Dictionary Definition
war
Noun
1 the waging of armed conflict against an enemy;
"thousands of people were killed in the war" [syn: warfare]
2 a legal state created by a declaration of war
and ended by official declaration during which the international
rules of war apply; "war was declared in November but actual
fighting did not begin until the following spring" [syn: state of
war] [ant: peace]
3 an active struggle between competing entities;
"a price war"; "a war of wits"; "diplomatic warfare" [syn: warfare]
4 a concerted campaign to end something that is
injurious; "the war on poverty"; "the war against crime" v : make
or wage war [ant: make peace]
[also: warring, warred]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Late etyl ang wyrre, from Old Northern French werre ( = etyl fro guerre), from etyl frk werra, ultimately from .Pronunciation
- /woʊr/, /wɔː(r)/
- /wO:(r)/
- Rhymes: -ɔː(r)
Noun
- A conflict involving the organized use of arms and physical force between countries or other large-scale armed groups. The warring parties hold territory, which they can win or lose; and each has a leading person or organization which can surrender, or collapse, thus ending the war.
- In the context of "rhetorical": A campaign against something. E.g., the war on drugs is a campaign against the use of narcotic drugs; the war on terror is a campaign against terrorist crime.
- In the context of "by analogy|uncountable": A particular card game for two players.
Antonyms
Derived terms
- civil war
- cold war
- declaration of war
- go to war
- perpetual war
- prisoner of war, P.O.W. or POW
- state of war
- undeclared war
- wage war
- war between the sexes, etc. Jocular.
- war bonnet
- war bride
- war chest
- war child
- war crime
- war criminal
- war cry
- war game
- war paint or warpaint
- war party
- war room
- war torn
- war zone
- warfare
- warhead
- warlord
- warmonger
- warpath
- warring
- warrior
- wartime
- world war
- dynastic war
- World War One
- World War Two
Translations
war
- Albanian: luftë
- Arabic: (ħarb)
- Armenian: պատերազմ (paterazm)
- Belarusian: вайна
- Bosnian: rat
- Breton: brezel
- Catalan: guerra
- Chinese: 战争, 戰爭 (zhànzhèng)
- Chiricahua: dishbá (I start off to war)
- Croatian: rat
- Czech: válka , vojna (archaic)
- Danish: krig
- Dutch: oorlog , krijg
- Esperanto: milito
- Estonian: sõda
- Finnish: sota
- French: guerre
- Georgian: ომი (omi)
- German: Krieg
- Greek: πόλεμος (pólemos)
- Guarani: ñorairõ
- Hebrew: מִלְחָמָה (milkhama)
- Hindi: युद्ध (yuddh) , जंग (ja.ng)
- Hungarian: háború
- Icelandic: stríð , styrjöld
- Ido: milito
- Indonesian: perang
- Interlingua: guerra, bello
- Irish: cogadh
- Italian: guerra
- Japanese: 戦 (いくさ, ikusa), 戦争 (せんそう, sensō)
- Jèrriais: dgèrre
- Khmer: (jombəng), (songkrīəm)
- Korean: 전쟁 (戰爭, jeonjaeng)
- Kurdish: ceng , şerr
- Latin: bellum
- Latvian: karš (sometimes kaŗš)
- trreq Lithuanian
- Malay: perang, peperangan
- Maltese: gwerra
- trreq Maori
- Nahuatl: yaoyotl
- Northern Sami: soahti
- Norwegian: krig
- Old English: wīġ
- Pashto: (jang)
- Persian: (jang)
- Polish: wojna
- Portuguese: guerra
- Romanian: război , răzbel (archaic)
- Russian: война (vojná)
- Scottish Gaelic: cogadh
- Serbian:
- Sindhi: (jangi)
- trreq Sinhala
- Slovak: vojna
- Slovene: vojna
- Spanish: guerra
- Swahili: vita (noun 8)
- Swedish: krig (1,3), inbördeskrig (2)
- Tagalog: gera, gyera, digmaan
- Tamil: போர் (pōr)
- Telugu: యుద్ధం (yuddhaM) (1,3); అంతర్యుద్ధం (aMtaryuddhaM) (2)
- Thai: (sŏng-kraam)
- Tupinambá: marana
- Turkish: savaş, muharebe (obsolete), harp (obsolete), cenk (obsolete)
- Urdu: (yuddh) , (ja.ng)
- Vietnamese: chiến tranh
- Welsh: rhyfel g Welsh
- West Frisian: oarloch, kriich
- Yiddish: מלחמה (milkhome) , קריג (krig)
See also
Verb
- To engage in conflict with a foe.
