One World, Rival Theories |
The U.S. government has endured several painful rounds of scrutiny as it
tries to figure out what went wrong on Sept. 11, 2001. The intelligence
community faces radical restructuring; the military has made a sharp pivot to
face a new enemy; and a vast new federal agency has blossomed to coordinate
homeland security. But did September 11 signal a failure of theory on par with
the failures of intelligence and policy? Familiar theories about how the world
works still dominate academic debate. Instead of radical change, academia has
adjusted existing theories to meet new realities. Has this approach succeeded?
Does international relations theory still have something to tell policymakers?
Six years ago, political scientist Stephen M. Walt published a much-cited
survey of the field in these pages ("One World, Many Theories,"
Spring 1998). He sketched out three dominant approaches: realism, liberalism,
and an updated form of idealism called "constructivism." Walt argued
that these theories shape both public discourse and policy analysis. Realism
focuses on the shifting distribution of power among states. Liberalism
highlights the rising number of democracies and the turbulence of democratic transitions.
Idealism illuminates the changing norms of sovereignty, human rights, and
international justice, as well as the increased potency of religious ideas in
politics.
The influence of these intellectual constructs extends far beyond university
classrooms and tenure committees. Policymakers and public commentators invoke
elements of all these theories when articulating solutions to global security
dilemmas. President George W. Bush promises to fight terror by spreading
liberal democracy to the Middle East and claims that skeptics "who call
themselves 'realists'.... have lost contact with a fundamental reality"
that "America is always more secure when freedom is on the march."
Striking a more eclectic tone, National security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, a
former Stanford
University political science professor, explains that the new Bush doctrine
is an amalgam of pragmatic realism and Wilsonian liberal theory. During the
recent presidential campaign, Sen. John Kerry sounded remarkably similar:
"Our foreign policy has achieved greatness," he said, "only when
it has combined realism and idealism."
International relations theory also shapes and informs the thinking of the
public intellectuals who translate and disseminate academic ideas. During the
summer of 2004, for example, two influential framers of neoconservative
thought, columnist Charles Krauthammer and political scientist Francis
Fukuyama, collided over the implications of these conceptual paradigms for U.S.
policy in Iraq. Backing the Bush administration's Middle East policy, Krauthammer
argued for an assertive amalgam of liberalism and realism, which he called
"democratic realism." Fukuyama claimed that Krauthammer's faith in
the use of force and the feasibility of democratic change in Iraq blinds him to
the war's lack of legitimacy, a failing that "hurts both the realist part
of our agenda, by diminishing our actual power, and the idealist portion of it,
by undercutting our appeal as the embodiment of certain ideas and values."
Indeed, when realism, liberalism, and idealism enter the policymaking arena
and public debate, they can sometimes become intellectual window dressing for
simplistic worldviews. Properly understood, however, their policy implications
are subtle and multifaceted. Realism instills a pragmatic appreciation of the role
of power but also warns that states will suffer if they overreach. Liberalism
highlights the cooperative potential of mature democracies, especially when
working together through effective institutions, but it also notes democracies'
tendency to crusade against tyrannies and the propensity of emerging
democracies to collapse into violent ethnic turmoil. Idealism stresses that a
consensus on values must underpin any stable political order, yet it also
recognizes that forging such a consensus often requires an ideological struggle
with the potential for conflict.
Each theory offers a filter for looking at a complicated picture. As such,
they help explain the assumptions behind political rhetoric about foreign
policy. Even more important, the theories act as a powerful check on each
other. Deployed effectively, they reveal the weaknesses in arguments that can
lead to misguided policies.
IS REALISM STILL REALISTIC?
At realism's core is the belief that international affairs is a struggle for
power among self-interested states. Although some of realism's leading lights,
notably the late University
of Chicago political scientist Hans J. Morgenthau, are deeply pessimistic
about human nature, it is not a theory of despair. Clearsighted states can
mitigate the causes of war by finding ways to reduce the danger they pose to
each other. Nor is realism necessarily amoral; its advocates emphasize that a
ruthless pragmatism about power can actually yield a more peaceful world, if
not an ideal one.
