CLASE 4 Doyle - Kant, Liberal Legacies, and Foreign Affairs
CLASE 4 Doyle - Kant, Liberal Legacies, and Foreign Affairs
CLASE 4 Doyle - Kant, Liberal Legacies, and Foreign Affairs
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MICHAELW. DOYLE Kant,LiberalLegacies,
and ForeignAffairs*
I
Whatdifferencedo liberalprinciplesand institutionsmake to the conduct
of the foreign affairsof liberal states? A thicket of conflictingjudgments
suggests that the legacies of liberalismhave not been clearlyappreciated.
For many citizens of liberalstates, liberalprinciplesand institutionshave
so fully absorbeddomestic politics that their influence on foreign affairs
tends to be either overlookedaltogetheror, when perceived,exaggerated.
Liberalismbecomeseitherunself-consciouslypatrioticor inherendy"peace-
loving." For many scholars and diplomats, the relations among inde-
pendent states appearto differ so significantlyfromdomestic politics that
influences of liberalprinciplesand domesticliberalinstitutionsare denied
or denigrated. They judge that internationalrelations are governed by
perceptions of national security and the balance of power; liberal prin-
ciples and institutions, when they do intrude, confuse and disrupt the
pursuit of balance-of-powerpolitics.'
* This is the first half of a two-partarticle.The articlehas benefitedfrom the extensive
criticismsof WilliamAscher, RichardBetts, WilliamBundy,Joseph Carens, Felix Gilbert,
Amy Gutmann,Don Herzog, Stanley Hoffman,MarionLevy, Judith Shklar,MarkUhlig,
and the Editors of Philosophy & Public Affairs. I have also tried to take into account
suggestions from Fouad Ajami, Steven David, Tom Farer,RobertGilpin,Ernest van den
Haag, GermaineHoston,RobertJervis,DonaldKagan,RobertKeohane,John Rawls,Nich-
olas Rizopoulos,RobertW. Tucker,RichardUllman,and the membersof a SpecialSeminar
at the LehrmanInstitute,February22, I983. The essay cannotbe interpretedas a consensus
of their views.
i. The liberal-patriotic view was reiteratedby PresidentReagan in a speech before the
BritishParliamenton 8 June I982. There he proclaimed"aglobalcampaignfor democratic
development."This "crusadefor freedom"will be the latest campaignin a traditionthat,
he claimed, began with the MagnaCartaand stretchedin this century throughtwo world
wars and a cold war. He added that liberal foreign policies have shown "restraint"and
"peacefulintentions"and that this crusade will strengthen the prospects for a world at
peace (New YorkTimes, 9 June I982). The skepticalscholarsand diplomatsrepresentthe
predominantRealistinterpretationof internationalrelations.See ns. 4 and I 2 forreferences.
206 Philosophy & Public Affairs
II
Liberalismhas been identified with an essential principle-the impor-
tance of the freedom of the individual. Above all, this is a belief in the
importanceof moralfreedom, of the right to be treatedand a duty to treat
others as ethical subjects, and not as objects or means only. This principle
has generated rights and institutions.
A commitment to a threefold set of rights forms the foundation of
liberalism. Liberalism calls for freedom from arbitraryauthority, often
called "negativefreedom,"which includes freedom of conscience, a free
press and free speech, equality under the law, and the right to hold, and
207 Kant, LiberalLegacies
and Foreign Affairs
But the dilemma within liberalism is how to reconcile the three sets
of liberal rights. The right to private property,for example, can conflict
with equalityof opportunityand both rights can be violatedby democratic
legislation. During the i8o years since Kant wrote, the liberal tradition
has evolved two high roads to individualfreedom and social order; one
is laissez-faireor "conservative"liberalismand the otheris social welfare,
or social democratic,or "liberal"liberalism.Both reconcile these conflict-
ing rights (though in differing ways) by successfully organizing free
individuals into a political order.
