The Origins of Geopolitics
The Origins of Geopolitics
The Origins of Geopolitics
Key Concepts
Explain the origins of geopolitics
Memorize the key concepts and distinctions in classical geopolitical study
Evaluate how geopolitics may be distinguished from international relations
Despite the fact the geopolitics emerged as a scientific approach, from the very beginning
it was aimed at explaining the nature of international relations. At finding some laws of
international relations and laws of competition between states. And thus very connected with
military conflicts and war between states. As we mentioned previously, by the end of the 19th
century there was no more free space in the world to conquer. And thus international relations
and competition between countries had become some sort of zerosum game. Meaning that if
you want to add some territories to your own country, you should take them from another
country. The First World War had many reasons, and we're not going to find the geopolitical
ones.
However, the First World War had certain geopolitical consequences that contributed to
the further development of geopolitical approaches of some European countries. That's why
let's just briefly remind what happened to the European empires. First the two European and
two Asian empires collapsed, meaning the German Empire, the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the
Russian Empire, and the Ottoman Empire. In the place where these empires were located, new
sovereign states appeared. There were several reasons of why the First World War started, and
we're not going to look for the geopolitical ones. However, the First World War had certain
very important geopolitical consequences that contributed a lot to further development of
geopolitical approaches in various European countries. If before the first world war geopolitics
was considered during the process of foreign policy decision-making. After the First World
War in certain countries geopolitics became much closer to foreign policy-making. And to
some extent started to consult the politicians or the politicians started to use its theories to
justify the aggressive actions. First, let's very briefly remind what happened to the European
countries. First, we should mention that the two European empires and the two Asian empires
collapsed. The German Empire, the Austro-hungarian Empire, the Russian Empire, and the
Ottoman Empire cease to exist. In the region of Eastern Europe many new small states
appeared. However, many of these new European countries were unstable, and Halford
Mackinder was worried that Germany and the Soviet Russia could spread their influence in the
region. That is why he suggested to construct an effective security system for Eastern Europe
and to make a strategic buffer of independent states between Germany and Soviet Russia. And
thus to limit geographical access of both Germany and Soviet Russia to this region.
Geopolitically, it was aimed at limiting power of Germany and the Soviet Russia. However, the
triumphant states, Great Britain, France and the United States President Woodrow Wilson did
not consider all these geopolitical factors. Instead they proposed the so-called liberal approach
to international relations. They believed that the only way to avoid any further conflict is to get
rid of secret diplomacy and to establish the common security system for the whole European
region.
There was a romantic idea that these steps would allow the European countries to avoid
any future conflicts. The fact that this idea did not work is usually associated with the
personality of the German geopolitical thinker Karl Haushofer. Karl Haushofer, a geographer
and retired general, saw geopolitics as a solution to many of the Germans post-war difficulties.
In this map we can see that as a result of the First World War, the territory of German
shortened. It lost many of its territorial possessions, and different parts of the country were
even divided. Karl Haushofer was to some extent a follower of the ideas of Friedrich Ratzel,
meaning that he tried to continue his traditions of geopolitic. In his book Why Geopolitik?,
Haushofer claimed that the reason Germany lost World War I was because its leaders did not
study geopolitics. As he said, geopolitik is one of the most powerful weapons in the struggle
for a more just distribution of vital spaces of the earth. Thus Karl Haushofer tried to use
geopolitics based on traditions of Friedrich Ratzel and Halford Mackinder. And to give certain
suggestions to the German politicians of how to overcome the post First World War
difficulties. It is hard to find the certain moment when the transition from Househofer's
geopolitik to the Nazi geopolitics happened. Maybe we can start with friendship between Karl
Haushofer and Rudolf Hess who was Adolf Hitler's deputy. Via Hess, Karl Haushofer even
met Adolf Hitler in 1923 and had a chance to share some of his ideas. Including the idea of
Lebensraum, the concept which was first developed by Drew drechsel. Since nations were
competitive organic entities, according to the Ratzel's theory, that gain their power from the
soil, the German nation that lacked this territory and resources could begin pursuing
Lebensraum or else face decay and further decline. As long as nations were competitive
organic entities, according to the Ratzel's theory, that gain their power from the soil, there were
two ways for the Germany to continuous history. The first one to pursue its Lebensraum or else
to face decay and further decline. Despite the fact that Nazi geopolitics emerged from
Househofer's geopolitik, there were certain very important distinctions between these two
concepts. For example, Househofer's geopolitik advocated for economic collaboration between
Germany and the great open spaces of the Soviet Union. In contrast, Nazi geopolitic was
oriented on Eastern policy in the sense of acquiring the necessary soil for the German people.