In liberal democracies, realism is the theory that everyone loves to hate.
Developed largely by European émigrés at the end of World War II, realism
claimed to be an antidote to the naive belief that international institutions
and law alone can preserve peace, a misconception that this new generation of
scholars believed had paved the way to war. In recent decades, the realist
approach has been most fully articulated by U.S. theorists, but it still has
broad appeal outside the United States as well. The influential writer and
editor Josef Joffe articulately comments on Germany's strong realist
traditions. (Mindful of the overwhelming importance of U.S. power to Europe's
development, Joffe once called the United States "Europe's
pacifier.") China's current foreign policy is grounded in realist ideas
that date back millennia. As China modernizes its economy and enters
international institutions such as the World Trade Organization, it behaves in
a way that realists understand well: developing its military slowly but surely
as its economic power grows, and avoiding a confrontation with superior U.S.
forces.
Realism gets some things right about the post-9/11 world. The continued
centrality of military strength and the persistence of conflict, even in this
age of global economic interdependence, does not surprise realists. The
theory's most obvious success is its ability to explain the United States'
forceful military response to the September 11 terrorist attacks. When a state
grows vastly more powerful than any opponent, realists expect that it will
eventually use that power to expand its sphere of domination, whether for
security, wealth, or other motives. The United States employed its military
power in what some deemed an imperial fashion in large part because it could.
It is harder for the normally state-centric realists to explain why the
world's only superpower announced a war against al Qaeda, a nonstate terrorist
organization. How can realist theory account for the importance of powerful and
violent individuals in a world of states? Realists point out that the central
battles in the "war on terror" have been fought against two states
(Afghanistan and Iraq), and that states, not the United Nations or Human Rights
Watch, have led the fight against terrorism.
Even if realists acknowledge the importance of nonstate actors as a
challenge to their assumptions, the theory still has important things to say
about the behavior and motivations of these groups. The realist scholar Robert
A. Pape, for example, has argued that suicide terrorism can be a rational,
realistic strategy for the leadership of national liberation movements seeking
to expel democratic powers that occupy their homelands. Other scholars apply
standard theories of conflict in anarchy to explain ethnic conflict in
collapsed states. Insights from political realism-a profound and wide-ranging
intellectual tradition rooted in the enduring philosophy of Thucydides, Niccolò
Machiavelli, and Thomas Hobbes-are hardly rendered obsolete because some
nonstate groups are now able to resort to violence.
Post-9/11 developments seem to undercut one of realism's core concepts: the
balance of power. Standard realist doctrine predicts that weaker states will
ally to protect themselves from stronger ones and thereby form and reform a
balance of power. So, when Germany unified in the late 19th century and became
Europe's leading military and industrial power, Russia and France (and later,
Britain) soon aligned to counter its power. Yet no combination of states or
other powers can challenge the United States militarily, and no balancing
coalition is imminent. Realists are scrambling to find a way to fill this hole
in the center of their theory. Some theorists speculate that the United States'
geographic distance and its relatively benign intentions have tempered the
balancing instinct. second-tier powers tend to worry more about their immediate
neighbors and even see the United States as a helpful source of stability in
regions such as East Asia. Other scholars insist that armed resistance by U.S.
foes in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere, and foot-dragging by its formal
allies actually constitute the beginnings of balancing against U.S. hegemony.
The United States' strained relations with Europe offer ambiguous evidence:
French and German opposition to recent U.S. policies could be seen as classic
balancing, but they do not resist U.S. dominance militarily. Instead, these
states have tried to undermine U.S. moral legitimacy and constrain the
superpower in a web of multilateral institutions and treaty regimes-not what
standard realist theory predicts.
These conceptual difficulties notwithstanding, realism is alive, well, and
creatively reassessing how its root principles relate to the post-9/11 world.
