"An Evaluation of Collective Security Arrangements".

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International Politics II

“An Evaluation of Collective Security Arrangements”

Collective security asserts that the peace of the international community can be maintained through a binding, predetermined agreement to take collective action to preserve it.  It says that any illegal threat or use of force by any sovereign member of the international community against any other – that is, aggression, potential or real – should trigger the combined force of all the rest.  It expects to combine so mush collective power in opposition to that of the law breaker, that the latter should be constrained from the self-defeating illegal action by that threat or quickly be repulsed by the communities action if it should persist in its warlike course. Woodrow Wilson said that, “collective security seeks, not a balance of power, but a community of power: not organised rivalries, but an organised common peace” (Link, 1982:536).

Central to a collective security concept is a binding obligation to defend a particular status quo against forceful change.  It is often asserted that this requirement makes it a hopelessly conservative technique of world order.  However, that is true only in the sense that all efforts at governance are conservative because their purpose is to maintain what allows society to function in an orderly an dependable way.  Sound governance motivates reliance on peaceful change by punishing efforts at violent change.  Collective security can only succeed if it operates in a context where peaceful alternatives exist for the advancement of competing values.  Where such alternatives are not reliably in place, the idea of collective security will remain more illusionary than real.

Pre-twentieth century collective security schemes could not be implemented in the absence of a specific commitment by sovereign states to do so.  That would require both a solemn treaty defining the delicts unacceptable to members of the community and a clear indication of how the community would respond to overturn the illegal action.  Also demanded is some kind of institutionalised structure in which the members of the community can determine when conditions requiring the collective action of the community have arisen (Finkelstein and Finkelstein, 1966:2).  The League of Nations was the first effort to create such an institution, finally making it possible to say that the idea of collective security had joined mainstream thinking about how to strengthen peace in the modern international system (Finkelstein and Finkelstein, 1966:2).

Ever since the Leagues dissolution, its death has been correctly attributed to its failure at collective security, which soon plunged the world into general war again.  Those who conceived the UN as the Leagues successor were most concerned with ‘correcting’ the flaws of that system – by giving the UN greater enforcement capability – while copying much of it (Claude, 1962).  Problems and cleavages are grouped around four complex issues.  The first is that of which members collective security is to serve.  The second is the issue of agents, which involves the question of what sovereign actors will be required to keep the peace.  The third, instruments, has to do with the capability that are required to keep it.  The fourth involves the nature of the obligations sovereign states are under to participate in the collective effort, which can be put the other way around as question of what authority the international institution should be expected to have (Finkelstein and Finkelstein, 1966).  

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Both the League of Nations (LoN) and the UN sought to define the collective security community as a global one, including virtually every sovereign state on earth.  Woodrow Wilson emphasised a security system that would protect the rights of small states equally with those of the powerful.  Universality, at least of “self governing state, was to be a central feature of what came to be seen as Wilsonian Liberalism (Link, 1982).  But the failure of universality really began with the refusal of the USA to become a member of the LoN, which had a slowly deadening effect on the hope ...

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