Another distinction was that Househofer considered British Empire as the ultimate enemy of
Germany. For Adolf Hitler a crusade against the Soviet Union and the Jewish Bolshevism was
the main goal. For Karl Househofer, the Russo-German alliance of 1939 was aimed at enabling
Germany to be independent and self-sufficient. Fom the point of view of Adolf Hitler, this
could be achieved only through colonization of the east by the renewed German Empire. The
German race was to enslave the sub-human Slavs of the East, according to his book Mein
Kampf. It was also the opposite view on the ultimate determinant of national destiny.
For Househofer it was space, not race, while for Adolf Hitler race was in the first place.
Karl Househofer tried to defend the German geopolitics or geopolitik. He said that the
borderline was easily crossed between the pure science and practical science. And therefore it
happened that he occasionally overstepped those borders. He also said that all that was written
and printed after 1933 by himself was under pressure and should be judged accordingly.
He also said that in the Third Reich in Germany in 1930s the party in power, the Nazi
party wrongly understood and wrongly used many of his geopolitical concepts. But in the end
it was this period in the history of development of geopolitical thought that it started to be
associated strongly with the aggressive policy, in this case of the Nazi Germany. And thus was
blamed by many other political scientists, thinkers, philosophers, and public in general. All the
know, there were three main attacks on geopolitics. First, it was blamed to be responsible for
war and aggression in the end of 19th and the first half of the 20th century. Second, it was
blamed for being not a pure science. Instead of proved causalities, geopolitics provided
justification of foreign policy, which was far from the real social sciences. Finally, there was a
very huge pressure on geopolitics from the other mainstream IR approaches. German
geopolitics was used to justify oppressive European colonial empires, ideas of white
supremacy. It was quite understandable that Karl Househofer, who was the author of many
German geopolitical theories is trying to defend something that he had created. However, the
things were done by the Nazi party and the Nazi geopolitics. And it was 1930s when
geopolitical thought started to be associated with war, with conflict, with aggressive behavior
of the German State. And that brought certain problems to the whole geopolitical approach.
In the first half of the 20th century, geopolitics had build under a strong critics that came
from several directions. First, as we have mentioned, geopolitics was accused for being very
close to foreign policy-making and for being very associated with war and conflict, like
responsible for war and aggression in the end of the 19th and in the first half of the 20th
century. Second, geopolitics was widely criticized by many scholars in the field of social
sciences for being not a pure science, instead of providing causalities geopolitics justified for
an impulse of certain stage which did not allowed to call it a pure science. Finally, there was a
very huge and growing pressure from the other mainstream IR approaches that emerged as IR
theories in the first half of the 20th century. So nearly in the same time when geopolitics
appeared under this critics. Those people who try to find connections between geopolitics, and
war, and aggression usually spoke about responsibility of geopolitics for oppressive European
colonial empires, like we gave examples of Japan previously, ideas of white supremacy, which
was also very connected with the European colonial expansion. Finally, with the Nazi
geopolitics. Even despite the fact that Haushofer did everything to defend his pure geopolitical
theories, many geopoliticians did not agree with his arguments. For example, the American
geopolitical Strausz-Hupe pointed that geopolitics is the master plan that tells what and why to
conquer. Guiding the military strategists alone the easiest path to conquest, and thus he
believed that the key to Hitler's global mind was German geopolitic. All in all, we can say that
geopolitics encouraged statesman to play guard with the world political map. Another critical
question was if geopolitics was a science or ideology. On the one hand, we can agree that there
were a lot of geopoliticians who produced very peculiar theoretical concepts in order to explain
this behavior. On the other hand, we have example of Karl Haushofer and German geopolitics,
meaning the Nazi geopolitics, which used many of Haushofer's theoretical assumptions to use
them in their foreign policy and to justify there aggressive foreign policy. So there were clear
examples of how geopolitics was used as a ideology in justification of foreign policy
aggression. Finally, a huge pressure came from the new international relations approaches that
appeared in the first half of the 20th century. As we remember by the end of the 19th century,
geopolitics as an IR approach concentrated on geographical factors. However, in the beginning
of the 20th century, international relations theories turned to social scientific approaches to
emphasize the power of human beings. The relationship between man and earth were called
inverted. It was man who had the power capable of molding the earth to his wishes or in other
words, as Isaac Bowman, a prominent geopolitician pointed, "The mind of man was still a
more important source of power than heartland or a dated theory about it." It was always man
that made his history. Ultimately, after all these critics, the very academic value of geopolitics
was compromised. By the middle of the 20th century, geopolitics could even disappear and
replaced by the new international relations theories. That is why geopoliticians and those who's
still believed in geopolitics had no other choice but to modernize this approach to prove that
geopolitics was still a science and a scientific instrument to explain the foreign policy rather
than to contribute to aggression of certain states or to ideology that justified this aggression
wars and conflict.