The politicalorderof laissez-faireand social welfare liberalsis marked
by a shared commitment to four essential institutions. First, citizens
possess juridical equality and other fundamental civic rights such as
freedom of religion and the press. Second, the effective sovereigns of the
state are representativelegislatures derivingtheir authorityfrom the con-
sent of the electorateand exercising their authorityfree from all restraint
TABLE I
LiberalRegimes
and the Pacific Union Total
Period (By date "liberal")a Number
i8th century Swiss Cantonsb 3
French Republic I790-I795
the United Statesb I 776-
TABLE I (cont.)
LiberalRegimes
and the Pacific Union Total
Period (By date "liberal")a Number
I850-I900 Switzerland, I3
the United States,
Belgium, GreatBritain,
Netherlands
Piedmont - i86i, Italy i86i -
Denmark -i866
Sweden I864-
Greece I864-
Canada I867-
France I87I-
Argentina i88o-
Chile I89I-
I900-I945 Switzerland, 29
TABLE I (cont.)
LiberalRegimes
and the Pacific Union Total
Period (By date "liberal")a Number
Sen,egal I963-
Malaysia I963-
South Korea I963-I972
Botswana I 966-
Singapore I965-
Greece I975-
Portugal 1976-
Spain I 978-
Dominican Republic 1978-
a. I have drawnup this approximate list of "LiberalRegimes"accordingto the four
describedas essential:marketandprivateproperty
institutions economies; politiesthatare
externallysovereign;citizenswhopossessjuridicalrights;and"republican" (whetherre-
publicanormonarchical), representative,government. Thislatterincludestherequirement
that the legislativebranchhave an effectiverole in publicpolicyand be formallyand
competitively, oractually,elected.Furthermore,
eitherpotentially I havetakenintoaccount
whethermalesuffrageis wide(thatis, 30 percent)oropento"achievement" byinhabitants
(forexample,to poll-taxpayersor householders) of the nationalormetropolitan territory.
Femalesuffrageis grantedwithina generation of its beingdemanded; andrepresentative
government is intemallysovereign(forexample,includingandespeciallyovermilitaryand
foreignaffairs)as wellas stable(in existenceforat leastthreeyears).
Sources: ArthurBanks and W. Overstreet,eds., The Political Handbookof the World,
I980 (New York:McGraw-Hill, I980); ForeignandCommonwealth Office,A YearBook
of the CommonwealthI980 (London: HMSO, I980); Europa Yearbook,I98I (London:
Europa,I98i); W. L. Langer,An Encyclopediaof WorldHistory(Boston:Houghton-Mifflin,
I968); Departmentof State, Country Reports on Human Rights Practices (Washington,
DC: GovernmentPrintingOffice, ig8i); and Freedomat Issue, no. 54 (Jan.-Feb. I980).
b. Therearedomesticvariationswithintheseliberalregimes.Forexample,Switzerland
wasliberalonlyin certaincantons;the UnitedStateswasliberalonlynorthof the Mason-
DixonlineuntilI865, whenit becameliberalthroughout. Theselistsalsoexcludeancient
since none appearto fit Kant'scriteria.See StephenHolmes,"Aristippus
"republics," in
and out of Athens,"AmericanPolitical ScienceReview 73, no. I (March 1979).
c. Selected list, excludes liberalregimes with populationsless than one million.
III
In foreign affairs liberalismhas shown, as it has in the domestic realm,
serious weaknesses. But unlike liberalism'sdomestic realm, its foreign
affairs have experienced startling but less than fully appreciated suc-
cesses. Together they shape an unrecognized dilemma, for both these
successes and weaknesses in large part spring from the same cause: the
internationalimplications of liberal principles and institutions.
The basic postulateof liberalinternationaltheoryholds that states have
the right to be free from foreign intervention. Since morallyautonomous
citizens hold rights to liberty, the states that democraticallyrepresent
them have the right to exercise political independence. Mutual respect
for these rights then becomes the touchstone of internationalliberalthe-
ory.6When states respect each other's rights, individualsare free to es-
tablish privateinternationalties without state interference. Profitableex-
changes between merchants and educationalexchanges among scholars
then create a web of mutual advantages and commitments that bolsters
sentiments of public respect.
