The Fate of the State
MARTIN VAN CREVELD
© 1996 Martin van Creveld
From Parameters, Spring 1996, pp. 4-18. .
The State, which since the Treaty
of Westphalia (1648)
has been the most important and most characteristic of all modern
institutions,
is dying. Wherever we look, existing states are either combining into
larger
communities or falling apart; wherever we look, organizations that are
not
states are taking their place. On the international level, we are
moving away
from a system of separate, sovereign, states toward less distinct, more
hierarchical, and in many ways more complex structures. Inside their
borders, it
seems that many states will soon no longer be able to protect the
political,
military, economic, social, and cultural life of their citizens. These
developments may lead to upheavals as profound as those that took
humanity out
of the Middle Ages and into the Modern World. Whether the direction of
change is
desirable, as some hope, or undesirable, as others fear, remains to be
seen.
In this article the state of the state will be discussed
under five headings.
Part I looks at the state's declining ability to fight other states.
Part II
outlines the rise and fall of the welfare state. Part III examines the
effects
of modern technology, economics, and the media. Part IV focuses on the
state's
ability to maintain public order. Finally, Part V is an attempt to tie
all the
threads together and to see where we are headed.
Part I. The Declining Ability to Fight
The principal function of the state, as that of all
previous forms of
government, has always been to fight other states, whether defensively
in an
attempt to defend its interests or offensively to extend them. Usually
a state
that was unable to do this was doomed to disappear. The best it could
hope for
was to lead a sort of shadowy existence under the protection of some
other
state, as Lebanon, for example, does under Syrian tutelage; even that
existence
was likely to be temporary.
Conversely, the need to fight other states has played a
critical role in the
development of the state's most important institutions.[1] This
includes the
government bureaucracy, whose original function was to levy taxes for
the
purpose of waging war; the note-issuing state bank, an early
18th-century
invention designed specifically to help pay for Britain's military
effort during
the wars against Louis XIV; and of course the regular armed forces. In
most
states, the latter continued to take up the lion's share of expenditure
until
well into the 19th century.[2]
Driven largely by the need to fight other states, the
power of the state
expanded from 1700 on. The number of bureaucrats (the word itself is an
18th-century neologism) multiplied, and the amount of statistical
information at
their disposal increased, as did the share of GDP that was extracted by
government. Technology drove war, and war, technology. International
competition
intensified until, during the second half of the 19th century, it
reached the
point where much of the world had been turned into an armed camp. Each
of the
so-called great powers was looking anxiously over its shoulder at all
the rest
to see which one was the most threatening, and which one, being less so
for the
moment, could be drawn into an alliance.
Most important of all, the French Revolution led to the
nationalization of
the masses and, with that, to a drastic change in the role of the state
in the
popular consciousness. Hobbes, Locke, and many of their 18th-century
successors
saw the state simply as an instrument for maintaining public order and
permitting a civilized life; to quote a rhyme by Alexander Pope: "Over
government fools contest/What is best administered is best." Now it
became
an end unto itself, an earthly god in whose honor festivals were
celebrated,
monuments erected, and hymns composed and sung.[3] It was a vengeful
god who,
according to his greatest prophet, Georg Hegel,[4] fed on blood and
periodically
demanded the sacrifice of hundreds of thousands if not millions--for
their own
highest good, needless to say. In retrospect, nothing in the history of
the
modern state is more astonishing than the willingness, occasionally
even
eagerness, of people to fight for it and lay down their lives for it.
The climax of these developments was reached during the
years of total war
between 1914 and 1945. Acting in the name of the need to protect or
extend
something known as the national interest, states conscripted their
populations
and fought each other on an unprecedented scale and with an
unprecedented
ferocity. Nor was it merely a question of soldiers killing each other
in the
field. At the grand strategic level, both 1914-18 and 1939-45 were
conducted by
attrition; this gave states time to mobilize not only troops but
civilians
(including women and children) as well, putting them to work in fields
and
factories. Under the direction of such figures as Walter Rathenau in
Germany,
David Lloyd George in Britain, Georges Clemenceau in France, and
Bernard Baruch
in the United States, the state assumed control over finance, raw
materials,
transportation, labor (including professional qualifications and
wages), and
even the calorie intake of their citizens. Most of these controls were
demolished after 1918, only to be reinstituted on an even greater scale
after
1939.
Thanks to the unprecedented mobilization of demographic,
economic,
industrial, technological, and scientific resources, the two World Wars
together, and each separately, dwarfed all the armed conflicts that had
taken
place in the past. More important to our purpose, mobilization warfare
accelerated--if it did not create--technological progress.[5] All
through World
War II in particular, tens of thousands of scientists were engaged in
research
and development, producing devices that ranged from radar to the
electronic
computer and from the jet engine to the first ballistic missiles. The
climax
arrived on 6 August 1945 when the first atomic bomb exploded over
Hiroshima,
killing an estimated 75,000 people.
