Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Session 22: Misinterpretation - The real cause of war?

Major world conflicts such as the First World War, the Second World War, the Russian Civil War and the Cold War emerged as a result of several events coming together to trigger these conflicts. Some of these conflicts went from local to global while the others predominantly occurred on a massive scale. At the same time, there were armed struggles which were mostly limited. 

Every conflict had its own set of origins and causes. These causes are not only specific to a war but they also have a particular analysis attached to them. While one theory on the causes of war may propose that the commencement of a conflict is usually an outcome of the leaders’ rational decisions, others may hint solely at their irrationality. At the same time, some theories illustrate conflicts as a product of the states' misunderstanding of each other's objectives or the dominance of one state over another. On the global level, some wars took years to take their actual form and reach their climax while others did not take much time to culminate. 

There may be several reasons that contribute to the initiation of a conflict and several theories devoted to them nevertheless, I think that the fundamental cause of the major conflicts in the past was primarily the misinterpretation by the states of each other's intentions. The Cold War justifies this. During the Cold War, USA used polices against USSR such as that of 'rolling back' because they assumed that USSR was trying to extend its dominance and spheres of influence beyond the 'Iron Curtain'. Similarly, USSR believed that USA was rigorously promoting capitalism because it was intent on attaining triumph over communism. This resulted in a series of actions and reactions that intensified the war. 

1 comment:

Maryam Riaz said...

I agree. One of the major reasons for the causes of war is mis interepration or irrational fears. This was especially true during the Cold war, every action of the super power was mis interpreted as aggressive which led to decades of war. For example, the building of a sphere of influence by the Soviet Union because of a legitimate security threat was seen as expansionism and spreading of communist ideology by the USA which led to policies like containment, roll back and even push back. Prolonging the war for decades.