These conventions of mutual respect have formed a cooperativefoun-
dation for relations among liberal democracies of a remarkablyeffective
kind. Even though liberal states have becomeinvolvedin numerous wars
with nonliberal states, constitutionally secure liberal states have yet to
engage in war with one another.7 No one should argue that such wars
are impossible; but preliminaryevidence does appear to indicate that
there exists a significant predispositionagainst warfarebetween liberal
states. Indeed, threats of war also have been regardedas illegitimate. A
liberal zone of peace, a pacific union, has been maintained and has ex-
6. Charles Beitz, Political Theory and International Relations (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, I979) offers a clear and insightful discussion of liberal ideas on inter-
vention and nonintervention.
7. There appearto be some exceptions to the tendency for liberalstates not to engage
in a war with each other. Peru and Ecuador,for example, entered into conflict. But for
each, the war came within one to three years after the establishmentof a liberalregime,
that is, before the pacifyingeffects of liberalismcould become deeply ingrained.The Pal-
estinians and the Israelis clashed frequentlyalong the Lebanese border,which Lebanon
couldnot hold secure fromeitherbelligerent.But at the beginningof the I967 War,Lebanon
seems to have sent a flight of its own jets into Israel.The jets were repulsed.Alone among
Israel'sArabneighbors,Lebanonengagedin no furtherhostilitieswith Israel.Israel'srecent
attackon the territoryof Lebanonwas an attackon a countrythathad alreadybeen occupied
by Syria(and the P.L.O.). Whether Israel actuallywill withdraw(if Syriawithdraws)and
restorean independent Lebanonis yet to be determined.
214 Philosophy & Public Affairs
TABLE 2
International Wars Listed Chronologically*
Anns, Small and Singer identify a total of 575 wars in this period;but approximately159
of them appearto be largely domestic, or civil wars.
This definitionof war excludes covert interventions,some of which have been directed
by liberalregimes against other liberalregimes. One example is the United States' effort
to destabilizethe Chilean election and Allende'sgovernment.Nonetheless, it is significant
(as will be apparentbelow) that such interventionsare not pursued publicly as acknowl-
edged policy. The covertdestabilizationcampaignagainst Chile is recountedin U.S. Con-
gress, Senate, Select Committee to Study GovernmentalOperationswith Respect to In-
telligenceActivities,CovertActionin Chile,1963-73, 94th Congress,Ist Session(Washington,
DC: U.S. GovernmentPrintingOffice, 1975).
The argumentof this article(and this list) also excludes civil wars. Civilwars differfrom
2I6 Philosophy & PublicAffairs
intemationalwars not in the ferocityof combatbut in the issues that engender them. Two
nationsthat could abideone anotheras independentneighborsseparatedby a bordermight
well be the fiercest of enemies if forced to live togetherin one state, jointly deciding how
to raise and spend taxes, choose leaders, and legislate fundamentalquestions of value.
Notwithstandingthese differences,no civil wars that I recall upset the argumentof liberal
pacification.
8. ImperialGennanyis a difficultcase. The Reichstagwas not only elected by universal
male suffragebut, by and large, the state ruled under the law, respectingthe civic equality
and rights of its citizens. Moreover,ChancellorBismarckbegan the creation of a social
welfaresociety that servedas an inspirationforsimilarreformsin liberalregimes. However,
the constitutionalrelations between the imperialexecutive and the representativelegis-
lature were sufficiently complex that variouspractices,rather than constitutionaltheory,
determined the actual relation between the governmentand the citizenry. The emperor
appointedand could dismiss the chancellor.Although the chancellorwas responsibleto
the Reichstag, a defeat in the Reichstag did not remove him nor did the government
absolutelydepend on the Reichstag for budgetaryauthority.In practice,Germanywas a
liberalstate under republicanlaw for domestic issues. But the emperor'sdirect authority
217 Kant, LiberalLegacies
and Foreign Affairs
Statistically,war between any two states (in any single year or othe:
short period of time) is a low probabilityevent. War between any tw(
adjacent states, considered over a long periodof time, may be somewha
more probable. The apparent absence of war among the more clearlb
liberal states, whether adjacent or not, for almost two hundred year,
thus has some significance. Politicallymore significant, perhaps,is that
when states are forced to decide, by the pressure of an impinging worlc
war, on which side of a world contest they will fight, liberal states winc
up all on the same side, despite the real complexity of the historical
economic and political factors that affect their foreign policies. An(
historically, we should recall that medieval and early modern Europe
were the warring cockpits of states, wherein France and England anc
the Low Countries engaged in near constant strife. Then in the latc
eighteenth centurythere began to emerge liberalregimes. Atfirsthesitan
and confused, and later clear and confident as liberal regimes gainec
deeper domestic foundations and longer internationalexperience, a pa
cific union of these liberal states became established.