At first, nuclear weapons were thought to have put
unprecedented military
power in the hands of the state; after a few years, though, it began to
be
realized that they did not so much serve the objectives of war as put
an end to
it.[6] As the power of nuclear weapons grew--from 20,000 kilotons in
1945 to 58
megatons in 1961--and their numbers increased, wherever they made their
appearance large-scale interstate war came to a halt. First the
superpowers;
then their close allies in NATO and the Warsaw Pact; then the USSR and
China;
then China and India; then India and Pakistan; then Israel and its Arab
neighbors. Much as they hated each other, they each in turn saw
themselves with
their horns locked and unable to fight each other in earnest.[7]
Without exception, what large-scale interstate wars have
taken place since
1945 have been waged either between or against third- and fourth-rate
military
powers. The Korean War, which originally was simply a civil war between
the two
parts of a country split into half; the five (or six depending on the
way one
counts) Arab-Israeli wars; the three Indian-Pakistani wars; the
Chinese-Indian
War; the Chinese-Vietnamese War; the Falklands War, so small that it is
often
referred to as a campaign; the Iran-Iraq War; the Gulf War; and most
recently,
the war between Ecuador and Peru--all these serve to prove the point.
Since 1945
no two first-rate states, meaning such as were armed with nuclear
weapons, have
fought each other; by some accounts they have not even come close to
fighting
each other.[8]
Even more striking than the marginalization of the
belligerents was the
declining scale on which war was waged. Though the world's population
has almost
tripled since 1945, and though its ability to produce goods and
services has
increased many times over, both the size of armed forces and the number
of the
major weapon systems with which they are provided now amount to only a
fraction
of what they were in 1945. For example, the forces mobilized by the
coalition in
the Gulf were just one-seventh of the size of those deployed by Germany
for its
invasion of Russia in 1941. In most places the shrinking process is
still under
way. Not a day passes without some new cuts being announced. And in the
face of
the potential for nuclear destruction, there is not much chance of the
mass
forces of World War II being rebuilt in any kind of foreseeable future.
Part II. The Rise and Fall of the Welfare State
As the state lost its ability to expand at its
neighbors' expense--a handicap
confirmed by the Charter of the United Nations, which, as the most
subscribed-to
document in history, prohibits using force to annex territory--it
turned its
energies inward. It lies in the nature of a bureaucratic construct that
it
should seek to control and regulate everything; in so doing it created
the
welfare state.
The beginning of the story is in the period 1789 to
1830. First came the
French Revolution, which, exported across the length and width of
Europe, broke
up the ancient feudal and ecclesiastic institutions; by atomizing
society, it
put the state in a much stronger position than ever before. Next came
the
industrial revolution. Starting in Britain, it brought with it economic
freedom,
unbridled capitalism (including its worst manifestations--a total lack
of
planning, widespread poverty, and inhumane exploitation), and the
invisible
hand. The influence of such figures as Adam Smith and Friedrich List
caused one
nation after another to dismantle internal and external economic
controls and
switch to free trade; with the Manchester School firmly in control,
during the
first half of the century the motto was laissez faire.
After 1850 or so, the prevailing mood began to change.
One reason for this
was a number of inquiries, some of them official, that were launched
into the
state of the working class and that brought to light the often shocking
conditions in which working people lived.[9] Another was the military
competition mentioned in the previous section; with the most important
states
increasingly dependent on mass armies consisting of conscripts and
reservists,
their rulers felt they could no longer afford to neglect the
populations that
provided those armies. Finally there was the steady, if often stormy,
movement
toward democratization and the rise in many countries of socialist
parties. The
former made it necessary, in the words of one English parliamentarian,
"to
educate our masters." The latter attracted a growing number of voters
and
openly threatened violent revolution unless something was done to
improve the
lot of the masses.
Be the exact reasons what they may, the first Factory
Acts were passed in
Britain during the 1840s over howls of protests by the owners and their
spokesmen. The laws' purpose was to put limits on working
hours--initially those
of women and children--and to institute at least some safety controls.
Imitated
by many countries, originally the new laws only applied to a few
industries
considered particularly dangerous, such as mining. Later they were
extended to
others such as textile and metalworking plants. Among the last to be
reached
were agriculture, domestic service, and small-scale light industry,
particularly
in the form of sweatshops. These were affected, to the extent that they
were
affected at all, only during the early years of the 20th century.
Once the state had begun to supervise the conditions of
labor--including the
establishment of labor exchanges, another early 20th-century
development--it
soon sought to do the same for education and public health. The pioneer
in the
former field was Prussia; following beginnings made in the reign of
Frederick
the Great, something like universal--although, as yet, not
free--elementary
education was achieved in the years after 1815 when Prussia became a
much-imitated model and educators from all over the world flocked to
see how it
was done.[10] In the rest of Europe the real push was provided by the
war of
1870-71. The French in particular looked for an explanation; unable to
agree on
the causes of the defeat, in the end they pointed a finger at the
schoolmaster.
