o countries] once they understand
‘
es a succession o
s capable
solut1~
ost unreasonably handled by an
1m
arnty. ~ven for so realistic an observer as H
er L
lem
f m
o
ledge; if the
f ignorance” is replaced by the know
f the pertinent facts, m
w
n
he tim
ill
e;” w
ous pacifist B
hen the science o
poli~ics w
hen only those w
have leg-
?w
ho sincerely seek only the truth and through
only the good-the universal good com
civilized nations.”
e siecle,” O
pletes, IX
Proudhon, La G
entu, 1861).
. P. G
fPeace (L
M
23 U
ow
ith Britain (N
Y
arper and B
cience of P
ontem
topianism
he tim
uttner spoke o
ere posses-
f know
obert S. L
he diagnosis,”
rote,
plete, thanks to a long list o
petent studies of
, im
, international finance and trade, and other factors
ithin our culture that encourage w
he problem
ar, m
ost
f scientists from
the dissection has proceeded to the point w
l-
he causes of w
n and accepted by a w
f
ut the statem
hat is to be done languishes
resolving the austere findings of scholarly
onographs into a bold program
e for action …. In the case o
like this, w
does not arise from
ledge, w
social science appears to need is the w
ass its findings so that the truth
ill not continue to trickle aw
W
enough about w
gs, pom
their m
ay that w
aging
blest
as for this A
f R
ethods o
er politics,
acy, and w
, scientific approach. T
s, sover-
inqrities, the distribution o
m
m
am
een the “haves” and the “have-nots,”
f the w
not “political” problem
poranl? and al_ways prec~nousl~ accord-
f pow
ong quarrelm
ance. T
s for w
ill find the one correct
T
f peace” as a separate
f scientific know
f books w
O
petition. 25 T
ural frontier” -w
connotation in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries-w
French revolutionaries and N
f a geographically “correct”
f the nineteenth century, public opinion
reat B
o
is
akes all other
M
ouse on N
ber 9, 1878, D
fghan W
by saying that the frontier oflndia w
now
hat? (Princeton: Princeton U
25L
ara, La Science de la paix (1872).
Political P
er
.
T
f the
hen, on the occasion o
f terri-
f the pieces o
as determ
on the basis ?f certain “o~jective” standards, such .is fertility, num
ty o
ing this trend the C
fV
the suggestion o
etterm
m
as
ith evaluati~g the territories under discussion by the “objectiv;” stan-
f num
fpopulations. 26 T
itation o
thus beca~e a land o
athem
he idea o
develo~e? m
f the nineteenth century in G
any w
to R
ew
ilar connotation. T
?f t~e “scientific _tariff” attem
m
part upon ideas put forth in the early nineteenth century by Friedrich List.
f international plebiscites are also typical m
tions o
s· here the w
f the
ajority i~ the scientific _te~t according to w
be determ
ed. In the thirties, M
efebure advanced his theories on “scien-
ent._” “G
hole
It w
on general acceptance. “R
becom
g an m
rote L
llen ofH
ood, “influencing
f m
his 1s due to the com
f science…. Feeling him
now
aster o
ind is beginning to w
o
W
form
opinion he observes
ena
and draw
that m
ent m
an m
f m
therefore be considered as a
~ereas that has never previously been possible in the history o
C1V
D
g the last thirty years this has
opinion.”
T
~at can properly be called the age o
to m
, and the end is not yet in sight. Preceded by the H
C
f sm
ents them
selves em
o
~istory, w
f solving all international problem
t~fic ~
he go’:ernm
eague o
ations, and private groups
orgam
g m
teachm
f volum
o
anity in a scientific w
e have recently w
idespread efforts
s o
ar w
hese are
harles D
ie, 1909),
27 “Pacifism
eaning and Its T
fPeace, pp. 22, 23.
cience o
f P
eace: C
ontem
porary U
topianism
5
anifestation o
odern intellectual
.
ur arre is forever searching for the philosophers’ stone, the m
ula,
hich, m
ill produce the desired r~sult and t~us substitute
f political action the certitude ?f r~tlonal c~cula-
ow
hat the seekers after the m
ula v.:ant _is sim
m
hat they have to deal w
plicated, m
calculable.
s a consequence they are com
blance
plify the reality o
upon w
ight call the “m
f the single cause.”