- His emotions war with his intellect, making him conflicted.
Anagrams
Breton
Preposition
warDutch
Noun
German
Pronunciation
Verb form
war- past of sein, was
Kurdish
Noun
warOld High German
Adjective
wārTocharian B
Noun
Extensive Definition
War is any large scale, violent conflict. The conduct of war
extends along a continuum, from the almost universal tribal
warfare that began well before recorded human history, to wars
between city states,
nations, or empires. By extension, the word
is now used for any struggle, as in the war on
drugs or the war on
terror. It was once thought humans were the only creatures who
fought wars, but closer observation of animal life has discovered
wars between ant colonies
and chimpanzee
tribes.
A group of combatants and their support is called
an army on land, a navy at sea, and air force in
the air. Wars may be prosecuted simultaneously in one or more
different theatres.
Within each theatre, there may be one or more consecutive military
campaigns. A military campaign includes not only fighting but
also intelligence, troop movements, supplies, propaganda, and other
components. Continuous conflict is traditionally called a battle, although this terminology
is not always fed to conflicts involving aircraft, missiles or
bombs alone, in the absence of ground troops or naval forces. A
civil
war is the use of force to resolve internal differences.
Factors leading to war
A war may begin following an official declaration of war but undeclared wars are common. Any general theory of war must explain not only war but also peace. It must explain not only the wars fought in almost every generation in almost every country in the world, but also the rare instances of extended relative peace, including the Pax Romana and the peace in Europe since World War II.Motivations for war may be different for those
ordering the war than for those undertaking the war. For a state to
prosecute a war it must have the support of its leadership, its
military forces, and the population. For example, in the Third Punic
War, Rome's leaders may
have wished to make war with Carthage for the
purpose of eliminating a resurgent rival, while the individual
soldiers may have been motivated by a wish to end the practice of
child sacrifice. Since
many people are involved, a war may acquire a life of its own --
from the confluences of many different motivations.
In Why Nations Go to War, by Darian Domer, the
author points out that both sides will claim that morality
justifies their fight. He also states that the rationale for
beginning a war depends on an overly optimistic assessment of the
outcome of hostilities (casualties and costs), and on
mis-perceptions of the enemy's intentions. In War
Before Civilization, Lawrence
H. Keeley, a professor at the
University of Illinois, says that approximately 90-95% of known
societies engaged in at least occasional warfare, and many fought
constantly.
Psychological theories
Psychologists such as E.F.M. Durban and John Bowlby have argued that human beings are inherently violent. While this violence is repressed in normal society, it needs the occasional outlet provided by war. This combines with other notions such as displacement, where a person transfers their grievances into bias and hatred against other ethnic groups, nations, or ideologies. While these theories may have some explanatory value about why wars occur, they do not explain when or how they occur. Nor do they explain the existence of certain human cultures completely devoid of war. If the innate psychology of the human mind is unchanging, these variations are inconsistent. A solution adapted to this problem by militarists such as Franz Alexander is that peace does not really exist. Periods that are seen as peaceful are actually periods of preparation for a later war or when war is suppressed by a state of great power, such as the Pax Britannica.If war is innate to human nature, as is
presupposed by many psychological theories, then there is little
hope of ever escaping it. Psychologists have argued that while
human temperament
allows wars to occur, this only happens when mentally unbalanced
people are in control of a nation. This school of thought argues
leaders that seek war such as Napoleon, Hitler, and Stalin were mentally
abnormal, but fails to explain the thousands of free and presumably
sane people who wage wars at their behest.
A distinct branch of the psychological theories
of war are the arguments based on evolutionary
psychology. This school tends to see war as an extension of
animal behaviour, such as territoriality and competition. However, while
war has a natural cause, the development of technology has
accelerated human destructiveness to a level that is irrational and
damaging to the species. Humans have similar instincts to that of a
chimpanzee but
overwhelmingly more powerful. The earliest advocate of this theory
was Konrad
Lorenz. These theories have been criticised by scholars such as
John G.
