Title: Waltz
1Waltzs Neorealism
2Balance of Power as a Reaction to a Threat
Napoleon, 1802-1815
Major Powers FRA, UK, RUS, PRUS, AUS
After French Revolution (1789), Napoleon
Bonaparte rises to power. -- Consul (1802) --
Emperor of France (1804) Continues military
campaigns to build empire and feed war machine.
-- Poses major threat to Europe
UK, RUS, PRUS, AUS form coalitions against FRA
-- Napoleon defeated (1814) -- Congress of
Vienna (1814) -- Napoleon returns (1815) --
Waterloo (1815)
3BoP as a Peaceful Equilibrium Concert of
Europe, 1815-1848
After Napoleonic Wars, Congress of Vienna
continues (1815) Defeated France let back into
club Quadruple Alliance Austria,
Britain, Prussia, Russia Congresses held to
attempt to resolve issues. Buffer
states/territory traded.
4Bipolarity vs Multipolarity
1792
1815
1854
1866
1870
1914
1939
Napoleonic Wars
Crimean War
Franco-Prussian War
WW I
WW II
(peaceful)
Concert of Europe
Austro-Prussian War
Multipolar loose, shifting alliances, Britain as
balancer four or five Great Powers
1945
1990
Cold Waror Long Peace
?
Bipolar (two Great Powers, tight blocs)
5Bipolarity vs Multipolarity
- Internal balancing is more reliable
- External balancing can give rise to
miscalculations that lead to general war - Large influence of small allies
- Deterrence fails because there is an incentive to
defect from commitments - As numbers grow, strategic complexity grows
geometrically - Uncertainty is the leading cause of war
6Structural Theories WWI
Multipolar System
- Abandoning an ally invites ones own destruction
- In a moment of crisis, the weaker or more
adventurous party (Austria) is likely to
determine its sides policy - Its partners (Germany) can afford neither to let
the weaker member be defeated nor to advertise
their disunity by failing to back a venture even
while deploring its risks
7Structural Theories WWI
Balance of Power
- The Triple Entente and the Triple Alliance were
approximately balanced - The defeat of any great power would give the
opposing coalition a decisive advantage in the
overall European balance of power - Britain entered the war to prevent Germany from
upsetting the balance of power on the continent
8Structural Theories WWI
Alliance System
- The establishment of the Triple Entente and the
Triple Alliance divided the European powers into
two camps - While seen as a form of self-protection, the
alliances also had the potential to escalate
small crises into major wars - When Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia, this
brought Serbias ally Russia into the war, which
brought Germany, France, and Britain into the war
9Strengths of Structural Realism
- Parsimony
- Focus on systemic effects
- Power is defined as capabilities
(non-tautological) - Explanatory power is in the constraints, not in
the preferences - Collective action
- Probabilistic predictions