T
f w
ental problem
g
one m
cause or causes. W
akes a solution appear so difficult for the nonrat10nahst
ind is the variety o
m
an heart. W
ultiple,
plex factors to a single cause-one capable of rational form
tion o
o
ar w
im
hat liberal
~e the heyda?’
f N
ost people w
f creative thought 1f
an or a political thinker did not have a “constructive” plan as a rem
for the “single cause.”
.
re not the rem
f feudalism
aking for w
orld? Let us do aw
ith aristocratic governm
here, the classical
ould say, and w
ill have peace. In practical politics this general propo-
as frequently narrow
n to m
edies inten~ed to ?1eet
hus, as w
entham
entham
_ted
ain cause for w
from
edy for w
ere the source o
evils in the international sphere; to them
as the source of all good.
thers w
acy in general and, through
f international policies, secure peace. Is not m
ar an out-
th o
perialism
hich, in turn, is a result o
onop-
? H
ay w
, the M
ould say, and
e w
ar: socialism
f. C
. B
Foreign Poliry far Am
ew
ork: A
nopf, 1940), pp. 98:-99:
ith the new
f international law
acy w
ld-fashioned courses o
diplom
ances-w
supplem
n
hich em
as laid 01; w
the m
f prom
ooks, pam
ere w
and w
ith the aid o
peace funds. International peace con-
ere organized and provided opportunities for travel and exte~ded discourses._ S
had
en, and leaders am
om
received such m
f the general public. It looked as if a new
f
in the field o
ade the
ost o
6
ow
er
.
T
e one-track _m
f thought is found also in dom
ll
from
fthe law
feconom
accoun~ ~
s and w
s. O
ic system
out o
m
ent spends m
budget and our econom
s w
ad linguistic habits are at the
f our _social evils; w
f good linguistic habits our social
s w
m
ew
ngland R
ers,” thus described
f thinking:
ne apostle thought all m
ing; and another, that no m
should buy or sell; that the use of m
as the cardinal evil; another, that
ischief w
e eat and drink dam
ade
ere foes to the death to ferm
thers
of agriculture; the use of anim
anures in farm
the tyranny of m
Even the insect w
as to be defended-that had been too long neglected
orm
osquitoes w
to be incorporated w
ith these appeared the adepts of hom
athy; of hydropathy, of m
erism
onderful theo-
hristian m
thers assailed particular vocations, as that of
yer, that of the m
anufacturer, of the clergym
scholar. O
arriage as the fountain of social
thers devoted them
orrying of churches and m
public w
s of antinom
am
tans, seem
atch in the plenty o
harvest of reform
estic field, how
ethod o
o
ited theoretical and practical im
o
m
f the
f the affected interests prevents the quack from
m
T
ith
is thought, ifit is sufficiently general, can roam
globe w
ith the stark facts o
e w
ould
the Four Freedom
nited States itself w
ity o
s entailed by
pt at realizing those great principles. B
ation o
Four Freedom
here in the w
w
T
er w
ory o
odern interna-
hat he is looking for. T
w
. For since the “single cause” is an arbitrary
a m
f actual causes, one abstraction, and hence one
alph W
m
oston: H
ifflin, 1899), pp. 204-5.
cience o
f P
eace: C
ontem
porary U
topianism
7
ore, _the hunt for the
a vague desire to contribute so~ethm
ent o
an affairs rather than from
tervene m
te
ay, virtually any general explanation of th_e ills o
the w
edy them
ill satisfy the psychic need
H
form
edy it has been the international scene, w
w
o decades betw
orld w
ized· thus “international organization”-in its abstract rationality a kind o
cou~terpart to the utopian system
f eighteenth-
ophy-becam
ula that, since the leadm
obel
inner A. H
the credo o
hole school o
thers w
aterial rem
A
ars being fought w
s? L
am
and w
ill no longer be possible or at least w
thers, agam
w
bine different rem
bination-“on scientific
hus the French R
advocated “security, arbitration, disarm
ent” as logical successive steps for the
ent o
anent peace; w
sequence and sw
ula “sec~rity
am
productive in abstract schem
riand,” the “plan Laval,” ~he
ardieux,” the “plan H
oncour,” pretended to_ give
ula a scientific solution to the problem
uropean secunty.