over the army, the army'seffective independencefrom the minimal authorityof the War
Ministry,and the emperor'sactive role in foreignaffairs(includingthe influentialseparate
channel to the emperorthrough the militaryattaches) together with the tenuous consti-
tutionalrelationshipbetween the chancellorand the Reichstagmade imperialGermanya
state divorcedfrom the controlof its citizenryin foreign affairs.
This authoritarianelement not only influenced Germanforeign policymaking,but also
shaped the internationalpolitical environment(a lack of trust) the Reich faced and the
domesticpoliticalenvironmentthat defined the government'soptionsand capabilities(the
weakness of liberalopinion as against the exceptionalinfluence of junker militaristicna-
tionalism).Thus directinfluence on policywas but one result of the authoritarianelement.
Nonetheless, significant and strife-generatingepisodes can be directlyattributedto this
element. They include Tirpitz'sapproachto Wilhelm II to obtain the latter'ssanction for
a veto of ChancellorBethmann-Hollweg'sproposalsfor a naval agreement with Britain
(I909). Addedto this was Wilhelm'spersonalassurances of full supportto the Austrians
earlyin the SarajevoCrisis and his, togetherwith Moltke's,erraticpressureon the Chan-
cellor throughoutJuly and August of I9I4, which helped destroy whatever coherence
Germandiplomacymight otherwisehave had, and which led one Austrianofficialto ask,
"Whorules in Berlin?Moltkeor Bethmann?"(GordonCraig,The Politics of the Prussian
Army [New York:OxfordUniversityPress, I9641, pp. xxviii and chap. 6). For an excellent
account of Bethmann'saims and the constraintshe encountered,see KonradH. Jarausch,
"TheIllusionof LimitedWar:ChancellorBethmann-Hollweg'sCalculatedRisk,July I9I4,"
CentralEuropeanHistory 2 (I969).
The liberal sources of Italy's decision are pointed out in R. Vivarelli'sreview of Hugo
Butler'sGaetano Salvemini und die Italienische Politik vor dem Ersten Weltkriegin the
Journal of ModernHistory 52, no. 3 (SeptemberI980): 54I.
The quotationfromPresidentWilsonis fromWoodrowWilson,TheMessagesand Papers
of WoodrowWilson, ed. AlbertShaw (New York:The Review of Reviews, I924), p. 378.
2I8 Philosophy& Public Affairs
is not rational (first best) for either individuallyif there is some chance
that the other will back down first (the game of "chicken").Io
Specific wars therefore arise from fear as a state seeking to avoid a
surprise attack decides to attack first; from competitive emulation as
states lacking an imposed internationalhierarchyof prestige struggle to
establish their place; and from straightforwardconflicts of interest that
escalate into war because there is no global sovereign to prevent states
from adopting that ultimate form of conflict resolution. Herein lie Thu-
cydides's trinityof "security,honor, and self-interest"and Hobbes's "dif-
fidence," "glory,"and "competition"that drive states to conflict in the
internationalstate of war.II
Finding that all states, including liberal states, do engage in war, the
Realist concludes that the effects of differingdomestic regimes (whether
liberal or not) are overriddenby the internationalanarchy under which
all states live.I2 Thus Hobbes does not bother to distinguish between
"some council or one man" when he discusses the sovereign. Differing
domestic regimes do affect the quantityof resources availableto the state
as Rousseau (an eighteenth-century Realist) shows in his discussion of
Poland, and Morgenthau (a twentieth-centuryRealist) demonstrates in
his discussion of morale.13 But the ends that shape the internationalstate
of war are decreed for the Realist by the anarchy of the international
order and the fundamental quest for power that directs the policy of all
States, irrespectiveof differences in their domestic regimes. As Rousseau
argued, internationalpeace therefore depends on the abolitionof inter-
nationalrelationseither by the achievement of a worldstate or by a radical
isolationism (Corsica). Realists judge neither to be possible.