Around 1900 the "utopian vision"--the phrase used by the British
Fabian socialist Beatrice Webb--of universal elementary education had
been
achieved in all the most advanced countries.
Advances in public health were made necessary by urban
growth and were
initially decentralized. In Britain, Germany, and to a growing extent
the United
States, laws were enacted that entrusted the task of providing better
sanitation, better disease controls, to local authorities and
municipalities;
they also took over from the church and private charitable
organizations by
providing at least some hospitals for the indigenous ill. In the most
advanced
countries, ministries of health were established during the first two
decades
after 1900. Their task was to supervise those countries' entire health
systems,
including both medical practice and training; in addition, many of them
also
provided various programs, such as inoculation and prenatal care, that
were
compulsory, free, or both.
Like state-run education, state-run welfare was
originally a German
invention.[11] The 1880s found Bismarck worried about the progress of
the Social
Democratic Party. This caused him to institute the so-called
"Revolution
from above" and the world's first schemes for unemployment, accident,
sickness, and old age insurance. Between 1890 and 1914 his example was
followed
by others through much of Western Europe and Scandinavia. Seen from
this point
of view, the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 was anything but an anomaly;
instead
it was simply an attempt to grab one particularly backward country by
the neck,
institute universal welfare at a single stroke, and extend state
control to the
point where civil society itself almost ceased to exist. Only the
United States,
with its tradition of free enterprise and rugged individualism,
resisted the
trend and, as a result, found itself lagging behind. In the land of the
dollar
it took the Great Depression and 13 million unemployed to make first
the New
Deal and then social security during the 1930s.
Still, what really made the modern welfare state was
World War II. As had
already been the case during World War I, governments took
responsibility for
running many aspects of their citizens' lives, including even the
number of
inches of hot water they were allowed to put in their tubs; but this
time they
did so with no intention of giving up their power after the war had
ended. In
one developed country after another, extensive health programs covering
the
entire population--as under the British National Health System which
served as
the model for many others--were established. To this were added a vast
variety
of ancillary programs, such as free or subsidized meals for children
and the
elderly, cheap housing, vocational training and retraining, and
education. The
latter often led to free education up to, and in some instances
including, the
university level.
These developments led to a huge increase in the number
of bureaucrats per
population and per square mile.[12] By the end of the 1950s the number
of
ministries, which during the state's formative years in the 17th and
18th
centuries had usually stood at four, had risen to something nearer 20
in most
countries. To the minister of justice, the minister of foreign affairs,
the
minister of war, and the minister of the treasury (sometimes, a first
or prime
minister as well), were added ministers for interior affairs, police,
agriculture, transportation, communications, education, health, labor,
welfare,
trade and industry, aviation, energy, and tourism. Some countries
thought it
necessary to have a special minister responsible for the
infrastructure. Others
considered they could not do without one for sport and leisure, whereas
during
the 1970s and 1980s many cabinets came to include a portfolio for
ecological
matters and women's affairs.
To pay for these programs and these ministries, it
became necessary to raise
taxes--particularly direct ones--until, in countries such as Britain
and Sweden,
marginal rates of income tax could reach 90 percent and more. Taxation,
though,
was only part of the solution. The nationalization of industry had been
demanded
by socialist parties ever since the time of the Communist Manifesto.
The
way ahead had been shown in Britain by the creation of the Electricity
Board in
1926; next, France during the premiership of Legon Blum (1936-37)
nationalized
its arms industry. Following World War II, in one European country
after another
entire sectors of the economy were taken out of private hands and put
into those
of the state.[13] The exact identity of the industries in question
varied. Often
they included mass transportation such as sea, air, and rail;
telecommunications, energy, banking, insurance, mining (particularly
for coal
and oil), and critical branches of manufacturing such as steel,
shipbuilding,
aviation, and military equipment. Initially it was hoped that the
profits of
these industries would be made to work for the community at large
rather than
for their shareholders alone. In practice it did not take long before
many of
them, run on electoral principles rather than business ones, turned
into
albatrosses that were grossly overstaffed, incurred enormous losses,
demanded
vast subsidies, and hung like chains around the state's neck.[14]
In retrospect, the turning point in the history of
nationalization and the
welfare state came during the second half of the 1970s. Until then the
trend
toward greater state control had been increasing steadily. Even in the
United
States, always a latercomer in such matters, "big government" made its
debut during the 1950s; in the 1960s the Kennedy and Johnson
administrations
declared "war on poverty" and presided over a vast expansion of
varioussocial programs.[15] Then, in one country after another a
reaction set
in. It was motivated partly by the immense losses attributable to many
nationalized industries; partly by the drastic increase in
unemployment--and
consequently in the cost of insuring against it--brought about by the
oil
crisis; and partly by the desire to cut the burden of taxes, which was
regarded
as stifling economic enterprise. On top of all this the welfare state
had become
a victim of its own success. The more it sought to help disadvantaged
groups
such as the aged or single parents, the larger the number of those who
claimed
the benefit of its services and the greater also the addition to the
national
debt.[16]
By this time the naive belief in the virtues of an
"impartial"
state bureaucracy that had inspired political scientists from Hegel to
Max
Weber[17] was long since dead. Instead of representing rationality,
bureaucracy
was coming to be seen as its antithesis; instead of being an instrument
of
social progress, it was now perceived as an obstacle to change of any
kind.[18]
During the late 1970s there emerged a number of political leaders such
as
Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan whose goal, loudly professed, was
to roll
back the power of the state. "Standing on one's own feet" and
"getting government off our backs" became the rallying cries under
which some of the most important states set out to dismantle
themselves; even
though, in many places, progress--if that is the correct term--was
greater in
words than in deeds.