f 1929, the “single cause” o
international unrest has been found in the econom
estrictions on inter-
f raw
aterials, and insufficient international purchasing
er drive nations to w
ent ran. T
m
ents, for the redistribution of raw
atenal~, and
f international loans-and there w
pe-
as reasoned that w
change the status quo peacefully they w
ar; thus peaceful
ould m
ar unnecessary. Since bankers’ fears
ents w
ent in the First W
ar,
loans to belligerents: w
one. M
sible for w
s that the pooling o
orld fed-
f the dem
the problem
f w
hus our era is alw
form
akes the solut1011 of today
f tom
.
enneth W
hom
and Power in International Politics: 17Je Crisis in
aton R
ouisiana State U
ow
4
he “scientific” era o
f
e cases
ent so far as to im
ake any intel-
er, how
ited and qualified, is the value
e. T
hich international
ust be subject refers, therefore, to the m
hich those
fpow
he question that R
am
(no less than Jefferson, for that m
israeli w
the international scene w
er o
this and other nations? T
f the international “scientist” is different.
the history o
ounts to a succession o
entific problem
ed or m
ed
e value is not pow
he quest for and the defense
f pow
e aberrations from
hich looks for
edies. If w
ay things are, let us look for the cause
here is essentially nothing to fight for;
ays som
.
ow
as it possible for the m
ind to m
em
ers o
f its foreign policy? H
the answ
ises o
–
ptions by dom
he victory o
liberalism
estic field led to a peculiar narrow
corresponding w
f the nonpolitical, sphere; and thus the latter w
to detached rational exam
bjectives that form
prize in the struggle for political pow
ere now
m
ay and m
ith the specific techniques o
nom
inistration, or law
them
political dom
y. T
liberalism
ain from
political dom
seem
the
o
ake statecraft itself a science. C
m
w
in their autonom
hat w
w
, unsuccessfully suggested to the political pow
fthe
as for A
Sm
o
ence, the practical im
fw
an could escape. Political
ere replaced by independent courts com
fjudges trained to ren-
f legal science. A
election system
ade w
that w
he civil service
put the selection o
ent personnel on an objective, nonpolitical
oday legislative reform
m
f experts
ho seem
f political considerations.
axation, adm
e “scientific” in approach; and,
f governm
ould not be regarded as a
cience o
f P
eace: C
ontem
porary U
topianism
9
he use o
ethod in politics, to w
odern m
as
as and is a political fallacy in
estic affairs. T
ever, the refined m
o
self.interest serves as an autom
field such a m
, acting directly upon the individual, does not exist. It is
itless pow
f the scientific form
becom
panaceas engendered by this belief have no connection w
ith the forces
ine the actual course o
vents w
m
fexperts
r those devices
ill be applied in an exceptional instance and w
seen by their prom
-such as the sanctions
thiopian W
et, as a suprem
of thought attem
onopolize for itself the virtue o
treats w
pts to base international action on a genuine
f the forces determ
postulates o
s far back as 1877, Jam
orim
rite in “Le Problem
Revue du droit international et de legislation com
{1877), p. 184: “Strangely enough, how
these speculations of E
, taken as a w
f all the dissertations on the sub-
the least useful from
f view
f. also B
Foreig,z Policy in
erica, p. 129: “N
as inconceivable in internationalist ideology in 1919 cam
to pass w
f tw
ould seem
e of thought had been
e m
en and nations or, if
they had set before them
heir im
f the w
ith sufficient
ethods had been deficient in points o
hey could,
e o
did, ascribe their defeats to the m
f m
as a con-
er prem
f calculation. In any
as the sam
e w
m
orld’s
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