io. RobertJervis, "CooperationUnder the Security Dilemma,"WorldPolitics 30, no. I
(JanuaryI978).
i I. Thucydides, The PeloponnesianWars, trans. Rex Warner(Baltimore,MD: Penguin
Books, I954) 1:76; and Hobbes, Leviathan, I, chap. I3, 6i, p. I85. The coincidence of
views is not accidental;Hobbes translatedThucydides.And Hobbes'sportraitof the state
of nature appearsto be drawnfrom Thucydides'saccount of the revolutionin Corcyra.
I2. Kenneth N. Waltz, Man, the State, and War(New York:ColumbiaUniversityPress,
I954, I959), pp. I20-23; and see his Theory of International Politics (Reading, MA:
Addison-Wesley,I979). The classic sources of this form of Realismare Hobbes and, more
particularly,Rousseau's "Essayon St. Pierre'sPeace Project"and his "Stateof War"in A
Lasting Peace (London: Constable, I9I7), E. H. Carr'sThe Twenty Year'sCrisis: 1919-
1939 (London:Macmillan& Co., I951), and the works of Hans Morgenthau.
I3. Jean-JacquesRousseau, The Governmentof Poland, trans. WillmooreKendall(New
York:Bobbs-Merrill,I972); and Hans Morgenthan,Politics AmongNations (New York:
AlfredA. Knopf, I967), pp. I32-35.
220 Philosophy & Public Affairs
attributes nor historic alliances or friendships can account for the wide
reach of the liberal peace. The peace extends as far as, and no further
than, the relations among liberal states, not including nonliberal states
in an otherwise liberal region (such as the north Atlantic in the I930s)
nor excluding liberalstates in a nonliberalregion (such as CentralAmer-
ica or Africa).
At this level, Raymond Aron has identified three types of interstate
peace: empire, hegemony, and equilibrium.21An empire generally suc-
ceeds in creatingan internalpeace, but this is not an explanationof peace
among independent liberal states. Hegemony can create peace by over-
awing potentialrivals.Althoughfar fromperfect and certainlyprecarious,
United States hegemony, as Aronnotes, might account for the interstate
peace in South America in the postwar period during the height of the
cold war conflict. However, the liberalpeace cannot be attributedmerely
to effective internationalpolicing by a predominanthegemon-Britain in
the nineteenth century, the United States in the postwar period. Even
though a hegemon might well have an interest in enforcing a peace for
the sake of commerce or investments or as a means of enhancing its
prestige or security;hegemons such as seventeenth-centuryFrance were
not peace-enforcingpolice, and the liberalpeace persistedin the interwar
periodwhen internationalsocietylacked a predominanthegemonic power.
Moreover,this explanation overestimateshegemonic control in both pe-
riods. Neither England nor the United States was able to prevent direct
challenges to its interests (colonialcompetitionin the nineteenth century,
Middle East diplomacyand conflicts over tradingwith the enemy in the
postwarperiod). Where then was the capacity to prevent all armed con-
flicts between liberal regimes, many of which were remote and others
strategicallyor economically insignificant? Liberalhegemony and lead-
ership are important (see Section V below), but they are not sufficient
to explain a liberal peace.
Peace through equilibrium (the multipolarclassical balance of power
or the bipolar"cold war") also draws upon prudential sources of peace.
2i. RaymondAron,Peace and War(New York:Praeger,I968) pp. I5I-54. Progressand
peace through the rise and decline of empires and hegemonies has been a classic theme.
Lucretius suggested that they may be part of a more general law of nature: "Augescunt
aliae gentes, aliae miniuntur/Inquebrevis spatio mutantur saecula animantum,/Etquasi
cursoresvitai lampadatradunt."[Some peoples wax and others wane/Andin a short space
the orderof living things is changed/Andlike runners hand on the torch of life.] De Rer.
