1 / 9

The Bipolarity of the Cold War created a period of peace and stability

The Bipolarity of the Cold War created a period of peace and stability. WAR. Michael J Hinze: “Civil Wars are not wars!” Thus on the international level, intrastate conflicts with more than 2,000 casualties are termed wars. On the contrary, peace is defined as a mutual harmony between states.

krista
Download Presentation

The Bipolarity of the Cold War created a period of peace and stability

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Bipolarity of the Cold War created a period of peace and stability

  2. WAR • Michael J Hinze: “Civil Wars are not wars!” • Thus on the international level, intrastate conflicts with more than 2,000 casualties are termed wars. • On the contrary, peace is defined as a mutual harmony between states.

  3. Mearsheimer “Why we will soon miss the Cold War” The peace in Europe since 1945… as flowered from three factors: the bipolar distribution of military power in the continent; the rough military equality between the polar powers, the United States and the Soviet Union; and the ritualistically deplored fact that each of these superpowers is armed with a large nuclear arsenal(Mearsheimer 45 )

  4. We know that from 1900 to 1945 some 50 million Europeans were killed in wars that were great part by the instability of this state system. We also know that since 1945 only some 15,000 Europeans have been killed in wars… (Mearsheimer 45)

  5. Levels of Analysis • State Level • State concerned for own safety; perseverance of political, economical, and social aspects of the society. • Relative Gains • International Level • MAD, Space Race, Arms Race • Relative Gains

  6. MORE THAN 2,000 casualties During Cold War (1945-1989) 16,482,827 Not Cold War (1901-1945; 1989-2000) 99, 963,000 War is statistically more likely in a multipolar system than it is in a bipolar one. Wars in a multipolar world that involve only minor powers or only one major power are not likely to be as devastating as a conflict between two major powers (Mearsheimer 46).

  7. Deterrece Nuclear organizations are a large factor in bipolar organizations, with the debate hovering over if nuclear weapons creates peace or destroys it. The space race is an example of this, with the power the USSR held when it beat the USA in launching Sputnik. Nuclear weapons can be said to be a powerful force for peace. Deterrence is most likely to hold when the cost and risk of going to war are clear and explicit. Nuclear weapons further bolster peace by moving power relations among states toward equality. States that posses nuclear deterrents can stand up to one another… as long as both sides have an assured destruction capability (Mearsheimer 48).

  8. Mearsheimer The prospects for peace… are affected by the relative military strength of those major states. Bipolar and multipolar systems both are likely to be more peaceful when power is distributed equally in them. Power inequalities invite war, because they increase an aggressor’s prospects for victory on the battlefield. (Mearsheimer 47)

  9. The Bipolarity of the Cold War created a period of peace and stability

More Related