Monday, April 13, 2026

War : Survivors, Memory, and Moral Responsibility (31)

Few questions have preoccupied philosophers, theologians, and statesmen as persistently as the one posed here: is war an inescapable feature of the human condition, or is peace a genuine possibility? The twentieth century alone witnessed two catastrophic world wars, the Holocaust, the Cold War's nuclear brinkmanship, and dozens of regional conflicts—yet it also produced the United Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the longest period of great-power peace in modern history. This paradox suggests that neither pure pessimism nor naive optimism captures the full picture.

The question is not merely academic. As the twenty-first century confronts new threats—from climate-induced resource scarcity to the proliferation of autonomous weapons—understanding the structural and moral roots of war and peace has never been more urgent. This essay proceeds in four sections: it first surveys lessons that history offers about the causes and patterns of war; it then examines the fundamental tension between conflict and cooperation in human societies; it considers the emerging prospects for peace in an interconnected world; and, finally, it integrates the perspectives of Islamic thought, which offers a rich and often overlooked framework for understanding both the ethics of war and the imperative of peace.

IS HUMANITY DESTINED FOR WAR?
Lessons from History: The Tension Between Conflict and Cooperation
and the Possibility of Peace in an Interconnected World

This essay examines whether humanity is inherently destined for war or whether enduring peace remains an attainable ideal. Drawing upon historical evidence, political theory, and the Islamic moral tradition, the essay argues that whilst conflict has been a recurrent feature of human civilisation, it is not an inevitable destiny. The interplay between war and cooperation reveals that human societies possess both the capacity for destruction and the potential for lasting reconciliation. In an increasingly interconnected world, structural, normative, and spiritual resources exist that may guide humanity towards sustainable peace—if the will to do so is collectively summoned.

I. Lessons from History
1.1 The Ubiquity of War

A survey of human history offers little immediate comfort to the pacifist. The historian Will Durant, reviewing five thousand years of recorded civilisation, famously calculated that in all of history there have been fewer than three hundred years without recorded warfare (Durant & Durant, 1968). From the ancient city-states of Mesopotamia and Greece to the dynastic struggles of medieval Europe and the colonial conflicts of the modern era, organised violence has accompanied human societies at virtually every stage of development.

Thucydides, writing in the fifth century BCE, offered one of the first systematic analyses of war's causes. In his account of the Peloponnesian War, he identified fear, honour, and interest as the three primary motivators of conflict between states—a taxonomy that scholars continue to regard as remarkably durable (Thucydides, trans. Strassler, 1996). This realist tradition, later elaborated by Thomas Hobbes, who described the natural condition of mankind as a 'war of all against all' (Hobbes, 1651/1996), suggests that without strong governance and mutual deterrence, violent competition is the default state of human relations.
 
1.2 War as a Social Construction

Yet the historical record also admits a more nuanced reading. Many anthropologists and historians argue that large-scale organised warfare is not a primordial human instinct but a relatively recent social invention, emerging alongside the development of agriculture, surplus wealth, and hierarchical political organisation roughly ten thousand years ago (Pinker, 2011; Gat, 2006). Hunter-gatherer societies, whilst certainly not peaceful, rarely engaged in the kind of organised, sustained military campaigns associated with state warfare.

Steven Pinker's influential but contested work, The Better Angels of Our Nature (2011), marshals extensive empirical data to argue that, measured in per-capita terms, humanity has become substantially less violent over millennia, centuries, and decades. The rate of death from inter-group conflict, Pinker contends, has declined dramatically as states have monopolised violence, trade has increased interdependence, and humanistic norms have spread. Critics such as John Gray (2015) and Nassim Nicholas Taleb have challenged Pinker's statistical methods and questioned whether declining rates of warfare represent a durable trend or merely a fragile interlude, but the debate itself underscores that war's historical prevalence does not make it biologically inevitable.
 
1.3 The Learning Capacity of Civilisations

History also demonstrates that societies learn from the catastrophe of war. The devastation of the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) gave birth to the Westphalian system of sovereign states and early norms of non-interference. The carnage of the Napoleonic Wars produced the Concert of Europe. The tragedy of the First World War prompted the creation of the League of Nations, and its successor—the United Nations, established in 1945—reflected a collective determination, however imperfect, to replace the law of force with the force of law (Kennedy, 2006). These institutional responses to warfare are not merely political artefacts; they embody a moral evolution in humanity's understanding of its own destructive potential.

II. The Tension Between Conflict and Cooperation

2.1 Dual Impulses in Human Nature

The debate between those who regard war as natural and those who see it as contingent ultimately reflects a deeper ambiguity in human nature itself. Social psychologists and evolutionary biologists have long observed that human beings are simultaneously predisposed towards both intra-group cooperation and inter-group competition (Wilson, 2012). This 'dual inheritance'—the capacity for extraordinary solidarity and extraordinary cruelty—means that neither peace nor war can be reduced to a simple biological programme.

Evolutionary theorist E. O. Wilson (2012) argues that the tension between selfish and altruistic impulses is not a defect but a feature of the human genome, the product of multi-level selection operating simultaneously at the individual and group level. Groups that cooperated internally were better able to compete externally, producing a species that is at once tribal, empathetic, and lethal. This does not mean that humans are condemned to warfare, but it does suggest that the institutions and norms that channel these impulses matter enormously.
 
