Democratic Jihad? Military Intervention and Democracy
Democracies rarely if ever fight one another, but they participate in wars as frequently as autocracies. They tend to win the wars in which they participate. Democracies frequently build large alliances in wartime, but not only with other democraci...
Main Authors: | , , |
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Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2007/06/7680987/democratic-jihad-military-intervention-democracy http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7095 |
Summary: | Democracies rarely if ever fight one
another, but they participate in wars as frequently as
autocracies. They tend to win the wars in which they
participate. Democracies frequently build large alliances in
wartime, but not only with other democracies. From time to
time democracies intervene militarily in ongoing conflicts.
The democratic peace may contribute to a normative
justification for such interventions, for the purpose of
promoting democracy and eventually for the promotion of
peace. This is reinforced by an emerging norm of
humanitarian intervention. Democracies may have a motivation
to intervene in non-democracies, even in the absence of
ongoing conflict, for the purpose of regime change. The
recent Iraq War may be interpreted in this perspective. A
strong version of this type of foreign policy may be
interpreted as a democratic crusade. The paper examines the
normative and theoretical foundations of democratic
interventionism. An empirical investigation of interventions
in the period 1960-96 indicates that democracies intervene
quite frequently, but rarely against other democracies. In
the short term, democratic intervention appears to be
successfully promoting democratization, but the target
states tend to end up among the unstable semi-democracies.
The most widely publicized recent interventions are targeted
on poor or resource-dependent countries in non-democratic
neighborhoods. Previous research has found these
characteristics to reduce the prospects for stable
democracy. Thus, forced democratization is unpredictable
with regard to achieving long-term democracy and potentially
harmful with regard to securing peace. But short-term
military successes may stimulate more interventions until
the negative consequences become more visible. |
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