User Contributed Dictionary
Adjective
- Supportive of warlike foreign policy; bellicose; inclined toward
military action.
- The Prime Minister could count on the support of a hawkish majority in Parliament to support the invasion.
- Favouring increasing interest rates; inclined towards
increasing interest rates.
- The Federal Reserve's recent statement on the slowing of inflation was interpreted as hawkish by the market.
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
War Hawk is a term originally used to describe a
member of the
House of Representatives of the
Twelfth Congress of the United
States who advocated waging war against
Great Britain in the War of
1812. The term has evolved into an informal Americanism
used to describe a political stance of preparedness for aggression,
by diplomatic and ultimately military means, against others to
improve the standing of their own government, country, or
organization. Thus the hawk
(a bird of
prey), and is usually contrasted with the term dove, which alludes to the more
peaceful bird.
War Hawks of 1812
The War Hawks in the Twelfth Congress were mostly
young Democratic-Republicans
who had been imbued with the ideals of the American
Revolution as youths, and were primarily from southern
and western states. (The American West then consisted of Kentucky, Tennessee, and
Ohio, as well
as territories in the Old
Northwest, which did not yet have votes in Congress.) The War
Hawks advocated going to war against Britain for a variety of
reasons, mostly related to the interference of the Royal Navy in
American shipping, which the War Hawks believed hurt the American
economy and injured American prestige. War Hawks from the western
states also believed that the British were instigating
American Indians on the frontier to attack American
settlements, and so the War Hawks called for an invasion of British
Canada to
punish Britain and end this threat.
The term "War Hawk" was coined by the prominent
Virginia
Congressman John
Randolph of Roanoke, a staunch opponent of entry into the war.
There was, therefore, never any "official" roster of War Hawks; as
historian Donald Hickey notes, "Scholars differ over who (if
anyone) ought to be classified as a War Hawk." However, most
historians use the term to describe about a dozen members of the
Twelfth Congress. The leader of this group was
Speaker of the House Henry Clay of
Kentucky. John C.
Calhoun of South
Carolina was another notable War Hawk. Both of these men became
major players in American politics for decades. Other men
traditionally identified as War Hawks included Richard
Mentor Johnson of Kentucky,
William Lowndes of South
Carolina, Langdon
Cheves of South
Carolina, Felix Grundy
of Tennessee, and
William W.
Bibb of Georgia.
The older members of the Party, led by United
States President James
Madison and
Secretary of the Treasury Albert
Gallatin tried unsuccessfully to defeat the War Hawks movement.
They felt the United States was not prepared for war.
Modern usage
The term War Hawk (or warhawk or hawk) has often been used since the War of 1812 to describe politicians or other persons with "hawkish" positions on warfare. It is sometimes extended to describe a tough stance on other issues, such as "deficit hawk" for someone who puts a high priority on reducing the United States federal budget deficit. A pejorative variation is Chickenhawk, used to belittle someone who advocates war but avoided military service themselves.References
hawkish in Japanese: タカ派
hawkish in Finnish: Haukka (politiikka)
hawkish in Chinese: 鹰派