Kennedy, who argue that the organised, sustained war of humans
differs more than just technologically from the territorial fights
between animals. Ashley Montagu strongly denies such universalistic
instinctual arguments, pointing out that social factors and
childhood socialisation are important in determining the nature and
presence of warfare. Thus while human aggression may be a universal
occurrence, warfare is not and would appear to have been a
historical invention, associated with certain types of human
societies.
The Italian psychoanalyst Franco Fornari, a
follower of Melanie Klein, thought that war was the paranoid or
projective “elaboration” of mourning. (Fornari 1975). Our nation
and country play an unconscious maternal role in our feelings, as
expressed in the term “motherland.” Fornari thought that war and
violence develop out of our “love need”: our wish to preserve and
defend the sacred object to which we are attached, namely our early
mother and our fusion with her. For the adult, nations are the
sacred objects that generate warfare. Fornari focused upon
sacrifice as the essence of war: the astonishing willingness of
human beings to die for their country, to give over their bodies to
their nation. Fornari called war the “spectacular establishment of
a general human situation whereby death assumes absolute value.” We
are sure that the ideas for which we die must be true, because
“death becomes a demonstrative process.”
Sociological theories
Sociology has long been very concerned with the origins of war, and many thousands of theories have been advanced, many of them contradictory. Sociology has thus divided into a number of schools. One, the Primat der Innenpolitik (Primacy of Domestic Politics) school based on the works of Eckart Kehr and Hans-Ulrich Wehler, sees war as the product of domestic conditions, with only the target of aggression being determined by international realities. Thus World War I was not a product of international disputes, secret treaties, or the balance of power but a product of the economic, social, and political situation within each of the states involved.This differs from the traditional Primat der
Außenpolitik (Primacy of Foreign Politics) approach of Carl
von Clausewitz and Leopold
von Ranke that argues it is the decisions of statesmen and the
geopolitical
situation that leads to war.
Demographic theories
Demographic theories can be grouped into two classes, Malthusian theories and youth bulge theories.Malthusian theories see expanding population and
scarce resources as a source of violent conflict.
Pope Urban
II in 1095, on the eve of the First
Crusade, wrote, "For this land which you now inhabit, shut in
on all sides by the sea and the mountain peaks, is too narrow for
your large population; it scarcely furnishes food enough for its
cultivators. Hence it is that you murder and devour one another,
that you wage wars, and that many among you perish in civil strife.
Let hatred, therefore, depart from among you; let your quarrels
end. Enter upon the road to the Holy Sepulcher; wrest that land
from a wicked race, and subject it to yourselves."
This is one of the earliest expressions of what
has come to be called the Malthusian theory of war, in which wars
are caused by expanding populations and limited resources. Thomas
Malthus (1766–1834) wrote that populations always
increase until they are limited by war, disease, or famine.
This theory is thought by Malthusians to account
for the relative decrease in wars during the past fifty years,
especially in the developed
world, where advances in agriculture have made it possible to
support a much larger population than was formerly the case, and
where birth
control has dramatically slowed the increase in
population.
Youth bulge
theory differs significantly from malthusian theories. Its
adherents see a combination of large male youth cohorts (as
graphically represented as a "youth bulge" in a population
pyramid) with a lack of regular, peaceful employment
opportunities as a risk pool for violence. While malthusian
theories focus on a disparity between a growing population and
available natural resources, youth bulge theory focuses on a
disparity between non-inheriting, "excess" young males and
available social positions within the existing social system of
division of labour.
Contributors to the development of youth bulge
theory include French sociologist Gaston
Bouthoul,, U.S. sociologist Jack A.
Goldstone,, U.S. political scientist Gary Fuller,,
and German sociologist Gunnar
Heinsohn. Samuel
Huntington has modified his Clash
of Civilizations theory by using youth bulge theory as its
foundation:
-
-
- ''"I don't think Islam is any more violent than any other religions, and I suspect if you added it all up, more people have been slaughtered by Christians over the centuries than by Muslims. But the key factor is the demographic factor. Generally speaking, the people who go out and kill other people are males between the ages of 16 and 30.
-
-
-
- During the 1960s, 70s and 80s there were high birth rates in the Muslim world, and this has given rise to a huge youth bulge. But the bulge will fade. Muslim birth rates are going down; in fact, they have dropped dramatically in some countries. Islam did spread by the sword originally, but I don't think there is anything inherently violent in Muslim theology."''