Nat. ii, 77-79.
224 Philosophy & Public Affairs
IV
Most liberaltheoristshave offeredinadequate guidancein understanding
the exceptional nature of liberal pacification. Some have argued that
democraticstates would be inherentlypeaceful simplyand solely because
in these states citizens rule the polity and bear the costs of wars. Unlike
monarchs, citizens are not able to indulge their aggressive passions and
have the consequences suffered by someone else. Other liberals have
argued that laissez-fairecapitalismcontains an inherent tendency toward
rationalism, and that, since war is irrational,liberal capitalisms will be
pacifistic. Others still, such as Montesquieu, claim that "commerce is
the cure for the most destructive prejudices,"and "Peace is the natural
effect of trade."23While these developments can help account for the
liberal peace, they do not explain the fact that liberal states are peaceful
only in relations with other liberal states. France and England fought
expansionist, colonial wars throughout the nineteenth century (in the
I83os and I84os against Algeria and China); the United States fought
a similar war with Mexico in I848 and intervened again in I9I4 under
President Wilson. Liberalstates are as aggressive and war prone as any
other form of government or society in their relations with nonliberal
states.
Immanuel Kant offers the best guidance. "PerpetualPeace," written
in I795, predicts the ever-widening pacification of the liberal pacific
union, explains that pacification, and at the same time suggests why
liberal states are not pacific in their relationswith nonliberalstates. Kant
argues that Perpetual Peace will be guaranteed by the ever-widening
acceptance of three "definitivearticles"of peace. When all nations have
accepted the definitive articles in a metaphorical "treaty"of perpetual
peace he asks them to sign, perpetualpeace will have been established.
The First Definitive Articleholds that the civil constitutionof the state
must be republican. By republican Kant means a political society that
has solved the problemof combining moralautonomy,individualism,and
social order. A basically private propertyand market-orientedeconomy
23. The incompatibilityof democracy and war is forcefully asserted by Paine in The
Rights of Man. The connection between liberalcapitalism,democracy,and peace is argued
by, among others, Joseph Schumpeterin Imperialismand Social Classes (New York:Me-
ridian, I955); and Montesquieu, Spirit of the Laws I, bk. 2o, chap. i. This literatureis
surveyed and analyzed by Albert Hirschman, "RivalInterpretationsof Market Society:
Civilizing,Destructive,or Feeble?"Journal of EconomicLiterature 2o (December i 982).
226 Philosophy& Public Affairs
or state of nations. The first is insufficient; the second and third are
impossible or potentiallytyrannical.Kantdevelops no organizationalem-
bodiment of this treaty, and presumably he does not find institutionali-
zation necessary. He appears to have in mind a mutual nonaggression
pact, perhaps a collective security agreement, and the cosmopolitanlaw
set forth in the Third Definitive Article.26
The Third Definitive Article of the Eternal Peace establishes a cos-
mopolitan law to operate in conjunction with the pacific union. The
cosmopolitanlaw "shallbe limited to conditions of universal hospitality."
In this he calls for the recognition of the "rightof a foreigner not to be
treatedwith hostility when he arrivesupon the soil of another [country],"
which "doesnot extend further than to the conditionswhich enable them
[the foreigners]to attemptthe developingof intercourse [commerce]with
the old inhabitants." Hospitality does not require extending either the
right to citizenship to foreigners or the right to settlement, unless the
foreign visitors would perish if they were expelled. Foreign conquest and
plunder also find no justification under this right. Hospitalitydoes appear
to include the right of access and the obligation of maintaining the op-
portunityfor citizens to exchange goods and ideas, without imposing the
obligation to trade (a voluntary act in all cases under liberal constitu-
tions).27
Kant then explains each of the three definitive articles for a liberal
peace. In doing so he develops both an account of why liberal states do
maintain peace among themselves and of how it will (by implication,has)
come about that the pacific union will expand. His central claim is that
a natural evolution will produce "a harmony from the very disharmony
of men against their will."28
26. Kant's"PacificUnion,"the foedus pacificum,is thus neither a pactum pacis (a single
peace treaty)nor a civitas gentium (a worldstate). He appearsto have anticipatedsomething
like a less formallyinstitutionalizedLeague of Nations or United Nations. One could argue
that these two institutions in practice workedfor liberalstates and only for liberal states.
