{"title":"How Unique is South African Military Integration","authors":"R. Licklider","doi":"10.5787/43-1-1113","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The study of civil war since the end of the Cold War has uncovered several interesting, counter-intuitive facts. The first is that civil wars do end. Depending on how one counts, there have been 100–200 such wars since 1945. [i] There are now fewer than ten, and some of them are new rather than old. Of course, some of these may break out again (a gentleman on a flight to Atlanta once explained to the author that the American Civil War was not yet over), but it is not likely that most will, let alone all. Indeed, every major power has had one or more civil wars which have ended: the French, Russians and Chinese after their revolutions; Germany, after the wars of unification (or the Thirty Years War, if you want to go back that far); the British, after the War of the Roses and its Civil War. The United States has done it twice: after the American Revolution and after the American Civil War. But it is fair to say that we do not really understand how large numbers of people who have been killing one another with considerable skill and enthusiasm are somehow able to create working political communities. [i] Themne’r, L & Wallensteen, P. Armed Conflicts 1946-2013. Journal of Peace Research 51/4, 2014, 541.","PeriodicalId":173901,"journal":{"name":"Scientia Militaria: South African Journal of Military Studies","volume":"27 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-05-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Scientia Militaria: South African Journal of Military Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5787/43-1-1113","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
The study of civil war since the end of the Cold War has uncovered several interesting, counter-intuitive facts. The first is that civil wars do end. Depending on how one counts, there have been 100–200 such wars since 1945. [i] There are now fewer than ten, and some of them are new rather than old. Of course, some of these may break out again (a gentleman on a flight to Atlanta once explained to the author that the American Civil War was not yet over), but it is not likely that most will, let alone all. Indeed, every major power has had one or more civil wars which have ended: the French, Russians and Chinese after their revolutions; Germany, after the wars of unification (or the Thirty Years War, if you want to go back that far); the British, after the War of the Roses and its Civil War. The United States has done it twice: after the American Revolution and after the American Civil War. But it is fair to say that we do not really understand how large numbers of people who have been killing one another with considerable skill and enthusiasm are somehow able to create working political communities. [i] Themne’r, L & Wallensteen, P. Armed Conflicts 1946-2013. Journal of Peace Research 51/4, 2014, 541.
对冷战结束以来的内战的研究发现了一些有趣的、违反直觉的事实。第一种是内战会结束。根据不同的计算方式,自1945年以来,已经发生了100-200次这样的战争。现在只有不到10个,其中一些是新的而不是旧的。当然,其中一些可能会再次爆发(一位在飞往亚特兰大的航班上的绅士曾经向作者解释说,美国内战尚未结束),但大多数人不太可能会,更不用说所有人了。事实上,每个大国都有过一次或多次以内战告终的经历:法国、俄国和中国在革命结束后;德国,在统一战争之后(或者三十年战争,如果你想追溯到那么远的话);在玫瑰战争和内战之后的英国。美国已经这样做了两次:在美国独立战争和美国内战之后。但公平地说,我们并没有真正理解,这么多以相当的技巧和热情互相残杀的人,是如何能够建立起起作用的政治团体的。[1] [m] m . m . L .和m . walensteen .。和平研究学报,2014,51(4):541。