Pax
Democritus?
by
Jason Gonella
by Jason Gonella
There
is a lot of talk on the internet boards in support of the United
States invasion of Iraq based on the theory of Pax Democritus, or
the Democratic Peace Theory. The theory is that since democracies
do not wage war against democracies, if a democracy were to be established
in Iraq, Iraq would no longer be any threat to the United States.
The theory is the work of a Professor
R. J. Rummel, based largely on the POLITY
Data Set. The POLITY Data Set rates various countries on how
close to a liberal democracy they are, giving them a score between
10 for liberal democracies and –10 for illiberal non-democracies.
One
problem is a logical one; because an event hasn’t happened doesn’t
mean it won’t happen. Every scientific theory is only as valid as
its next test, leading to the joke in every Physics I class about
the physicist who drops a book every day to see if that would be
the day the book doesn’t fall. If it doesn’t fall, the physicist
will win the Nobel Prize. This does nothing to disprove the theory,
as every theory in science, from Gravity to Relativity to Evolution
is accepted based on the preponderance of data and the absence of
contradictory data.
But
is it true that two democracies have not gone to war with each other?
If it can be shown that two democracies have gone to war with each
other, that will disprove the theory. Unfortunately, every time
an event is shown that can disprove the theory, advocates of the
theory are quick to try to ignore or explain away that new data.
In science, contradictory data demands attention; data exclusion
is the hallmark of bad science.
Attempts
to disprove the theory have run afoul of several problems of definition.
The first of which is determining when a country is a democracy.
Many examples of democracies at war are resolved to "Ah, but
that one isn’t a democracy." It’s a classic example of the
No True Scotsman fallacy. "No Scotsman puts sugar on his porridge."
"My uncle Angus puts sugar on his porridge." "Ah,
but no true Scotsman puts sugar on his porridge." In
cases of a war between democracies, proponents of the theory are
quick to discount one of the participants as "not a democracy."
A
subset of this problem is the definition of liberal democracy, an
even more ephemeral concept. The POLITY Data Set rates countries
not on the sole criterion of whether or not they are democratic.
The highest scores go to liberal democracies. Intermediate scores
go to liberal non-democracies and illiberal democracies. The lowest
scores go to illiberal non-democracies. Some proponents of the theory
try to talk about the liberal democracies only, but that severely
limits the discussion. In 1816, the year the Data Set begins, the
liberal democracies of that era all had slavery within either their
own or their colony’s borders. Universal suffrage was not well known
either. In fact, before WWI, it is hard to say that by today’s standards
any liberal democracies existed. After WWII there exists the special
case of the liberal democracies of the world being allied against
a mutual external threat, so if the case is limited to liberal democracies,
there is too little data to reach a conclusion.
The
dataset begins on the year 1816, and therefore the theory states
that since 1816 two democracies have not gone to war with each other.
1816 is a convenient number because 1815 was the end of the Napoleonic
Era and therefore the beginning of the modern world. After the fall
of Napoleon, liberal ideas spread across Europe. Starting at the
year 1816 excludes from the data set all conflicts that occurred
before 1816.
The
second problem is the theory’s definition of "war," which
states that there must be at least 1000 deaths. Any conflict with
fewer that 1000 deaths is considered not to be a war. According
to Prof. Rummel, a threshold needed to be established, but this
is a case of the Fallacy of the Beard – when can you say someone
really has a beard? Was it a war when the United States invaded
Haiti? Panama? How about the bombing of Libya? None of those were
wars as defined by the theory.
Another
aspect of the definition of "war" is that internal conflicts
are not counted. Civil Wars, Wars of Secession, guerilla resistance,
and any other conflict contained within the border of a single country
are not counted.
While
there is a very
comprehensive list of democracies at war with each other, I’ll
concentrate on five specific examples and why they are excluded.
The
first example is the 1812 war between the United States and Great
Britain. Advocates of the theory insist that the dataset starts
at 1816. The problem is that neither the United States nor Great
Britain were significantly different in 1816 than they were in 1812.