2.2 Structural Causes of War

Beyond individual psychology, political scientists have identified structural conditions that make war more or less likely. Kenneth Waltz's systemic theory holds that the anarchic structure of the international system—the absence of a world government—creates persistent security dilemmas in which states, fearing one another, arm and compete even when none desires war (Waltz, 1979). This structural realist view explains why even well-intentioned states may stumble into conflict, as arguably occurred in 1914.

By contrast, liberal institutionalists such as Robert Keohane and Joseph Nye have argued that deepening economic interdependence, international institutions, and democratic governance can substantially mitigate the structural incentives for war (Keohane & Nye, 1977). The empirical record offers some support for this view: democratic states have rarely gone to war against one another (the 'democratic peace' thesis), and countries deeply embedded in global trade networks have strong material incentives to avoid the disruptions that conflict brings.
 
2.3 Cooperation as a Historical Constant

It would be misleading to focus exclusively on conflict. The historical record is equally rich with examples of cooperation across ethnic, religious, and national lines. The development of international humanitarian law, beginning with the first Geneva Convention of 1864, reflects a collective effort to humanise warfare and protect non-combatants — a project that, whilst imperfectly observed, has nonetheless saved countless lives (Best, 1994). The post-war European project of integration, which transformed centuries of Franco-German enmity into a shared political community, stands as perhaps the most remarkable exercise in peaceful reconciliation in modern history (Judt, 2005).

These examples are not anomalies; they are evidence that cooperation is as deeply rooted in the human repertoire as conflict. The question, then, is less whether human beings are capable of peace and more what conditions make peace durable.

III. The Possibility of Peace in an Interconnected World

3.1 Globalisation and Interdependence

The contemporary world is, by virtually every measurable indicator, more deeply interconnected than at any previous point in history. Global trade as a share of world GDP has increased dramatically since the mid-twentieth century; billions of people are linked by digital communication networks, and transnational challenges from pandemic disease to climate change require coordinated multilateral responses. This interdependence creates powerful material incentives for states to manage their disputes peacefully, lest conflict disrupt the supply chains, financial flows, and ecological systems on which modern prosperity depends.

The liberal peace theory, drawing on Immanuel Kant's vision of a federation of free republics in Perpetual Peace (1795/1991), posits that a combination of democratic governance, economic interdependence, and international law can progressively reduce the incidence of war. The empirical evidence for aspects of this thesis—particularly the democratic peace and the pacifying effects of trade—is reasonably robust, though scholars continue to debate its scope and limits (Russett & Oneal, 2001).

3.2 New Threats to Peace

Yet the interconnected world is not simply more peaceful; it is also more complex and in some respects more precarious. Climate change threatens to exacerbate resource scarcity and generate mass displacement, conditions historically associated with conflict (Burke, Hsiang, & Miguel, 2015). The proliferation of cyber capabilities and autonomous weapons introduces new forms of coercive power whose norms and governance remain underdeveloped. Great-power competition between the United States and China, conducted across economic, technological, and geopolitical dimensions, raises the spectre of a new cold war—or worse.

Moreover, the rise of populist nationalism in many parts of the world has weakened the multilateral institutions that the post-war order constructed. The fraying of the rules-based international order does not make major war inevitable, but it does make the international environment more volatile and the management of crises more difficult (Haass, 2017).
 
3.3 Grounds for Cautious Optimism

Despite these challenges, there are serious grounds for cautious optimism. The existence of nuclear weapons, whilst a source of existential anxiety, has paradoxically contributed to great-power stability by raising the costs of direct military confrontation to an intolerable level. The 'long peace' since 1945—the absence of direct conflict between major powers—is without precedent in modern history (Gaddis, 1987). International institutions, for all their limitations, have provided forums for conflict management and normative standard-setting that did not exist a century ago.

Furthermore, civil society—transnational advocacy networks, human rights organisations, religious bodies, and peace movements—has become an increasingly significant actor in shaping norms and holding governments accountable. The International Campaign to Ban Landmines and the International Criminal Court both owe their existence in large part to sustained civil society pressure (Boli & Thomas, 1999). This suggests that peace is not solely the prerogative of states but can be built from below.

IV. The Islamic Perspective

4.1 Islam, Peace, and the Meaning of Salaam

Any serious discussion of war and peace in the contemporary world must engage with Islamic thought, given that approximately 1.8 billion Muslims—nearly a quarter of humanity—draw on this tradition for moral and spiritual guidance. The very name of the faith, Islam, is derived from the Arabic root s-l-m, sharing its origin with the word salaam (peace), and points towards the centrality of peace, wholeness, and reconciliation in the Islamic worldview (Nasr, 2002). The Islamic greeting, as-salamu alaykum—' peace be upon you'—is not merely a social pleasantry; it is a daily affirmation of a moral commitment to peaceful coexistence.