All through the 1980s the movement back to the 19th
century gathered
momentum. Late in the decade it was given a tremendous boost by the
collapse of
the USSR. For 70 years, communism had provided an alternative model in
which the
state, for all its manifold and perceived shortcomings, claimed to have
eliminated the worst forms of poverty and promised security from the
cradle to
the grave; now the system's sudden demise left East Bloc states naked
and their
respective civil societies poorer than ever. Not only was laissez faire
capitalism able to reemerge as the only way toward a better future, but
it no
longer felt obliged to apologize for its seamier sides, such as gross
inequality, ever-present insecurity for both employers and employees,
and the
colossal waste resulting from the business cycle on the one hand and
unplanned
development on the other. To the contrary, many of the advocates of the
new
supply-side economics regarded those features as potentially useful
tools toward
the all-important goals of low inflation and steady economic growth.
As the last years of the century approached, not even
those countries that
were loudest in their praise of capitalism had made significant
progress in
reducing their bureaucracies, much less in cutting taxes as a
percentage of
GDP.[19] On the other hand, in virtually all countries some of the
juicier
morsels of the economy had been sold off and others deregulated, to say
nothing
of the cuts that, with or without the aid of inflation, were effected
in the
real value of numerous social programs including, not least, the
quality of
education. The homeless people appearing on the streets of cities
everywhere
offered visible proof of the fact that the post-World War II trend
toward a
narrowing of social gaps had been reversed; it became a matter of
policy for the
state to take more and more but give less and less. No wonder that
loyalty to
it--as manifested most clearly in the willingness to do conscript
service and
fight if necessary--declined.[20] In the United States under the Carter
Administration, even the attempt to register young males for an
eventual call-up
met with opposition.
Part III. Modern Technology, Economics, and the Media
Meanwhile, and often going almost unnoticed, technology
also had performed an
about-face. The role played by print in the establishment of the state
cannot be
overestimated; after all, where would any government be without forms?
Next, the
telegraph and the railways enabled states to bring their populations
under
control and to cast their networks over entire countries, even
continents.[21]
Nor were rulers satisfied when the time it took to travel from the
capital to
the provinces (for example, from Paris to Bordeaux or Toulouse) was
reduced from
weeks to days or hours. The role of technologies such as telephones,
teleprinters, computers (first put to use in calculating the results of
the US
census), highways, and other systems of transportation and
communication was
even greater than that of their predecessors. Without them it would
have been
impossible for the state to contemplate the task that it had undertaken
since
the beginning of the 19th century: to impose its control over every
part of
society from the highest to the lowest and almost regardless of
distance and
geographical location.
From the beginning, though, much of modern technology
bore a Janus face. On
the one hand it gave governments the tools with which to dominate their
countries and populations as never before. On the other it tended to
transcend
national borders, crossing them and turning them into obstacles to
domination.
This was because, unlike its pre-1800 predecessors, much of modern
technology
can operate only when, and to the extent that, it is grouped into
systems. A
plough, a hammer, a musket, or a ship can do its job even in the
absence of
others of its kind; but an individual railway station--or a telegraph
apparatus,
or a telephone--is simply useless on its own. In such systems what
matters is
the network of tracks, or wires, or switchboards, that connects each
unit with
countless others. Even more crucial is the central directing hand
which, sorting
out routes and priorities, enables them to communicate with each other
at will,
in an orderly manner and without mutual interference.