Despite changing configurations of power, realists remain steadfast in
stressing that policy must be based on positions of real strength, not on
either empty bravado or hopeful illusions about a world without conflict. In
the run-up to the recent Iraq war, several prominent realists signed a public
letter criticizing what they perceived as an exercise in American hubris. And
in the continuing aftermath of that war, many prominent thinkers called for a
return to realism. A group of scholars and public intellectuals (myself
included) even formed the Coalition for a Realistic Foreign Policy, which calls
for a more modest and prudent approach. Its statement of principles argues that
"the move toward empire must be halted immediately." The coalition,
though politically diverse, is largely inspired by realist theory. Its
membership of seemingly odd bedfellows-including former Democratic Sen. Gary
Hart and Scott McConnell, the executive editor of the American Conservative
magazine-illustrates the power of international relations theory to cut through
often ephemeral political labels and carry debate to the underlying
assumptions.
THE DIVIDED HOUSE OF LIBERALISM
The liberal school of international relations theory, whose most famous
proponents were German philosopher Immanuel Kant and U.S. President Woodrow
Wilson, contends that realism has a stunted vision that cannot account for
progress in relations between nations. Liberals foresee a slow but inexorable
journey away from the anarchic world the realists envision, as trade and
finance forge ties between nations, and democratic norms spread. Because
elected leaders are accountable to the people (who bear the burdens of war),
liberals expect that democracies will not attack each other and will regard
each other's regimes as legitimate and nonthreatening. Many liberals also
believe that the rule of law and transparency of democratic processes make it
easier to sustain international cooperation, especially when these practices
are enshrined in multilateral institutions.
Liberalism has such a powerful presence that the entire U.S. political
spectrum, from neoconservatives to human rights advocates, assumes it as
largely self-evident. Outside the United States, as well, the liberal view that
only elected governments are legitimate and politically reliable has taken
hold. So it is no surprise that liberal themes are constantly invoked as a
response to today's security dilemmas. But the last several years have also
produced a fierce tug-of-war between disparate strains of liberal thought.
Supporters and critics of the Bush administration, in particular, have
emphasized very different elements of the liberal canon.
For its part, the Bush administration highlights democracy promotion while
largely turning its back on the international institutions that most liberal
theorists champion. The U.S. National Security Strategy of September 2002,
famous for its support of preventive war, also dwells on the need to promote
democracy as a means of fighting terrorism and promoting peace. The Millennium
Challenge program allocates part of U.S. foreign aid according to how well
countries improve their performance on several measures of democratization and
the rule of law. The White House's steadfast support for promoting democracy in
the Middle East-even with turmoil in Iraq and rising anti-Americanism in the
Arab world-demonstrates liberalism's emotional and rhetorical power.
In many respects, liberalism's claim to be a wise policy guide has plenty of
hard data behind it. During the last two decades, the proposition that
democratic institutions and values help states cooperate with each other is
among the most intensively studied in all of international relations, and it
has held up reasonably well. Indeed, the belief that democracies never fight
wars against each other is the closest thing we have to an iron law in social
science.
But the theory has some very important corollaries, which the Bush
administration glosses over as it draws upon the democracy-promotion element of
liberal thought. Columbia University political scientist Michael W. Doyle's
articles on democratic peace warned that, though democracies never fight each
other, they are prone to launch messianic struggles against warlike
authoritarian regimes to "make the world safe for democracy." It was
precisely American democracy's tendency to oscillate between self-righteous
crusading and jaded isolationism that prompted early Cold War realists' call
for a more calculated, prudent foreign policy.
Countries transitioning to democracy, with weak political institutions, are
more likely than other states to get into international and civil wars. In the
last 15 years, wars or large-scale civil violence followed experiments with
mass electoral democracy in countries including Armenia, Burundi, Ethiopia,
Indonesia, Russia, and the former Yugoslavia. In part, this violence is caused
by ethnic groups' competing demands for national self-determination, often a
problem in new, multiethnic democracies. More fundamental, emerging democracies
often have nascent political institutions that cannot channel popular demands
in constructive directions or credibly enforce compromises among rival groups.
In this setting, democratic accountability works imperfectly, and nationalist
politicians can hijack public debate. The violence that is vexing the
experiment with democracy in Iraq is just the latest chapter in a turbulent
story that began with the French Revolution.
