The Peace of the Toothless: A History of Selective Pacifism
It is a charming, recurring comedy in international relations: the loud, moralistic preaching of pacifism by those who couldn't launch a coordinated lunch order, let alone a military intervention. Let’s be blunt—in the grand theater of global strategy, high-minded "peace-seeking" is usually just the default setting for the weak. When you lack the teeth to bite, you suddenly become a very big fan of vegetarianism.
History, that cold and unblinking witness, suggests that human nature hasn't changed much since Thucydides observed that "the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must." For the last century, the pattern has been as predictable as a hangover after a gala: whenever a nation achieves a surplus of regional military power, the "temptation" to intervene in neighboring affairs becomes an irresistible itch.
We like to wrap these interventions in the silk of "stability," "liberation," or "historical ties," but beneath the rhetoric lies the dark, primal reality of the schoolyard. If a state has the reach to crush a neighbor without risking its own survival, it eventually will. Power is like a gas; it expands to fill every available cubic inch of the room. The moment a nation becomes the undisputed heavyweight in its backyard, its definition of "national interest" miraculously expands to include its neighbor's backyard, too.
True pacifism—the kind practiced by those who could destroy you but choose not to—is a historical rarity. Most of what we see today is simply the "peace" of the sidelined. It is easy to be a saint when you lack the tools to be a sinner. But don't be fooled by the flowery speeches at the summits; the map is drawn in ink, but it’s maintained by the threat of lead.