The Quran explicitly describes God as Al-Salam, the Source of Peace (Quran 59:23), and characterises paradise as Dar al-Salam, the Abode of Peace (Quran 6:127). War, in Islamic jurisprudence, is not valorised as a positive good but treated as a regrettable necessity, permissible only under tightly constrained conditions. The Quran states: 'Fight in the cause of God those who fight you, but do not transgress limits; for God loves not transgressors' (Quran 2:190). This injunction establishes both the permission for self-defence and its moral limit—a framework that closely parallels just war theory in Western thought.
 
4.2 The Doctrine of Jihad: A Clarification

The concept of jihad is frequently misunderstood in popular discourse. Whilst jihad does encompass the notion of armed struggle under specific conditions, classical Islamic scholars have consistently maintained that its primary meaning is the inner struggle against one's own moral failings—what the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) is reported to have called the 'greater jihad' (al-jihad al-akbar) upon returning from battle (Nasr, 2002). The 'lesser jihad' of armed conflict is permissible only in defence of the community against aggression or oppression, and is subject to rigorous ethical constraints regarding the protection of non-combatants, the prohibition of environmental destruction, and the obligation to pursue peace whenever it becomes attainable.

The scholar and jurist al-Mawardi (972–1058 CE) codified these conditions in classical Islamic international law (siyar), establishing rules for the conduct of hostilities that anticipated many of the principles later enshrined in modern international humanitarian law (Khadduri, 1966). This tradition demonstrates that Islam possesses rich internal resources for limiting and humanising conflict, far removed from the distorted portrayals that equate the faith with perpetual warfare.
 
4.3 Islam and the Ethics of Peacemaking

Islamic ethics places a high positive value on sulh (reconciliation) and the resolution of conflict through dialogue and mediation. The Quran commands: 'If two parties among the believers fall into a quarrel, make peace between them' (Quran 49:9), and the Prophet Muhammad's life offers numerous examples of diplomatic resolution of disputes, most notably the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah (628 CE), in which he accepted short-term disadvantages in exchange for a peace agreement—a demonstration of strategic patience in service of a longer-term peace (Lings, 1983).

Contemporary Muslim scholars and institutions have increasingly applied this tradition to global peace-building. The Amman Message (2004), endorsed by scholars from across the Muslim world, explicitly condemned terrorism and affirmed the imperative of peaceful coexistence with non-Muslims. Organisations such as the Muslim World League and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation have, with varying degrees of effectiveness, worked to mediate regional conflicts. The Islamic tradition, in short, is not an obstacle to peace but a potential resource for it—provided its ethical core is recovered from the distortions of both external caricature and internal extremism.
 
4.4 The Islamic Vision of a Just World Order

Islam's vision of international relations is not one of perpetual conflict between civilisations—a Huntingtonian framing that many Muslim scholars vigorously reject—but of a world of nations recognising one another's dignity and managing their differences through justice and dialogue (Sachedina, 2001). The Quran declares: 'O mankind, indeed We have created you from male and female and made you peoples and tribes that you may know one another' (Quran 49:13). This verse—ta'aruf, or mutual recognition—constitutes a Quranic mandate for intercultural dialogue and peaceful coexistence.

The Islamic concept of maqasid al-shari'ah (the objectives of Islamic law), as elaborated by classical scholars such as al-Ghazali and al-Shatibi, identifies the protection of life (hifz al-nafs), intellect, lineage, property, and faith as the supreme goods that any just social order must safeguard. War, by definition, threatens all of these goods; peace protects them. From this perspective, working for peace is not merely a political preference but a religious obligation rooted in the deepest commitments of the Islamic moral tradition.

V. Conclusion

Is humanity destined for war? The evidence reviewed in this essay suggests that the answer is: not necessarily. War is real, recurrent, and rooted in identifiable features of human psychology, social organisation, and international structure. History offers no shortage of cautionary tales about the ease with which states, communities, and individuals descend into violence. The pessimists are not wrong to take this record seriously.

Yet the historical record also documents humanity's remarkable—if inconsistent—capacity for cooperation, institution-building, and moral learning. The decline of great-power war since 1945, the expansion of international law, the growth of global civil society, and the deepening of economic interdependence all represent genuine achievements that constrain, even if they do not eliminate, the incidence of organised violence. The liberal and institutionalist traditions of international relations theory provide analytical tools for understanding why and when these achievements endure.

The Islamic tradition enriches this picture by insisting that the pursuit of peace is not merely a strategic calculation but a moral and spiritual imperative. Rooted in the divine name Al-Salam and animated by the Quranic vision of ta'aruf—mutual recognition among peoples—Islam offers both a critique of unjust violence and a vision of a world ordered by justice, dialogue, and compassion. In a world where nearly a quarter of humanity draws moral sustenance from this tradition, its resources for peace cannot be ignored.

The ultimate answer to the question posed by this essay is, therefore, neither fatalistic nor naively optimistic: humanity is not destined for war, but neither is peace guaranteed. Peace must be constructed—institutionally, normatively, and spiritually—in each generation. As the charter of the United Nations affirms in its opening words, the determination 'to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war' is a choice, not a given. It is a choice that history, political theory, and religious ethics alike urge us to make—and to keep making, however difficult the path.

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