Contemporary liberal theory also points out that the rising democratic tide
creates the presumption that all nations ought to enjoy the benefits of
self-determination. Those left out may undertake violent campaigns to secure
democratic rights. Some of these movements direct their struggles against
democratic or semidemocratic states that they consider occupying powers-such as
in Algeria in the 1950s, or Chechnya, Palestine, and the Tamil region of Sri
Lanka today. Violence may also be directed at democratic supporters of
oppressive regimes, much like the U.S. backing of the governments of Saudi Arabia
and Egypt. Democratic regimes make attractive targets for terrorist violence by
national liberation movements precisely because they are accountable to a
cost-conscious electorate.
Nor is it clear to contemporary liberal scholars that nascent democracy and
economic liberalism can always cohabitate. Free trade and the multifaceted
globalization that advanced democracies promote often buffet transitional
societies. World markets' penetration of societies that run on patronage and
protectionism can disrupt social relations and spur strife between potential
winners and losers. In other cases, universal free trade can make separatism
look attractive, as small regions such as Aceh in Indonesia can lay claim to
lucrative natural resources. So far, the trade-fueled boom in China has created
incentives for improved relations with the advanced democracies, but it has
also set the stage for a possible showdown between the relatively wealthy
coastal entrepreneurs and the still impoverished rural masses.
While aggressively advocating the virtues of democracy, the Bush
administration has shown little patience for these complexities in liberal
thought-or for liberalism's emphasis on the importance of international
institutions. Far from trying to assure other powers that the United States
would adhere to a constitutional order, Bush "unsigned" the
International Criminal Court statute, rejected the Kyoto environmental
agreement, dictated take-it-or-leave-it arms control changes to Russia, and
invaded Iraq despite opposition at the United Nations and among close allies.
Recent liberal theory offers a thoughtful challenge to the administration's
policy choices. Shortly before September 11, political scientist G. John Ikenberry
studied attempts to establish international order by the victors of hegemonic
struggles in 1815, 1919, 1945, and 1989. He argued that even the most powerful
victor needed to gain the willing cooperation of the vanquished and other weak
states by offering a mutually attractive bargain, codified in an international
constitutional order. Democratic victors, he found, have the best chance of
creating a working constitutional order, such as the Bretton Woods system after
World War II, because their transparency and legalism make their promises
credible.
Does the Bush administration's resistance to institution building refute
Ikenberry's version of liberal theory? Some realists say it does, and that
recent events demonstrate that international institutions cannot constrain a
hegemonic power if its preferences change. But international institutions can
nonetheless help coordinate outcomes that are in the long-term mutual interest
of both the hegemon and the weaker states. Ikenberry did not contend that hegemonic
democracies are immune from mistakes. States can act in defiance of the
incentives established by their position in the international system, but they
will suffer the consequences and probably learn to correct course. In response
to Bush's unilateralist stance, Ikenberry wrote that the incentives for the
United States to take the lead in establishing a multilateral constitutional
order remain powerful. Sooner or later, the pendulum will swing back.
IDEALISM'S NEW CLOTHING
Idealism, the belief that foreign policy is and should be guided by ethical
and legal standards, also has a long pedigree. Before World War II forced the United
States to acknowledge a less pristine reality, Secretary of State Henry Stimson
denigrated espionage on the grounds that "gentlemen do not read each
other's mail." During the Cold War, such naive idealism acquired a bad
name in the Kissingerian corridors of power and among hardheaded academics.
Recently, a new version of idealism-called constructivism by its scholarly
adherents-returned to a prominent place in debates on international relations
theory. Constructivism, which holds that social reality is created through
debate about values, often echoes the themes that human rights and
international justice activists sound. Recent events seem to vindicate the
theory's resurgence; a theory that emphasizes the role of ideologies,
identities, persuasion, and transnational networks is highly relevant to
understanding the post-9/11 world.
