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Traditional and NonTraditional

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The new and old puzzles (revisited) The Changing II Architecture. BoP ... enemy whose avowed tactics are wanton destruction and the targeting of innocents ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Traditional and NonTraditional


1
  • Traditional and Non-Traditional
  • Conflict Management UNI 360Y Fall 2005
  • Week 3
  • Alan S. Alexandroff, alan_at_alexandroff.com
  • Research Director, PCMN

2
Summary
  • The new and old puzzles (revisited)
  • The Changing II Architecture
  • BoP
  • Realist Diplomacy
  • Preemption and Prevention
  • Balance of Threat
  • Soft Balancing

3
The New Puzzles
  • The puzzle of U.S. Exceptionalism
  • A Shining Example
  • A Liberal Involvement
  • A Conservative Spread of Democracy
  • The conundrum of the individual in international
    relations
  • Interventions good and bad
  • Humanitarian intervention
  • Regime change

4
The Debate
5
Taxonomy of Conflict Management
  • Traditional Structures
  • Inter-State International Law and Organization
  • State Sovereignty
  • Realism/Neo-Realism
  • Diplomacy and Force
  • Non-Traditional Structures
  • International Human Rights Laws
  • Individuals
  • Wilsonianism
  • Democracy and Freedom

6
Taxonomy(Contd)
  • Traditional
  • Operations
  • Balance of Power
  • Concert Creation Management
  • Mediation
  • Cooperation and Conflict
  • Force
  • Non-Traditional
  • Courts,Truth Comm. Tribunals
  • Interactive Conflict Resolution (ICR) Elites
  • PSW
  • ICR Citizens
  • Citizen Engagement

7
THIRD AXIS
8
Classic System
9
Wilsonianism
10
21st CenturyPost Cold War Engagement
11
21st CenturyPax Americana
12
Elements of BoP
  • Self Help-Preserving Independence (an anarchic
    system means no central governing authority)
  • Preserve the State System-(states will form
    defensive alliances and acquire capabilities)
  • Prevent Dominance power competition is a fact
    of IR

13
BoP II
  • The Peace Requirement?
  • Status Quo/Flux Doctrine
  • Motivation-general good or self interest?

14
Motivation of Statesmen
  • Offensive Realism-Aggressive Hegemon
  • Another structural theory
  • A struggle for survival-in a world of anarchy
  • Status quo powers rarely found
  • Look for opportunities to gain power
  • Ultimate goal to become the hegemon
  • All effort to maximize power create
    security-increase odds of survival and leaves
    open the possibility of achieving hegemony

15
OffensiveRealism I
  • Structure drives state behavior
  • Absence of a central authority
  • The capability to act
  • Uncertain over others intentions (security
    dilemma)

16
Offensive Realism II
  • IR is a ruthless dangerous business
  • States seek to maximize share of world
    power-gaining power at the expense of others
  • The coming challenge
  • Ultimate aim to be a hegemon
  • States have revisionist intentions
  • A desire to alter the balance of power
  • Defend BoP when others seek hegemony

17
Kaplan, KissingerMetternich Hitler
  • Prince Clemens von Metternich- A World Restored
  • Alliances on philosophical values
  • Not a focus on ethnic identification
  • Napoleon-The Revolutionary Chieftain
  • Kissingers realism
  • Struggling against appeasement
  • Kissingers shortcomings

18
Architecture ofIR
  • Objective of all statesmen
  • Create a balance of fear, cooperation, and
    defensive mechanisms
  • Not a just or fair system but accepted by all-and
    as long as maintained dealt with all
    revolutionary changes
  • Cannot settle international disputes on good
    faith and a willingness to agree
  • The great threat to IR

19
The End of Balancing?
  • Did not fear US states acquired deterrence with
    nuclear weapons their existence not at issue
  • US did not involve itself it secessionist
    movements of second-tier powers China, India
    and Russia
  • A post imperial age?

20
NSS Preemption and Prevention
  • Our priority will be to disrupt and destroy
    terrorist organizations of global reach and
  • We must be prepared to stop rogue states and
    their terrorist clients before they are able to
    threaten or use weapons of mass destruction
    against the United States and our allies,

21
Preemption andPrevention
  • We will disrupt and destroy terrorist
    organizations by
  • the United States can no longer solely rely on a
    reactive posture as we have in the past.
  • We must adapt the concept of imminent threat to
    the capabilities and objectives of todays
    adversaries

22
Means
  • Proactive Counterproliferation
  • Strengthened Non-Proliferation
  • Effective Consequence Management

23
The Liberal Institutional Dilemma
  • NSS argues traditional concepts of deterrence
    will not work against a terrorist enemy whose
    avowed tactics are wanton destruction and the
    targeting of innocents
  • (preemption and prevention)For centuries,
    international law recognized that nations need
    not suffer an attack before they can lawfully
    take action to defend themselves against forces
    that present an imminent danger of attack

24
Balance ofThreat
  • Competition between great nations is inevitable,
    but armed conflict in our world is not.More and
    More civilized nations find ourselves on the same
    side united by common dangers of terrorist
    violence and chaos.
  • ( George W. Bush, West Point speech, June 1,
    2002)
  • Gaddis other great powers prefer management of
    the international system by a single hegemon as
    long as its a relatively benign one. When
    theres only one superpower, theres no point for
    anyone else to compete with it in military
    capabilities. - from Bush West Point speech
  • America has, and intends to keep, military
    strengths beyond challenge. from Bush west
    Point speech

25
A New Doctrine
  • The attack on multilateralism and collective
    action
  • NSS argues not just preemption but also
    prevention
  • Preempt in the process of mobilizing military
    forces deny the aggressor the advantages of
    completing the first move
  • Preventive war is designed to keep an opponent
    from acquiring military capabilities long before
    it mobilizes maybe years

26
BofT II
  • Unilateralism
  • Open US political system
  • Institutional arrangements
  • Sufficient institutional glue
  • Focus not on power but threats
  • Balance to deal with threats
  • Power, proximity, offensive power, offensive
    intentions

27
Soft Balancing
  • The efforts of second-tier powers
  • Territorial denial
  • Entangling diplomacy
  • Economic strengthening (regional trading blocs)
  • Effective coalition behavior that signals a
    commitment to resist the superpowers future
    ambitions

28
Effecting Soft Balancing
  • Hegemons actions a concern but not a threat to
    sovereignty for second-tier powers
  • Dominant state a source of benefits in both the
    economic and security areas that cannot be easily
    replaced
  • Unlikely the dominant stae will retaliate
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