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ID145675
Title ProperTaking uncertainty seriously
Other Title Informationclassical realism and national security
LanguageENG
AuthorPorter, Patrick
Summary / Abstract (Note)If we can’t reliably predict the future, how can we be wise when preparing for it? Examining the UK’s ‘Strategic Defence and Security Review’ of 2010, I demonstrate that though planners often rightly invoke uncertainty, they also imply a highly certain ideology about Western power and foresight. Modern ‘national security states’ describe the world as dangerously uncertain, yet fall prey to a misplaced confidence in their ability to anticipate and prevent threats. I argue that classical realism, especially that of Clausewitz and Morgenthau, is a valuable resource for handling uncertainty more reflexively. Classical realism counsels that governments should go beyond attempts to improve foresight. They should try to check against the fallibility of their assumptions, marshal their power more conservatively, insure against the likelihood of predictive failure by developing the intellectual capability to react to the unknown, and avoid misplaced confidence in their ability to bring order into chaos.
`In' analytical NoteEuropean Journal of International Security Vol. 1, No.2; Jul 2016: p.239-260
Journal SourceEuropean Journal of International Security Vol: 1 No 2
Key WordsNational Security ;  Uncertainty ;  Classical Realism ;  Carl Von Clausewitz ;  Hans Morgenthau


 
 
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