-
Youth Bulge
theories represent a relatively recent development but seem to have
become more influential in guiding U.S. foreign policy and military
strategy as both Goldstone and Fuller have acted as consultants to
the U.S. Government. CIA Inspector General John L.
Helgerson referred to youth bulge theory in his 2002 report
"The National Security Implications of Global Demographic
Change".
According to Heinsohn, who has proposed youth
bulge theory in its most generalized form, a youth bulge occurs
when 30 to 40 percent of the males of a nation belong to the
"fighting age" cohorts from 15 to 29 years of age. It will follow
periods with total
fertility rates as high as 4-8 children per woman with a 15-29
year delay. A total fertility rate of 2,1 children born by a woman
during her lifetime represents a situation of in which the son will
replace the father, the daughter the mother. Thus, a total
fertility rate of 2,1 represents replacement level, while anything
below represents a sub-replacement
fertility rate leading to population
decline. Total fertility rates above 2,1 will lead to population
growth and to a youth bulge.
A total fertility rate of 4-8 children per mother implies 2-4 sons
per mother. Consequently, one father has to leave not 1, but 2 to 4
social positions (jobs) to give all his sons a perspective for
life, which is usually hard to achieve. Since respectable positions
cannot be increased at the same speed as food, textbooks and
vaccines, many "angry young men" find themselves in a situation
that tends to escalate their adolescent anger into violence: they
are
- demographically superfluous,
- might be out of work or stuck in a menial job, and
- often have no access to a legal sex life before a career can earn them enough to provide for a family.
The combination of these stress factors according
to Heinsohn usually heads for one of six different exits:
- Violent Crime
- Emigration ("non violent colonization")
- Rebellion or putsch
- Civil war and/or revolution
- Genocide (to take over the positions of the slaughtered)
- Conquest (violent colonization, frequently including genocide abroad).
Religions and
ideologies are seen
as secondary factors that are being used to legitimate violence,
but will not lead to violence by themselves if no youth bulge is
present. Consequently, youth bulge theorists see both past
"Christianist" European colonialism and imperialism and today's
"Islamist" civil unrest and terrorism as results of high birth
rates producing youth bulges. While during the period of European
colonialism, European countries had high birthrates and huge youth
bulges that fueled colonialist expansion, today Afghanistan,
which has a total
fertility rate of 6 children per woman and an estimated
unemployment rate of 40%, would represent a typical youth bulge
country. The Gaza Strip can
be seen as another example of youth-bulge-driven violence,
especially if compared to Lebanon which is
geographically close, yet remarkably more peaceful. Among prominent
historical events that have been linked to the existence of youth
bulges is the role played by the historically large youth cohorts
in the rebellion and revolution waves of early modern Europe,
including French
Revolution of 1789, and the importance of economic depression
hitting the largest German youth cohorts ever in explaining the
rise of Nazism in Germany in
the 1930s. The 1994 Rwandan
Genocide has also been analyzed as following a massive youth
bulge.
While the security implications of rapid
population growth have been well known since the completion of the
National Security Study Memorandum 200 in 1974, neither the
U.S. nor the WHO have effectively implemented the recommended
preventive measures to control population growth to avert the
terror threat they are now facing. Prominent demographer Stephen
D. Mumford attributes this to the influence of the Catholic
Church.
Youth Bulge theory has been subjected to
statistical analysis by the World Bank,
Population Action International, and the Berlin Institute for
Population and Development. Detailed demographic data for most
countries is available at the international database of the
United States Census Bureau.
Youth bulge theories have been criticized as
leading to racial, gender and age discrimination.