Both are listed as democratic in 1816, so both should be listed
in 1812. The war of 1812 is excluded because it occurred before
1816. Professor Rummel instead excludes this example by saying that
in 1812 Great Britain was not a democracy, even though for that
time only the United States was more of a democracy.
The
second example is the War Between the States in America. Both the
United States of America and the Confederate States of America had
nearly identical constitutions, and both had their own currencies,
elected officials, scheduled elections, and foreign policy. But
the Democratic Peace Theory insists that the War Between the States
doesn’t count because it was an internal conflict. The Confederate
States of America isn’t even given a POLITY rating, although it
is likely that its score would be the same as that of United States
since it was, for it’s time, very liberal and democratic. The citizens
of both the U.S.A. and the C.S.A. regarded the C.S.A. as democratic.
The
third example is World War One. While many of the participants were
not democracies, such as Tsarist Russia or the Ottoman Empire, there
are two participants that beg for attention: Great Britain and Germany.
Advocates of the Democratic Peace theory have to work hard to exclude
Germany under the Kaiser as not being one of the world’s democracies,
because this is the biggest example of the theory failing.
Germany
is considered to be "not a Democracy" because it was ruled
by a monarch and a parliament, just like Great Britain. It is true
that the monarch had actual powers, just like in Great Britain.
No definition can easily exclude one and include the other. Germany
is given a much lower rating in polity (a 2 instead of an 8) but
it should be remembered that this theory discusses democracies,
not liberal democracies. There exists no reason to exclude this
example.
The
fourth example is the Ruhr invasion of Germany by France. While
advocates of the Theory exclude Kaiser Germany because it wasn’t
democratic enough, advocate of the theory exclude the invasion by
Third Republic France of Weimar Germany as it not being enough of
a war. In order for any act of war to be counted, it must result
in at least 1000 deaths. Professor Rummel doesn’t even mention this
incident in his discussion of the theory.
For
those not familiar with the Ruhr invasion, the story is sad and
simple. The French government was unhappy with the enforcement of
the Treaty of Versailles, and was also unhappy that Germany wasn’t
punished enough. So French troops entered the Ruhr area and declared
it a separate state, complete with a separate government supported
by French troops. After pleading to the League of Nations, the German
government threatened war if French troops did not leave the Ruhr.
The British government informed the French government that if war
broke out, Britain would not support France this time. The French
government got the message, and withdrew troops. The independent
Ruhr government collapsed, the quisling leaders were executed, and
Ruhr rejoined Germany.
The
fifth example occurs during World War Two, with the fighting between
Finland and Great Britain. This is the one that proponents of the
theory do not want to examine. Some try to say that the Finnish
were not fighting for the Nazis but only against the Soviets. However,
the British bombed Finland and sunk Finnish merchant ships in the
Baltic Sea. Finnish deaths did come to 1000 military and 2000 civilian,
but that is the sum of both fronts.
The
first example doesn’t count because it was before 1816.
The
second example doesn’t count because it was a civil war.
The
third example doesn’t count because Germany wasn’t really
a democracy.
The
fourth example doesn’t count because it wasn’t really a war.
The
fifth example doesn’t count because, even though Britain bombed
Finnish properties and territories, causing casualties, they supposedly
weren’t at war with each other, just each other’s allies.
Five
examples, and in each case proponents of the theory insist that
the examples don’t count. The data set is modified to eliminate
counter examples. In science, that is called "fixing the data"
and is frowned upon. These five examples either have to be eliminated,
or the theory is disproven. It is not safe to say that a successful
democratizing of Iraq will result in the neutralization of a threat,
as democracies have indeed gone to war with each other.
August
31, 2005
Jason
Gonella [send him mail]
is
an engineer, chair of the Antelope
Valley Libertarian Party and owner of the Gothic
Libertarian email list.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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