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Gulf War Using Cosmopolitan Pov Essay

Kant's premise on this statement is manifested with the existence of the United Nations whose roots came from the League of Nations that was established after World War 1. Both institutions are intended to prevent the escalation of conflicts to full blown wars. Unfortunately, however the United Nation failed to mitigate regional armed conflicts such as the Gulf War from taking place. Kant's notion of a universal civic society is quite difficult to achieve in the sense that sovereign states and other stakeholders in the international arena are actively pursuing their respective agenda and there is no entity, a cosmopolitan government that has the ability to reconcile conflicts among stakeholders and have the clout to enforce collective decisions that are binding to everyone. This is the end goal of the UN, an entity capable of instilling civic character among nations. In the absence of clear cut structures and arrangements that would bind states to behave in accordance to principles of peace and goodwill, the primary currency through which a specific state's sovereignty is preserved depends heavily on its military strength and economic resources. More importantly, countries who have both typically determine the rules of the game in terms of conflict resolution, if diplomacy fails, strong states will utilize their considerable military might as a final means to get their point across. This is manifested when the...

Kant similar to Karl Marx shared the same utopic view. Given the current times we are in it can be a possibility. Countries around the world are beginning to realize the value of cooperation in terms of concerns on the environment and sustaining the world economy.
And with the changes in the United State's leadership perhaps there would be shift in their international policy in intervening in the affairs of other countries.

References

Heywood, Andrew. 1999. Political Theories. Great Britain: McMillan Press Ltd.

Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point-of-View (1784). Translation by Lewis White Beck. From Immanuel Kant, "On History," the Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1963.

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References

Heywood, Andrew. 1999. Political Theories. Great Britain: McMillan Press Ltd.

Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point-of-View (1784). Translation by Lewis White Beck. From Immanuel Kant, "On History," the Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1963.
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