Evolutionary psychology theories
Wars are seen as the result of evolved psychological traits that are turned on by either being attacked or by a population perception of a bleak future. The theory accounts for the IRA going out of business, but leads to a dire view of current wars. Studies of endemic violence and tribal warfare in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea demonstrate that intertribal warfare is highest in those parts of the country where population densities are greatest and pressure on land and other resources is thereby maximized. Similarly, evidence of organized warfare in the Ancient World, in pre-dynastic Mesopotamia and in Ancient Egypt, suggests that organized systematic warfare only appeared after population densities had increased, and there was increased pressure upon limited ecological resources.(These ideas above are actually old International
Relations ideas and are not based on Evolutionary Psychology at
all, in fact they are not consistent with the Theory of Evolution
and so cannot be Evolutionary Psychology theories. A central tenet
of the Theory of Evolution is that populations quickly fill their
ecological niches, creating selective pressure for the most fit. In
effect, a "bleak future" is a given over evolutionary time, in fact
this insight of Malthus's lead Darwin to the Theory of Evolution,
and it is maladaptive to wait until you perceive it coming, when
your attack will be anticipated. It is also maladaptive to not take
the opportunity to gain habitat and women by attacking your
neighbor when they are weak. When the bleak future arrives they may
be strong or have new allies. Maladaptive behaviors cannot be
selected for. So the ideas above do not mesh with the theory which
is central to Evolutionary Psychology. Nor do they fit with the
anthropological record which Evolutionary Psychology always seeks
to corroborate its ideas with.)
The book "The Most Dangerous Animal: Human Nature
and the Origins of War" by David Livingstone Smith is much more
relevant for those seeking a view generated by the Evolutionary
Psychology methodology.
The paper "Altruism and War" which can be found
here is a work
written for an academic audience which takes an Evolutionary
Psychology viewpoint on war as well, attempting to describe for the
first time the entire psychological process from commitment to
group to willingness to kill members of another group on one's
groups behalf.
A critical aspect of all true EP based theories
of war is the understanding that most or all of the proximate
causes of war are little more than excuses that our minds need to
fabricate to justify their actions. These justifications take
universal forms at every level of human group conflict. They can
include: 1)The assertion that the other group presents a threat
which must be defended against, 2)The assertion that the other
group has provoked the conflict, 3)The assertion that the other
group has committed acts which violate morality (such as stealing
from your group, raping women, taking premature babies out of
incubators), 4)Descriptions of the other group as being threat
animals or pathogens (snakes, bears, jackals, cancers, rats, and so
on), 5)Asserting that the other is inherently evil, 6)Asserting
that the other group are insane or lead by the insane. The other
inherent pattern is that positive group definitional attributes are
seen as being the opposite of the enemy or rival group.
Evolutionary Psychology hypothesis on war also
importantly show that the decision making process is rarely
rational, that in fact human belief and decision making processes
are often not rational on the whole.
Of course, one side sometimes is simply defending
itself. But more often both sides go through a similar and linked
psychological process of justification, as above, and an escalating
cycle of verbal and then violent action. Such escalation takes
place as an effect of our evolved program to punitively punish the
other for their transgression through acts which attempt to
dissuade them from further transgression, by going well beyond
simple tit-for-tat.
Looking for rational causes, as is common in most
hypothesis and even in the above mentioned notions of perceived
bleak futures, is not the path to understanding war.
Rationalist theories
Rationalist theories of war assume that both sides to a potential war are rational, which is to say that each side wants to get the best possible outcome for itself for the least possible loss of life and property to its own side. Given this assumption, if both countries knew in advance how the war would turn out, it would be better for both of them to just accept the post-war outcome without having to actually pay the costs of fighting the war. This is based on the notion, generally agreed to by almost all scholars of war since Carl von Clausewitz, that wars are reciprocal, that all wars require both a decision to attack and also a decision to resist attack. Rationalist theory offers three reasons why some countries cannot find a bargain and instead resort to war: issue indivisibility, information asymmetry with incentive to deceive, and the inability to make credible commitments.Issue indivisibility occurs when the two parties
cannot avoid war by bargaining because the thing over which they
are fighting cannot be shared between them, only owned entirely by
one side or the other. Religious issues, such as control over the
Temple
Mount in Jerusalem, are more likely to be indivisible than
economic issues.
A bigger branch of the theory, advanced by
scholars of international relations such as Geoffrey
Blainey, is the problem of information asymmetry with
incentives to misrepresent. The two countries may not agree on who
would win a war between them, or whether victory would be
overwhelming or merely eked out, because each side has military
secrets about its own capabilities. They will not avoid the
bargaining failure by
sharing their secrets, since they cannot trust each other not to
lie and exaggerate their strength to extract more concessions. For
example, Sweden made efforts to deceive Nazi Germany that it would
resist an attack fiercely, partly by playing on the myth of Aryan
superiority and by making sure that Hermann
Göring only saw elite troops in action, often dressed up as
regular soldiers, when he came to visit.