As the history of both telegraphs and railways shows,
most of the early
technological systems were launched by private entrepreneurs. However,
in most
countries the demand for economic efficiency or military effectiveness
soon
caused them to be taken over by governments. Either this was done by
way of
outright ownership, through nationalization and the establishment of a
state
monopoly, or else by means of regulations designed to ensure that they
would be
available in wartime. Still, there were limits to the extent that
governments
could control this technology without at the same time reducing its
cost-effectiveness. A railway net designed exclusively for meeting the
needs of
a single country--such as the broad-gauged one constructed by Imperial
Russia
and later passed to the USSR--provided some protection against invasion
but also
acted as a barrier to Russian trade with other countries. The same
applies to
various attempts to build autonomous electricity grids, highway
systems, or
telephone networks, to say nothing of fax machines and computers.
In theory each state was free to exercise its
sovereignty and build its own
networks, ignoring those of its neighbors and refusing to integrate
with them.
In practice it could do so only by incurring a tremendous technological
and
economic cost. The current plight of North Korea is a perfect case in
point; the
price of isolation was inefficiency and an inability to maximize the
benefits of
precisely those technologies that have developed most rapidly since
1945--communication (including data processing) and transportation.
Conversely,
in order to enjoy those benefits, states had to integrate their
networks with
those of their neighbors. What is more, it was necessary for them to
join the
international bodies whose task was to regulate the new technologies on
behalf
of all. The first such body was the International Railway Committee,
which
traces its origins to the 1860s. A century later they numbered in the
hundreds,
and the only way for any state to avoid becoming entangled in their
coils was to
doom itself to something like a pre-industrial existence.
These technological developments brought about a
decisive change in the
nature of the global economy.[22] The interwar period had been
characterized by
attempts to build self-contained empires; now, the most successful
states were
those which, like Germany and Japan and South Korea, were most
integrated into
the world market. By and large the more one exported and imported--in
other
words, maximized one's comparative advantage--the greater one's
economic
success. As more and more stock exchanges were opened to foreign
investors and
capital, a greater and greater percentage of a state's assets, and
those of its
citizens, was likely to be located beyond its borders. Conversely,
inside those
borders more and more wealth was likely to be controlled by persons and
corporations based elsewhere. During the 1980s economic statistics
began to
recognize the change by separating GNP from GDP. Generally the gap
between the
two provided a good index for the economic performance of any
particular
country; for example, 40 percent of all Japanese goods are now being
produced
outside Japan.
Another blow to state control implicit in the shift
toward a global economy
was that governments gradually lost their grip over their own
currencies. If a
nation was to participate in international trade, its currency had to
be
convertible, as free as possible from administrative controls. But
freedom from
administrative controls put it at the mercy of the international
market. Gone
were the days when, as during the period 1914-1939, most governments
tried to
create closed monetary systems and lay down the value of their
currencies by
fiat. Gone, too, were the Bretton Woods agreements which lasted from
1944 to
1971 and which pegged the various currencies to a US dollar which was
itself
pegged to gold.[23] Governments did not lose all influence over their
currencies; they still controlled the money supply as well as interest
rates.
Nevertheless, the values of these currencies became subject to wild
fluctuations
that were often beyond the power of central banks, or even combinations
of
central banks, to regulate. Their inability to do so put a premium on
hedging,
on holding at least some of one's assets in foreign currency. The
merry-go-round
leading to less and less government control continued.
Finally, the unprecedented development of electronic
information services
seems to mark another step toward the coming collapse of the state.
Traditionally no state has ever been able to completely control the
thoughts of
all its citizens; to the credit of the more liberally-minded among
them, it must
be added that they never even tried. Though the invention of print
greatly
increased the amount of information that could be produced, the ability
to move
that information across international borders remained limited by the
need to
physically transport paper, as well as by language barriers. The first
of these
problems was solved by the invention of radio. The introduction of
television,
which relies on pictures instead of words, to a large extent eliminated
the
second. During the 1980s cable and satellite TV, as well as videotape,
became
widely available and capable of providing near-instant coverage of
events on a
global scale. With the advent of computer networks and the consequent
democratization of access to information, the battle between freedom
and control
was irretrievably lost by the latter, much to the regret of numerous
governments.
Though the role of the various information services in
the collapse of the
former Eastern Bloc cannot be measured, it was certainly very
large.[24] Indeed,
even as these lines are being written, the future of Russia and its
fellow
republics of the Commonwealth of Independent States will be determined
partly by
the way the media will represent developments inside them. Conversely,
states
such as China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia are imitating the late East
Germany, doing
what they can to prevent their populations from being corrupted by
these
developments. The social, economic, and technological price that these
states
pay for their self-enforced isolation is considerable. In the long run,
their
struggle almost certainly will be hopeless.
Part IV. Maintaining Public Order
As governments surrender or lose their hold over many
aspects of the media,
the economy, and technology, and as public ownership as well as welfare
programs
stagnate or retreat, one of the principal functions still remaining to
the state
is to protect its own integrity against internal disorder. Thus the
question
that must be asked is whether they have been successful in this task;
is it
being mastered, and can they be expected to accomplish it in the
future?
