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International
Relations-PSC 201
VU
LESSON
06
NATIONAL
INTEREST
Origins
of National Interest
The
word interest is derived from
Latin and means "it
concerns, or it makes a difference to".
In the 1930s,
Charles
Bear wrote the first book
concerning national interest. In
following years the notion of
national
interest
in IR has been used to
describe the underlying rationale for the
behavior of states in a
threatening
global
environment, which preserves
and protects one's values
against another.
Statesmen
who are responsible for
and to their separate
publics, and who operate in
an uncertain milieu,
often
have little choice but to
put the interest of their
own entity above those of
others.
National
interest is understood to mean a state of
affairs valued solely for
its benefit to the nation.
National
interest
often becomes synonymous
with national egoism, with
its disposition of transferring self love
onto
the
national group.
One
cannot speak about national interest
without reference to values,
even if they are a culmination
of
those
held by some or all members of a given
society
What
does Nation Interest
include?
Scholars
define national interest variously.
Some put self-preservation
(territorial integrity,
political
independence
and fundamental government institutions) at the
head of the list.
Other
categories of national interest
focus on self-sufficiency, prestige,
aggrandizement. Charles
Bear
focused
on the notion of territory and
commerce as being the defining features
of national interest.
Morgenthau
says that a country's national
interests should be proportionate to its
capacities Britain
and
France
after WWII had superpower ambitions,
not commiserate to their
capacities).
Criteria
for Defining National
Interest
Ideological
criteria: if one
country's ideology is liberal-democratic, it
will make policies
supporting democratic
governments
and movements and oppose
totalitarian ones.
Moral
and legal criteria: the imperative to
act honestly and make
decisions in accordance with
international
laws.
Pragmatic
criteria: unemotional,
calculated decisions to deal
with on ground
realities.
Bureaucratic
criteria: each
organization tends to exaggerate its
specific funding request and
to argue in the
name
of the national interest rather than
its own interest.
Partisan
criteria: to
equate the success of one's
own political party with an entire
nation's success.
Racial
criteria: national
interest defined in terms of
interest of an ethnic or racial minority
or majority
Class-status
criteria: a particular
class will defend its
interests while defining
national interest.
Foreign-dependency
criteria: protector
states define policy obligations of their
dependencies.
Relevant
Vocabulary
Imperative:
vital or of utmost importance
Synonymous:
identical, a
different term with the same
meaning
Notion:
idea
Self-sufficiency:
self
reliance or independence
Aggrandizement:
enhancement
or exaggeration
Obligations:
duties or responsibilities
Dependency: being
dependent or reliant
Ground
realities:
actual circumstances
International
Relations-PSC 201
VU
Suggested
Readings
Students
are advised to read the
following chapters to develop a better understanding
of the various
principals
highlighted in this hand-out:
Chapter
3 in `"A Study of International
Relations" by Dr. Sultan
Khan.
Internet
Resources
In
addition to reading from the
textbook, please visit the
following web-pages for this
lecture, which
provide
useful and interesting
information:
National
Interest Analyses
www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/dfat/nia/
International
Relations-PSC 201
VU
LESSON
07
NATIONAL
INTEREST (CONTINUED FROM LECTURE
6)
Variations
in National Interest
There
are different types of
national interest. Some of the
salient ones are described
below:
Primary
Interests: preservation of
physical, political and cultural
identity of the nation-state.
Secondary
Interests:
protection of citizens abroad
and ensuring diplomatic
immunity of foreign
missions.
Permanent
Interests: long-term
interests of strategic, ideological or
economic nature which do not
change
easily,
with changes in domestic politics,
for example
Variable
Interests: these are short-term
interests varying with cross-currents of
personalities, public
opinion,
partisan
politics, sectional interests
etc.
General
Interests: involve
a large number of nations, such as
economic interests or diplomatic
norms.
Specific
Interests: location
and issue specific interests
emerging from more general
interests (bilateral terms of
trade
for example).
Identical
Interests: interests
held in common by different states
(climate protection
concerns)
Complementary
Interests: though not identical,
these interests can serve as
basis for agreement on
specific
issues
(US-Pakistan security
cooperation).
Conflicting
Interests: bring
countries at odds with each
other. Yet these interests
can also undergo change
due
to
varying internal circumstances and a
changing external scenario.
Means
to Promote National Interests
Coercive
Means: these
can be internal so that they
don't infringe directly on other
sovereign nations
(embargos,
boycotts, severing diplomatic relations)
or they can be external and are a prima
facie act of war
(seizure
of property of offending state,
suspension of treaties), if the other
state responds with
escalating
moves,
it leads to an outbreak of war.
Alliances:
based
on complementary or identical interests
and strengthened by ideology,
alliances can promote
national
interest.
Diplomatic
Negotiations: common
interests are most
effectively perpetuated by means of
diplomacy.
Diplomacy
is also useful in negotiating conflicting
national interests without resorting to
coercive means.
National
vs. Global Interests
Given
the complexities of international politics, Morgenthau
for e.g. opposes state
action based on universal
principles,
instead he advocates a pragmatic
approach of acting based on
national interests.
Yet,
issues of global concern like
growing inequalities and environmental
problems require world leaders
to
think
beyond the narrow ambit of national
interests. The world is also
becoming increasing interconnected
due
to which national interests
often exert an influence on global
interests and global interests to
some
degree
also compel national
interests.
Relevant
Vocabulary
Coercive
elements: potentially
destructive elements which
can lead to escalating
tensions or cause outbreak of
violence
Scenario:
existing
situation
Partisan:
division
into factions or different
parties
Perpetuated:
affected
or enabled
Ideological:
based
on an ideology or belief
system
Ambit:
realm, domain or field
Inequalities:
the
gap between the haves and
the have nots
International
Relations-PSC 201
VU
Compel:
oblige
or
influence
Suggested
Reading:
Students
are advised to read the
following chapters to develop a better understanding
of the various
principals
highlighted in this hand-out:
Chapter
3 in `"A Study of International
Relations" by Dr. Sultan
Khan.
Internet
Resources
In
addition to reading from the
textbook, please visit the
following web-pages for this
lecture, which
provide
useful and interesting
information:
Promoting
the National Interest
www.foreignaffairs.org/20000101faessay5/condoleezza-rice/
campaign-2000-promoting-the-national-
interest.html
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