The most prominent voices in the development of constructivist theory have
been American, but Europe's role is significant. European philosophical
currents helped establish constructivist theory, and the European Journal of
International Relations is one of the principal outlets for constructivist
work. Perhaps most important, Europe's increasingly legalistic approach to
international relations, reflected in the process of forming the European Union
out of a collection of sovereign states, provides fertile soil for idealist and
constructivist conceptions of international politics.
Whereas realists dwell on the balance of power and liberals on the power of
international trade and democracy, constructivists believe that debates about
ideas are the fundamental building blocks of international life. Individuals
and groups become powerful if they can convince others to adopt their ideas.
People's understanding of their interests depends on the ideas they hold.
Constructivists find absurd the idea of some identifiable and immutable
"national interest," which some realists cherish. Especially in
liberal societies, there is overlap between constructivist and liberal approaches,
but the two are distinct. Constructivists contend that their theory is deeper
than realism and liberalism because it explains the origins of the forces that
drive those competing theories.
For constructivists, international change results from the work of intellectual
entrepreneurs who proselytize new ideas and "name and shame" actors
whose behavior deviates from accepted standards. Consequently, constructivists
often study the role of transnational activist networks-such as Human Rights
Watch or the International Campaign to Ban Landmines-in promoting change. Such
groups typically uncover and publicize information about violations of legal or
moral standards at least rhetorically supported by powerful democracies,
including "disappearances" during the Argentine military's rule in
the late 1970s, concentration camps in Bosnia, and the huge number of civilian
deaths from land mines. This publicity is then used to press governments to
adopt specific remedies, such as the establishment of a war crimes tribunal or
the adoption of a landmine treaty. These movements often make pragmatic
arguments as well as idealistic ones, but their distinctive power comes from
the ability to highlight deviations from deeply held norms of appropriate
behavior.
Progressive causes receive the most attention from constructivist scholars,
but the theory also helps explain the dynamics of illiberal transnational
forces, such as Arab nationalism or Islamist extremism. Professor Michael N.
Barnett's 1998 book Dialogues in Arab Politics: Negotiations in Regional Order
examines how the divergence between state borders and transnational Arab
political identities requires vulnerable leaders to contend for legitimacy with
radicals throughout the Arab world-a dynamic that often holds moderates hostage
to opportunists who take extreme stances.
Constructivist thought can also yield broader insights about the ideas and values
in the current international order. In his 2001 book, Revolutions in
Sovereignty: How Ideas Shaped Modern International Relations, political
scientist Daniel Philpott demonstrates how the religious ideas of the
Protestant Reformation helped break down the medieval political order and
provided a conceptual basis for the modern system of secular sovereign states.
After September 11, Philpott focused on the challenge to the secular
international order posed by political Islam. "The attacks and the broader
resurgence of public religion," he says, ought to lead international
relations scholars to "direct far more energy to understanding the
impetuses behind movements across the globe that are reorienting purposes and
policies." He notes that both liberal human rights movements and radical
Islamic movements have transnational structures and principled motivations that
challenge the traditional supremacy of self-interested states in international
politics. Because constructivists believe that ideas and values helped shape
the modern state system, they expect intellectual constructs to be decisive in
transforming it-for good or ill.
When it comes to offering advice, however, constructivism points in two
seemingly incompatible directions. The insight that political orders arise from
shared understanding highlights the need for dialogue across cultures about the
appropriate rules of the game. This prescription dovetails with liberalism's
emphasis on establishing an agreed international constitutional order. And, yet,
the notion of cross-cultural dialogue sits awkwardly with many idealists' view
that they already know right and wrong. For these idealists, the essential task
is to shame rights abusers and cajole powerful actors into promoting proper
values and holding perpetrators accountable to international (generally
Western) standards. As with realism and liberalism, constructivism can be many
things to many people.