So far this article has concentrated on the developed
countries. However, at
this point it is useful to invert the order, starting our survey with
undeveloped ones. It is a characteristic of many traditional societies
that the
right to resort to violence, instead of being monopolized by an
all-powerful
state, is diffused in the hands of family heads, tribal chieftains,
feudal
noblemen, and the like, each of whom is responsible for policing his
own
subjects and for fighting off challenges by the rest. Conversely, the
extent to
which so-called Third World countries have succeeded in demolishing
other
organizations and concentrating violence in their own hands is one very
good
index of their progress toward modernization.
To look at many developing countries today, that
progress has been either
slow or nonexistent. As a recent article in the Atlantic Monthlyhas
pointed out,[25] in much of sub-Saharan Africa the state has already
collapsed,
often before it was able to properly establish itself. Angola, Burundi,
Ethiopia, Liberia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Somalia, the Sudan, and Zaire all
have been
torn by civil war or, at the very least, disorder on a scale that
approximates
it. On the Mediterranean littoral the position of Egypt and Algeria is
scarcely
better, confronted as those states are by the formidable challenge of
Islamic
fundamentalism, which in recent years has led to the deaths of
thousands and
which shows no sign of abating. Meanwhile, in the southern extremity of
the
continent, it is touch and go whether South Africa will be able to make
progress
toward a peaceful multiracial society or be torn apart by the war of
all against
all.
From Japan to Taiwan, South Korea, and Singapore, some
Asian states have been
enormously successful in maintaining internal order and protecting the
lives and
property of their residents. Not so others such as Afghanistan, Burma,
Cambodia,
India, Iran, Iraq, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Turkey, and, most
recently,
Pakistan; all of these are now confronted with a loss of control that
ranges
from riots and clashes between opposing gangs to full-scale civil war.
China,
too, is not immune. It is true that the coastal regions are making
unprecedented
economic progress; however, Beijing does not seem to be capable of
dealing
either with the 30-year-old Tibetan uprising or with the challenge of
Muslim
separatists in the undeveloped far west of the country. Against this
background
much of the Chinese leaders' opposition to liberalization may be
attributed to
the fear--which is certainly not unfounded--that the outcome may be
anarchy of
the kind that all but destroyed China between 1911 and 1949.[26]
Finally, in Latin America the ability of the state to
guarantee internal law
and order has, given the lack of a proper technological infrastructure
and the
immense gaps between rich and poor, always been in doubt. While some
parts of
the continent, such as Chile, are making good progress toward
modernization,
many others are clearly lagging behind and may be becoming less orderly
rather
than more. To adduce just two examples that have made headlines during
the last
few months, the government of Mexico has lost control over the southern
part of
the country, whereas that of Brazil is even now using the army in an
attempt to
reconquer its own former capital of Rio de Janeiro. In still other
places it is
the druglords who exercise de facto power. In countries where repeated
assassinations of public officials take place, there can be no
expectation for
the rule of law or the kind of stability necessary for economic growth.
What makes these facts all the more disturbing is that,
so far from remaining
limited to Third World countries, the disorder seems to be spreading.
The chaos
that overtook Armenia, Azerbaijan, Chechnya, Georgia, Moldavia,
Tajikistan, and
Yugoslavia following the collapse of communist rule is well known;
current
conditions in these countries resemble those of the Hundred Years War
(1337-1453) more than they do anything that we would expect from a
well-ordered
modern state. Nor, to judge by the experience of Spain in the Basque
country and
of Britain in Northern Ireland (to say nothing of the recent Tokyo
poison gas
attack and the Oklahoma City bombing), does it appear that First World
countries
are in principle immune to threats of this kind. Many of them are
challenged by
organizations which, whatever their goals, are capable of commanding
fanatical
loyalties and unleashing them against the state; these organizations,
incidentally, often take better care of their members than the state
does.
Attempting to deal with nongovernmental organizations
resorting to violence,
many modern states have found themselves in a quandary. On the one hand
their
most important weapons and weapon systems--including not just nuclear
ones but
most conventional ones as well--are clearly too powerful and
indiscriminate to
be of much use against those groups. On the other hand, should they use
the
terrorists' own methods against them, there exists the clear danger
that they
will turn into terrorists themselves. Under these circumstances many
First World
governments have chosen to diddle. They counter the challenge without
much
resolution and pretend that since the number of casualties is often
smaller than
that which results from ordinary motor traffic, the problem is merely a
nuisance. Others have given way and decentralized, as Spain did in the
case of
Catalonia; or else they are even now preparing to share control over
some of
their provinces with others, as are the British in Northern Ireland.