Intelligence gathering may sometimes, but not
always, mitigate this problem. For example, the Argentinian
dictatorship knew that the United Kingdom had the ability to defeat
them, but their intelligence failed them on the question of whether
the British would use their power to resist the annexation of the
Falkland
Islands. The American decision to enter the Vietnam War
was made with the full knowledge that the communist forces would
resist them, but did not believe that the guerrillas had the
capability to long oppose American
forces.
Thirdly, bargaining may fail due to the states'
inability to make credible commitments. In this scenario, the two
countries might be able to come to a bargain that would avert war
if they could stick to it, but the benefits of the bargain will
make one side more powerful and lead it to demand even more in the
future, so that the weaker side has an incentive to make a stand
now.
Rationalist explanations of war can be critiqued
on a number of grounds. The assumptions of cost-benefit
calculations become dubious in the most extreme genocidal cases of
World War II, where the only bargain offered in some cases was
infinitely bad. Rationalist theories typically assume that the
state acts as a unitary individual, doing what is best for the
state as a whole; this is problematic when, for example, the
country's leader is beholden to a very small number of people, as
in a personalistic dictatorship. Rationalist theory also assumes
that the actors are rational, able to accurately assess their
likelihood of success or failure, but the proponents of the
psychological theories above would disagree.
Rationalist theories are usually explicated with
game
theory, for example, the Peace War
Game, not a wargame
as such, rather a simulation of economic decisions underlying
war.
Economic theories
Another school of thought argues that war can be seen as an outgrowth of economic competition in a chaotic and competitive international system. In this view wars begin as a pursuit of new markets, of natural resources, and of wealth. Unquestionably a cause of some wars, from the empire building of Britain to the 1941 Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in pursuit of oil, this theory has been applied to many other conflicts. It is most often advocated by those to the left of the political spectrum, who argue such wars serve the interests of the wealthy but are fought by the poor. Some to the right of the political spectrum may counter that poverty is relative and one poor in one country can be relatively wealthy in another. Such counter arguments become less valid as the increasing mobility of capital and information level the distributions of wealth worldwide, or when considering that it is relative, not absolute, wealth differences that may fuel wars. There are those on the extreme right of the political spectrum who provide support, fascists in particular, by asserting a natural right of the strong to whatever the weak cannot hold by force. Some centrist, [capitalism|[capitalist]], world leaders, including Presidents of the United States and US Generals, expressed support for an economic view of war."Is there any man, is there any woman, let me say
any child here that does not know that the seed of war in the
modern world is industrial and commercial rivalry?" - Woodrow
Wilson, September
11, 1919,
St. Louis.
''"I spent 33 years and four months in active
military service and during that period I spent most of my time as
a high class muscle man for Big
Business, for Wall Street
and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism."'' -
simultaneously highest ranking and most decorated
United States Marine (including two Medals of
Honor) Major
General Smedley
Butler (and a
Republican Party primary candidate for the United
States Senate) 1935.
''"For the corporation executives, the military
metaphysic often coincides with their interest in a stable and
planned flow of profit; it enables them to have their risk
underwritten by public money; it enables them reasonably to expect
that they can exploit for private profit now and later, the risky
research developments paid for by public money. It is, in brief, a
mask of the subsidized capitalism from which they extract profit
and upon which their power is based." C. Wright
Mills, Causes of world war 3,1960
"In the councils of government, we must guard
against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or
unsought, by the military-industrial
complex. The potential for disastrous rise of misplaced power
exists and will persist."'' - Dwight
Eisenhower, Farewell Address, Jan. 17, 1961.
Marxist theories
The Marxist theory of war argues that all war grows out of the class war. It sees wars as imperial ventures to enhance the power of the ruling class and divide the proletariat of the world by pitting them against each other for contrived ideals such as nationalism or religion. Wars are a natural outgrowth of the free market and class system, and will not disappear until a world revolution occurs.Political science theories
The statistical analysis of war was pioneered by Lewis Fry Richardson following World War I. More recent databases of wars and armed conflict have been assembled by the Correlates of War Project, Peter Brecke and the Uppsala Department of Peace and Conflict Research.There are several different
international relations theory schools. Supporters of
realism in international relations argue that the motivation of
states is the quest for security, to ensure survival. One position,
sometimes argued to contradict the realist view, is that there is
much empirical evidence to support the claim that states that are
democracies do not
go to war with each other, an idea known as the democratic
peace theory. Other factors included are difference in moral
and religious beliefs, economical and trade disagreements,
declaring independence, and others.