But no specificallyliberal "pacificunion"was institutionalized.Instead liberalstates have
behaved for the past i8o years as if such a Kantianpacific union and treatyof Perpetual
Peace had been signed. This follows Riley's views of the legal, not the organizational,
characterof the foedus pacificum.
27. Kant, "Perpetual Peace," pp. 444-47.
28. Kant, the fourthprincipleof "TheIdea for a UniversalHistory"in The Philosophyof
Kant, p. I20. Interestingly, Kant's three sources of peace (republicanism,respect, and
commerce) parallelquite closely Aristotle'sthree sources of friendship(goodness, pleasure
or appreciation,and utility). See NicomacheanEthics, bk. 8, chap. 3, trans.J.A.K. Thomson
(Baltimore,MD: Penguin, I955).
228 Philosophy & Public Affairs
29. The "PrussianModel"suggests the connection between insecurity, war, and au-
thoritarianism.See The Anglo-AmericanTradition in ForeignAffairs, ed. ArnoldWolfers
and Laurence Martin (New Haven: Yale University Press, I956), "Introduction,"for an
argumentlinking security and liberalism.
30. Small and Singer, Resort to Arms, pp. I76-79.
229 Kant, LiberalLegacies
and Foreign Affairs
Dilemma"game. There a failure of mutual trust and the incentives to enhance one's own
position produce a noncooperativesolution that makes both parties worse off. Contrarily,
cooperation,a commitment to avoid exploiting the other party,producesjoint gains. The
significance of the game in this context is the characterof its participants.The "prisoners"
are presumed to be felonious, unrelatedapartfrom their partnershipin crime, and lacking
in mutual trust-competitive nation states in an anarchic world.A similar game between
fraternalor sororaltwins-Kant's republics-would be likely to lead to differentresults. See
RobertJervis, "Hypotheseson Misperception,"WorldPolitics 2o, no. 3 (April I968), for
an expositionof the role of presumptions;and "CooperationUnder the SecurityDilemma,"
WorldPolitics 30, no. 2 (JanuaryI 978), forthe factorsRealistssee as mitigatingthe security
dilemma caused by anarchy.
Also, expectations (including theoryand history)can influence behavior,making liberal
states expect (and fulfill) pacific policies towardeach other. These effects are exploredat
a theoreticallevel in R. Dacey, "Some Implicationsof 'TheoryAbsorption'for Economic
Theory and the Economics of Information"in PhilosophicalDimensionsof Economics,ed.
J. Pitt (Dordrecht,Holland:D. Reidel, I980).
232 Philosophy & Public Affairs
38. George Liska identifies this peaceful, hegemonic transitionas exceptionalin Quest
for Equilibrium:Americaand the Balanceof Poweron Land and Sea (Baltimore,MD: The
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1977), chap. 4, p. 75. Wilson's speeches, including his
"WarMessage,"suggest the importanceof ideologicalfactorsin explainingthis transition:
"Neutralityis no longer feasible or desirablewhere the peace of the worldis involvedand
the freedomof its peoples, and the menace to that peace and freedomlies in the existence
[emphasis supplied] of autocraticgovernmentsbacked by organizedforce which is con-
trolledwholly by their will, not by the wifl of theirpeople."This quotationis fromWoodrow
Wilson, The Messages and Papers of WoodrowWilson, ed. AlbertShaw (New York:The
Review of Reviews, 1924), p. 378. Ross Gregoryin The Origins of AmericanIntervention
in the First WorldWar(New York:Norton, 1971) offersan interpretationalong these lines,
combining commercial, financial, strategic, and ideologicalfactors in his account of the
policy which brought the United States onto a collision course with Germany.
235 Kant, Liberal Legacies
and Foreign Affairs