Meanwhile, from the White House to 10 Downing Street,
the residences of
presidents and prime ministers as well as entire government quarters
have been
transformed into fortresses. Private security has turned into a growth
industry
par excellence; in the United States alone it is said to employ 1.6
million
people (as many as the number of active troops) and to cost $52 billion
a year,
far more than all US police departments combined.[27] Feeling
themselves
exposed, more and more individuals and corporations are either renting
protection or setting up their own. While one does not want to
exaggerate the
problem, unquestionably all of this is symptomatic of the state's
faltering
ability to hold on to its monopoly over violence--or, in plain words,
to protect
its citizens' lives and property.
Part V. The Outlook
At a time when new states are being born almost daily,
paradoxically the fate
of the state appears sealed. The growth in numbers may itself be a sign
of
decay; what everybody has is worth little or nothing. Furthermore, far
from
safeguarding their hard-won sovereignty, most new states do not even
wait until
they have been properly established before they start looking for ways
to
integrate with their neighbors. A good example is provided by that
unique
political construct, the Commonwealth of Independent States. Another is
the
eventual Palestinian state. Its leaders are even now talking of
cooperation with
Israel, Jordan, and Egypt--in fact with anyone who can help them
transcend the
limits of their own people's small size.
Contrary to the fears of George Orwell in 1984,
modern technology, in
the form of nuclear weapons on the one hand and unprecedented means for
communication and transportation on the other, has not resulted in the
establishment of unshakable totalitarian dictatorships. Instead of
thought
control we have CNN and, which many regimes consider almost as
dangerous, Aaron
Spelling; instead of unpersons, Amnesty International. The net effect
has been
to make governments lose power in favor of organizations that are not
sovereign
and are not states.
Some of these organizations stand above the state--for
example, the European
Common Market, the West European Union, and, above all, the United
Nations,
which since the Gulf War has begun to play a role akin to that of the
medieval
popes in authorizing or prohibiting a state from waging international
war.
Others are of a completely different kind, such as international
bodies,
multinational corporations, the media, and various terrorist
organizations some
of which can barely be told apart from gangs of ordinary criminals.
What they
all have in common is that they either assume some of the functions of
the state
or manage to escape its control. All also have this in common: being
either much
larger than states or without geographical borders, they are better
positioned
to take advantage of recent developments in transportation and
communications.
The result is that their power seems to be growing while that of the
state
declines.
To sum up, the 300-year period that opened at Westphalia
and during which the
state was the most important organization in which people lived--first
in
Europe, then in other places--is coming to an end. Nobody knows the
significance
of the transition from a system of sovereign, territorial, legally
equal states
to one that takes greater cognizance of the new realities; it is likely
to be
eventful and, as is already the case in many places, quite possibly
bloody.
Still, it is worth recalling that the state's most remarkable products
to date
have been Hiroshima and Auschwitz; the former could never have been
built by any
organization but a state (and the most powerful one, at that), whereas
the
latter was above all an exercise in bureaucratic management.[28]
Whatever the
future may bring, it cannot be much worse than the past. For those who
regret
and fear the passing away of the world with which we are familiar, let
that be
their consolation.
NOTES
1. Bruce D. Porter, War and the Rise of the State
(New York: Free
Press, 1994).
2. For some figures see P. Flora, ed., State, Economy
and Society in
Western Europe, 1875-1975 (London: 1983) vol. 1, part iv, p. 441:
also Paul
Kennedy, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (New York:
Random House,
1987), p. 153.
3. See, e.g., George L. Mosse, The Nationalization
of the Masses(New
York: H. Fertig, 1975); also E. Weber, Peasants into Frenchmen(Stanford,
Calif.: 1976).
4. See Steven B. Smith, "Hegel's Views on War, the
State, and
International Relations," American Political Science Review, 77
(September 1983), 624-32.
5. See above all Vannevar Bush, Modern Arms and Free
Men (New York:
Simon and Schuster, 1949).
6. One of the first to perceive that nuclear weapons
would limit war was
Bernard Brodie in The Absolute Weapon (New Haven, Conn.: Yale
Univ.,
1946). The best discussion of nuclear doctrine from 1945 to the Reagan
years--when attention shifted to disarmament--is Lawrence Friedman,The
Evolution of Nuclear Strategy (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1981).
7. For the way nuclear weapons limited interstate war,
first between major
powers and then increasingly among the rest, see Martin van Creveld,Nuclear
Proliferation and the Future of Conflict (New York: Free Press,
1993).
8. McGeorge Bundy, Danger and Survival: the
Political History of the
Nuclear Weapons (New York: Random House, 1988), p. 616.
9. The most famous inquiry, albeit a non-official one,
was Friedrich Engels, The
Condition of the Working Class in England (St. Albans: 1972;
originally
published 1844).
10. For the rise of the public education system in
Germany, see K. A.
Schleunes, Schooling and Society: The Politics of Education in
Prussia and
Bavaria, 1750-1900 (Oxford: 1989); for an international perspective
on its
role in building the modern state P. Flora, "Die Bildungsentwicklung im
Prozess der Staaten und Nationenbildung," in P. C. Ludz, ed., Soziologie
und Sozialgeschichte (Opladen: 1972).