Another major theory relating to
power in international relations and machtpolitik is the
Power Transition theory, which distributes the world into a
hierarchy and explains major wars as part of a cycle of hegemons being destabilized by
a great
power which does not support the hegemons' control.
Types of war and warfare
Just Cause War
The Just War Theory was asserted as authoritative Catholic Church teaching by the United States Catholic Bishops in their pastoral letter, "'The Challenge of Peace: God's Promise and Our Response," issued in 1983. More recently, the Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2309, published in 1994, lists four "strict conditions for legitimate defense by military force.By cause
Marxism, succeeded by the Soviet ideology, distinguished the just and unjust war. Just war was considered to be slave rebellions, or national liberation movements, while an unjust war carried the imperialistic character. Smaller armed conflicts are often called riots, rebellions, coups, etc.When one country sends armed forces to another,
allegedly to restore order or prevent genocide, or other crimes
against humanity, or to support a legally recognized government
against insurgency, that
country sometimes refers to it as a police
action. This usage is not always recognized as valid, however,
particularly by those who do not accept the connotations of the
term.
A Fault Line
War is a war that is fought between two or more civilizations.
The issue at stake in a fault line war is very symbolic for at
least one of the groups involved.
Types of warfare
Conventional warfare is an attempt to reduce an opponent's military capability. It is a war between nation-states and nuclear or biological weapons are not usually used. Unconventional warfare is an attempt to achieve military victory through acquiescence, capitulation, or clandestine support for one side of an existing conflict. Nuclear warfare is a war in which nuclear weapons are used. Civil war is a war where the forces in conflict belong to the same country or empire or other political entity. Asymmetric warfare, is a conflict between two populations of drastically different levels of military mechanisation. This type of war often results in guerrilla tactics. Military action produces a very small percentage of air pollution emissions. Intentional air pollution in combat is one of a collection of techniques collectively called chemical warfare. Poison gas as a chemical weapons was principally used during World War I, and resulted in an estimated 91,198 deaths and 1,205,655 injuries. Various treaties have sought to ban its further use. Non-lethal chemical weapons, such as tear gas and pepper spray, are widely used, sometimes with deadly effect.Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
American Revolution, Ares, Athena, Balkan Wars, Bellona, Boer War, Civil War,
Crimean War, Crusades,
Enyo, Franco-Prussian War,
French Revolution, Gallic Wars, Greco-Persian Wars, Indian Wars,
Indochina War, Kilkenny cats, Korean War, Mars, Mexican War, Minerva, Napoleonic Wars,
Odin, Peloponnesian Wars,
Persian Wars, Punic Wars, Russian Revolution, Russo-Japanese War,
Sino-Japanese War, Six Day War, Southeast Asian War, Tiu, Tyr, Vietnam War, Woden, World War I, Wotan, all-out war, altercation, appeal to arms,
argument, armed combat,
armed conflict, arms, art
of war, attack, attempt, battle, belligerence, belligerency, bickering, bloodshed, box, brawl, broil, campaign, carry on hostilities,
cat-and-dog life, challenge, chivalry, clash, close, collide, combat, come to blows, conflict, contend, contention, contentiousness,
contest, contestation, controversy, crusade, cut and thrust,
debate, disputation, dispute, drive, duel, endeavor, engage, engage in hostilities,
enmity, essay, exchange blows, expedition, fence, feud, fight, fight a duel, fighting, generalship, give and take,
give satisfaction, grapple, grapple with, holy war,
hostilities,
hostility, hot war,
jihad, jostle, joust, knighthood, la guerre,
litigation, logomachy, make war, might of
arms, military operations, mix it up, open hostilities, open war,
oppugn, paper war,
polemic, quarrel, quarreling, quarrelsomeness,
rassle, resort to arms,
riot, run a tilt, scramble, scrapping, scuffle, shed blood, shooting
war, skirmish, spar, spill blood, squabbling, state of war,
strife, strive, struggle, take on, the sword,
thrust and parry, tilt,
total war, tourney,
tug, tussle, wage war, war of words,
warfare, warmaking, warring, wartime, words, wrangling, wrestle