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Between war and peace – Between trade and boycotts – Between emitting and restricting greenhouse gases
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They can arm – They can disarm
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Very old idea:
Si vis pacem, para bellum.
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“If you want peace, prepare for war.”
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This idea was known to the ancient Romans, as its Latinformulation suggests
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Formulated by the fourth or fifth century writer Vegetius as Igitur qui desiderat pacem, praeparet bellum.
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Alguien que desira la paz, prepara para la guerra
.
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He was writing during the decline of the Roman empire whenfear of conquest was a particular concern
So far in the discussion of the security dilemma, stateshave not been assumed to have any preferences^ –
You will sometimes hear that the security dilemma assumes thatstates are “unitary rational actors” with a preference for survival – Such a statement need not be true – States that have not armed may have all disappeared becausethey were conquered by states that did arm
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“Structural neo-realism” assumes that only states thatarm can survive in world politics^ –
“Arm” here has a broad definition that we will get to – Selection
as a concept of explanation: states are “selected” for
the behavior of “arming”
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You may see the expression “guns or butter” – In some versions of the security dilemma, arms areassumed not to cost anything except the risk of war – The state is assumed to have no other goals such aseconomic welfare
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In this case “guns or butter” makes sense
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For states with preferences of either kind, the security dilemma is aninstance of what game theorists call “prisoner’s dilemma” or PD^ –
Nau tells a story about a district attorney who separately offers a deal toeach of two prisoners who have conspired to commit a crime – The district attorney’s deal is designed to force each prisoner to testifyagainst the other one – While you should read Nau’s story, it is better to think of the interactionas simply PD with no district attorney – World politics features no counterpart to a district attorney who candefine the choices for the states
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PD is interesting for IR because if both agents try to achieve theoutcome they prefer, each receives a worse outcome than it couldachieve by a different choice^ –
Thus in world politics, states trying to achieve peace get the possibilityof war
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For many questions, “how much” an agent likes onestrategy pair better than another doesn’t matter
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Since the record often allows us to guess the order but notthe intensity of agents’ liking for a strategy pair, this is a veryuseful feature of strategic interaction as a tool forunderstanding
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For other questions, intensity can make a big difference
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Strategy b
1
Strategy b
2
Strategy a
1
Strategy a
2
If A wants A’s best strategy pair, A cantry choosing a
2;
If B chooses b
, A gets A’s best strategy 1
pair But if B chooses b
, A and B both do 2
worse than if A were to choose a
and B 1
were to choose b
1
But “nice guy” doesn’t work for A either;what if B chooses b
? 2
A is stuck; A must choose a
and B 2
must choose b
2
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Realists derive their name from their concern with the res
, or “matter,” of world politics, which they see as power
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Liberals derive their name from their conviction thatliberty enables individuals (whether individual persons orindividual states) to exercise power without necessarilygoing to war^ –
Realists are like Thomas Hobbes, who argued that only theentrusting of full power to an unconstrained monarch couldprevent the war of all against all – Liberals are like John Locke in arguing that people can beentrusted with the liberty to negotiate a settlement, or “contract,”capable of replacing the war of all against all with peace
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