11. See P. Flora and A. J. Heidenheimer, eds., The
Development of Welfare
States in Europe and America (New Brunswick: 1981); M. Bruce,The
Coming
of the Welfare State (London: Batsford, 1974); and E. Berkowitz and
K.
McQuaid, Creating the Welfare State: The Political Economy of the
Twentieth
Century Reform (Lawrence, Kans.: 1988).
12. For example, France in 1610 had some 25,000
officials, one per 80 in the
population. The United States in 1972 had one in 13, a sixfold
increase, most of
it taking place after 1870.
13. For the state of Britain's nationalized industries
during the 1960s, see
Graham L. Reid and Kevin Allen, Nationalized Industries
(Harmondsworth,
Middlesex: 1970; also, Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1970).
14. For the British side of the story, see R.
Kelf-Cohen, British
Nationalisation 1945-1973 (London: Macmillan, 1973).
15. For the creation of the American welfare state, see
Roger A. Freeman,The
Growth of American Government: A Morphology of the Welfare State(Stanford,
Calif.: Hoover Institution Press, 1975); also N. and B. Gilbert,The
Enabling
State: Modern Welfare Capitalism in America (New York: 1989).
16. The crisis of the welfare state is discussed, for
example, in John Logue,
"Will Success Spoil the Welfare State?" Dissent (Winter 1985).
C. Leaman, The Collapse of Welfare Reform: Political Institution,
Policy and
the Poor in Britain and the US (Lanham, 1986).
17. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, The Philosophy of
Right, trans. T.
M. Knox (Oxford: 1952; originally published 1821), pp. 188f; Max Weber,Economy
and Society, ed. G. Roth and C. Wittiche (New York: 1976;
originally
published 1923), pp. 48ff.
18. In the United States, attacks on bureaucracy started
with the Hoover
Commission Report (Washington, D.C., 1949) and proceeded through J.
Landis'sReport
on the Regulatory Agencies to the President Elect, US (Washington
D.C.,
1960). However, so long as prosperity lasted little was done.
19. For some comparative figures on various countries
see Economist, 4
September 1993, p. 103.
20. In the Gulf, US strategy was almost entirely
dictated by the need to
avoid casualties: Michael R. Gordon and Bernard E. Trainor, The
Generals'
War: the Inside Story of the Conflict of the Gulf (Boston: Little,
Brown,
1995), passim.
21. See H. Innis, Empire and Communications
(Toronto: 1975).
22. For a good introduction to these problems see Beth
V. and Robert M.
Yarbrough, The World Economy, Trade and Finance (3d ed.; Fort
Worth,
Tex.: 1994).
23. For the origins, rise, and fall of the Bretton Woods
system see M. D.
Bordo and B. Eichengreen, eds., A Retrospective on the Bretton
Woods System:
Lessons for International Monetary Reform (Chicago: 1993),
24. Exclusive of East Germany--where 15 million people
regularly watched West
German television--Western radio stations such as RFE, VOA, BBC, and DW
claimed
to have almost 100 million regular listeners in 1989.
25. R. Kaplan, "The Coming Anarchy," Atlantic Monthly,
February 1994, pp. 44-76.
26. Interestingly enough, the language of warlordism is
already making a
comeback; see A. Waldon, "The Warlord: Twentieth Century Chinese
Understanding of Violence, Militarism and Imperialism," American
Historical Review, 96 (October 1991), 1073-1100.
27. Figures from B. Jenkins, "Thoroughly Modern
Sabotage," Worldlink(March-April
1995), 16. For two works on the origins and nature of private security
in the
United Kingdom see N. South, Policing for Profit; The Private
Security Sector
(London: 1982); and I. Will, The Big Brother Society (London:
1983).
28. For the effort involved in building the bomb see
Richard Rhodes,The
Making of the Atomic Bomb (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1986); for
the
Holocaust as an exercise in bureaucracy above all, Raul Hilberg,The
Destruction of the European Jews (Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1961).
Dr. Martin van Creveld is a professor of history at Hebrew University
in
Jerusalem. He received his Ph.D. from the London School of Economics
and has
been a Fellow of War Studies at Kings College, Cambridge. During the
1991-92
school year, he taught at the US Marine Corps Command and Staff College
in
Quantico, Virginia. He is the author of many books, including
Fighting Power:
German and U.S. Performance, 1939-1945; Technology and War;
Command
in War; Supplying War; The Training of Officers: From
Military
Professionalism to Irrelevance; The Transformation of War; Nuclear
Proliferation and the Future of Conflict; andAir Power and
Maneuver
Warfare.
Reviewed 27 August 1997. Please send comments or
corrections to carl_Parameters@conus.army.mil
.
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