Geopolitics from its very early years was aimed at explaining the nature of international
relations. Therefore, it wasn't a surprise that in 1920s and especially in 1930s, when geopolitics
was under big critics because of its political connections with the German fascism.
Alternative approaches from social sciences that explain the nature of international
relations started to criticize geopolitics. These two mainstream approaches that emerged within
social sciences were the well-known realism and liberalism. Their origins date back to the
years of Thomas Hobbes, which is considered to be the founder of the Realest School of
Thinking and John Locke, which is usually called as one of the founding fathers of the Liberal
School. However, in both these cases, these theories were focused on explaining domestic
politics. While only in the early 20th century, in 1920s, people started to use them to describe
and to explain the nature of international relations. There was a fundamental difference
between these two theories. Realism believed that international relations is a war of all against
all and that all states are egoistic entities, they think first of all, about their own interests. The
Liberal School had a little bit different understanding of international relations. According to
Liberals, international relations was a sphere for cooperation between states and cooperation as
behavior was much more rational than competition. Both these schools entered the academic
community in 1920s, pushed by certain political events. The liberal approach was inspired by
the 14 points of Woodrow Wilson, where the American president decided to create a new
system, a new type of international relations where all nations would live in peace. While the
realist approach began to be discussed more and more as long as many other scholars did not
believe in this liberal way of thinking and prefer to continue to describe the International Arena
as a of competition between the major nations. So in 1930s, late 1930s, early 1940s, geopolitics
should somehow transform itself in order to survive when it appeared on the grid critics. And
there were two paradigms, two alternative theories of international relations, liberalism, which
was much more about cooperation, collective security, international regimes. And realism,
which told about war of all against all, use such terms as power, security, self-help, to explain
the nature of international relations. Obviously, without saying geopolitics which was much
closer to the realist way of thinking and that's why in order to survive it or tried to stand even
closer to the Realist School or international relations. So how did realism influence geopolitics
after the second world war? The main change was about obviously explaining the nature of
international relations. According to traditional geopolitics, geography was a deterministic
factor in international relations. According to new geopolitics that emerged under the influence
of realism, geography became a condition and factor. According to one of the the most famous
and well-known geopolitician of the period after the second World War, Nicholas Spykman,
neither does the entire foreign policy of a country like in geography nor does any part of that
policy like entirely in geography. There were a lot of other factors that influence foreign policy
behavior of states apart from geographic, such as population density, the economic structure,
the ethnic composition of the people and many more. In other words, as Spykman underlined,
the geography of the country was rather the material for than the cause of its foreign policy.
