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Detection and CountermeasuresMagnetic & Electric Fld Detection & Detectors

Perils of a Democratic Peace

Authors: Michael A. Brookes; NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL MONTEREY CA
 
Abstract: President Clinton has declared that the promotion of democracy is the key to ensuring America's security in the post-Cold War world. This assertion is based upon an international relations theory called the "democratic peace." Expressed simply, it states that democracies are reluctant to engage one another in war; therefore, increasing the number of democracies worldwide will promote peace and, ultimately, America's security. Although it is a seductive theory, the notion of the democratic peace has many pitfalls. The goal of this thesis is to demonstrate that the democratic peace theory is not an appropriate foundation for U.S. national security strategy. First, I establish that "democracy" is not universally desirable. Instead, cultural factors, ethnic nationalism, and economics create imperatives that thwart efforts to develop democracy. Second, I cite the actions of the intelligence services of democratic states against fellow democracies - including espionage, economic espionage, and covert action - to illustrate that peace is not without peril. Ultimately, pursuit of a democratic peace may jeopardize national security because it threatens to entangle the United States in costly foreign interventions. Additionally, the false sense of security it engenders may lull the U.S. into a state of complacency from which it will be unable to recover.

Limitations: APPROVED FOR PUBLIC RELEASE
Description: Master's thesis
Pages: 211
Report Date: SEP 1997
Report Number: A074143
Keywords relating to this report:
*DEMOCRACY
*NATIONAL SECURITY
*PEACETIME
COVERT OPERATIONS
CULTURE
ECONOMICS
ESPIONAGE
GOVERNMENT_FOREIGN_
INTELLIGENCE
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
STRATEGY
THEORY
THESES
UNITED STATES
WARFARE
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