Morgenthau takes the idea of a world state seriously. As James Speer wrote decades ago in @World_Pol: "Morgenthaus' entire treatment of world politics thus centers upon the requirements for the world state." cambridge.org/core/journals/…
This is not surprising. By the late 1940s, creating a world government was prominently viewed as necessary for avoiding nuclear annihilation
For instance, Albert Einstein, who turned to the cause of nuclear abolition in the late 1940s, viewed a World Government as the solution
But Morgenthau, while sympathetic to this view, didn't think it could work.
To see why, let's turn to Morgenthau's classic text, "Politics Among Nations" (first published in 1948). google.com/books/edition/…
Side note: Something I always try to appreciate when I teach Intro to International Relations at @UChicago is that Morgenthau used a similar course to develop "Politics Among Nations". As he wrote in the 1948 edition forward:
In "Politics Among Nations", Morgenthau wrote a whole chapter on the world state.
But we don't want to start there. Instead, we want to start with his views on disarmament. Morgenthau ALSO has an entire chapter on Disarmament.
Morgenthau offers a definition of disarmament and why it is so important to international politics
He summarizes the historic attempts at disarmament and finds disarmament to be...wanting
Most intriguing, Morgenthau's discussion of disarmament reveals the "human nature" underpinning of his realism. This passage is also (in my view) his definitive statement of realism in international politics
He sharpens this point at the beginning of his next chapter on "Security"
And then goes on to say that if states could be made to feel secure, not fear attack, then arms wouldn't be necessary
So how can states be made to feel secure in the international system?
Morgenthau offers two possibilities: collective security and an international police force.
But he finds both possibilities to be insufficient.
He uses this nifty figure to show how collective security is supposed to work
He then shows "the reality" of Collective Security in this figure
He based the second figure on the history of attempts by the League of Nations at collective security, such as (not) stopping Italian aggression against Ethiopia
He labels such episodes as debacles
What about an International Police force? Well, he labels it a contradiction of terms (notice he ties it to world state as well)
The idea of an International Police force (& the related idea of world government) seemed to greatly fascinate Morgenthau. So much so that he subsequently wrote a 1960 paper in @IntOrgJournal titled "political conditions for an international police force" cambridge.org/core/journals/…
His @IntOrgJournal paper echos what he wrote in "Politics Among Nations": an international police force is unlikely to work because, well, who is going to make sure that it works? It is similar to the problem of collective security
This leads Morgenthau to a more fundamental point: in his view, world state, world disarmament, and a world police force are all intertwined issues.
And they all suffer from the same problem: who is going to create it and maintain it? He just can't see it happening..at least not under present conditions.
Though he. like Einstein, agrees that a World State is probably necessary to ultimately make all feel secure.
In sum, Morgenthau recognized why folks called for the creation of world government. He just didn't think it could work
[END]
P.S. Tying the above to my 3 questions for realism: Morgenthau, like Kerr and Tate but unlike Carr, would answer "No" to the first question below and "Yes" to the third question.
Which of these two men is most responsible for World War II?
Short answer: not Churchill
Long answer: [THREAD]
To be clear, in this thread I am dealing with the onset of the war in Europe. The War in Asia was just as important and obviously connected to Europe. But that is for another thread. For now, I do highly recommend Paine's book "The Wars for Asia"
Solving the "Europe Problem" has vexed US foreign policy since the beginning.
[THREAD]
As I wrote last week, a key trait of US "grand strategy" since the founding of the Republic was "Go West" either by expanding US territory west or seeking to maintain trade with China.
Since the founding of the republic, US foreign policy has been about one thing:
Go west (and don't let Europe get in the way).
[THREAD]
I'll write more about "don't let Europe get in the way" in another 🧵. This one will focus on the "Go west" part (which will also touch on the Europe part).
One could go so far as to argue that the Republic itself was founded because of a desire to go west. Specifically, the colonials were forbidden to go west of the 1763 Proclamation line.
When you hear "Liberal International Order", just think "the G-7, for better and for worse"
[THREAD]
While some scholars and policy makers like to speak of the "Liberal International Order" as the collection of post-World War II international institutions.... cambridge.org/core/journals/…
...the phrase itself is much more recent in origins, largely a product of the mid-1990s.
As I wrote in my latest for @WPReview, shifting patterns in population growth will inevitably influence international politics. worldpoliticsreview.com/global-demogra…
This isn't a new idea. It's one found in classic works on change in world politics.