STUMPED BY CHANGE
None of the three theoretical traditions has a strong ability to explain
change-a significant weakness in such turbulent times. Realists failed to
predict the end of the Cold War, for example. Even after it happened, they
tended to assume that the new system would become multipolar ("back to the
future," as the scholar John J. Mearsheimer put it). Likewise, the liberal
theory of democratic peace is stronger on what happens after states become
democratic than in predicting the timing of democratic transitions, let alone
prescribing how to make transitions happen peacefully. Constructivists are good
at describing changes in norms and ideas, but they are weak on the material and
institutional circumstances necessary to support the emergence of consensus
about new values and ideas.
With such uncertain guidance from the theoretical realm, it is no wonder
that policymakers, activists, and public commentators fall prey to simplistic
or wishful thinking about how to effect change by, say, invading Iraq or
setting up an International Criminal Court. In lieu of a good theory of change,
the most prudent course is to use the insights of each of the three theoretical
traditions as a check on the irrational exuberance of the others. Realists
should have to explain whether policies based on calculations of power have
sufficient legitimacy to last. Liberals should consider whether nascent
democratic institutions can fend off powerful interests that oppose them, or
how international institutions can bind a hegemonic power inclined to go its
own way. Idealists should be asked about the strategic, institutional, or
material conditions in which a set of ideas is likely to take hold.
Theories of international relations claim to explain the way international
politics works, but each of the currently prevailing theories falls well short
of that goal. One of the principal contributions that international relations
theory can make is not predicting the future but providing the vocabulary and
conceptual framework to ask hard questions of those who think that changing the
world is easy.
[ Want to Know More? ]
Stephen M. Walt's "International Relations: One World, Many
Theories" (FOREIGN POLICY, Spring 1998) is a valuable survey of the field.
For a more recent survey, see Robert Jervis, "Theories of War in an Era of
Leading Power Peace" (American Political Science Review, March 2002).
Important recent realist contributions include John J. Mearsheimer's The
Tragedy of Great Power Politics (New York: Norton, 2001) and Fareed Zakaria,
From Wealth to Power: The Unusual Origins of America's World Role (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1998). Important realist-inspired analyses of
post-9/11 issues include "The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism"
(American Political Science Review, August 2003), by Robert A. Pape; "The
Compulsive Empire" (FOREIGN POLICY, July/August 2003), by Robert Jervis;
and "An Unnecessary War " (FOREIGN POLICY, January/February 2003), by
John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt. Read about a current effort to inject
realism into U.S. foreign policy at the Web site of the Coalition for a
Realistic Foreign Policy. For a worried look at the realist resurgence, see
Lawrence F. Kaplan, "Springtime for Realism" (The New Republic, June
21, 2004).
Recent additions to the liberal canon are Bruce Russett and John R. Oneal's
Triangulating Peace: Democracy, Interdependence, and International
Organizations (New York: Norton, 2001 ) and G. John Ikenberry's After Victory:
Institutions, Strategic Restraint, and the Rebuilding of Order After Major Wars
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001). To read about the dangers of
democratization in countries with weak institutions, see Edward D. Mansfield
and Jack Snyder, Electing to Fight: Why Emerging Democracies Go to War
(Cambridge: MIT Press, 2005) and Zakaria's The Future of Freedom: Illiberal
Democracy at Home and Abroad (New York: WW. Norton & Co., 2003). Charles
Krauthammer and Francis Fukuyama tussle over strains of liberalism in a recent
exchange. Krauthammer makes the case for spreading democracy in
"Democratic Realism: An American Foreign Policy for a Unipolar
World," an address to the American Enterprise Institute, and Fukuyama
responds in "The Neoconservative Moment," (The National Interest,
Summer 2004). Krauthammer's rejoinder, "In Defense of Democratic
Realism" (The National Interest, Fall 2004), counters Fukuyama's claims.
Read more on constructivism in Alexander Wendt, Social Theory of
International Politics (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999). Margaret
F. Keck and Kathryn Sikkink look at constructivism at work in Activists Beyond
Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, 1998). More focused works include Sikkink's Mixed Messages:
U.S. Human Rights Policy and Latin America (Ithaca: Cornell University Press,
2004) and Michael N. Barnett's Dialogues in Arab Politics: Negotiations in
Regional Order (New York: Columbia University Press, 1998).