Although Spykman represented a new generation of geopoliticians that were not so
deterministic about the geographic factors. He still believed that a good expert in international
relations should study geography and geopolitics. Because they're still were some factors that
contributed to foreign policy of states, like location, size, shape of the country, landscape
inside the country and in the region as a whole. So in other words, as he said, foreign policy
can modify some geographic facts, but it cannot ignore them, for geography does not argue, it
simply is. Nicholas Spykman studied different geographic factors that were supposed to
influence these foreign policy behavior. Location was one of them. Spykman believed that
there are two types of location that may influence these foreign policy. The world location,
with reference to land masses and oceans of the world as a whole. The world view that first
was introduced in geopolitics by Halford Mackinder. And regional location which refers to the
territory of other states. And both these factors influenced geopolitics of a particular country
from two different sites. And to continue to addition of the previous geopoliticians, Spykman
pointed that location is an internal factor that does not change, states continue to exist in the
place where they were once founded. But this significance of the world location, as of the
relative power, as well as location of their neighbors, the shape of the country, size of the
country, may change due to development of technologies of the ways communication that
contributes significantly to state's political geography and geopolitics. But definitely one of the
biggest contribution of Nicholas Spykman to geopolitics was the upgrade of Halford
Mackinder's theory. Let's very quickly remember this theory. According to health Halford
Mackinder, the whole world is divided into two parts. The World Island, which includes your
Eurasia, sometimes Africa, and the the outer space covered mainly by World Ocean. And the
main competition was between the continental power and the sea power. In the continent in the
World Island, the main area that attracted his attention was Heartland, located in Central
Eurasia and Northern Eurasia. According to Mackinder, it was potentially the strongest
territory, because on the one hand, it contained significant resources. On the other hand, it was
isolated from the rest of the world, and thus could be easily protected and secured by outer
threats. Spykman however, had a little bit different view on this issue. Spykman believed that
of course, Heartland was isolated from the rest of the world, it was true. But on the other hand,
it was the weak side of Heartland because it did not have access to international trade and
international communications as other states had, that were located across the coastline in
Europe, in the Middle East, in East and Southeast Asia. So Nicholas Spykman added one more
variable to this formula, a new region that he called Rimland. Rimland was the area that
surrounded Heartland, and according to Spykman, this area was even more significant, because
on the one hand, it was Rimland that contained the main resources. Not only material but also
human resources, labor resources. And finally, it was the area that determined the destiny of
Heartland, whether Heartland had access to the World Ocean and to international
communications or not. So Spykman tried to add to this theory of Heartland some ideas of
realism. That international relations were not only about competition between land power and
the sea power but much more about balance of powers between several states that could be
located in different parts of the world. In the Americas, in the Rimland, somewhere in Europe,
in the Middle East, in Southeast Asia and the Heartland, which he agreed was very significant
for international relations still. So finally, Spykman modified the main three rules of
Mackinder. According to Mackinder, who rules East Europe rules the Heartland because East
Europe with the region where Heartland could be penetrated and captured by the outer force.
Who rules the Heartland commands the World Island and who commands the World Islands
commands the whole world. According to Spykman, as long as Rimland was more important
than Heartland, who rules the Rimland rules Eurasia and who rules Eurasia controls the
destinies of the world. Only one additional thing should be mentioned here, is that besides the
fact that Rimland was something common and unified for Spykman, he did not try to say that it
could become a single country. There are different parts of Rimland and there could be
different combinations between great powers in the process of balancing each other. The first
years after the second World War was a period when not only realism influence geopolitics,
but also geopolitics influenced realism. Let's speak about one of the founding fathers of
political realism, Hans Morgenthau.
As representative of the Realist School of Thinking, he believe that international relations
are determined by power and balance of power. However, he still recognized significance of
geography and geographic factors in how powerful the state was and what was the distribution
of power in region or in the world. For example, in terms of nuclear power, he said that in
order to make a nuclear threat credible, a nation requires a territory large enough to disperse its
industrial and population centers as well as his nuclear installations. All in all, we can see the
geopolitics and realism became very close to each other after second World War. Both these
theories try to explain the same issues of international relations, but they focused on a little bit
different aspects of these issues. For both realism and geopolitics, competition between states
in international relations was inevitable. And both these theorists believe this, power was the
main instrument of this competition. However, while for realism, power which about amount
of power and how a particular state use this power against the other nations. For geopolitics
power, was about its geographic sources and about projection of power in particular places.
And finally, balance of power became a theory that unified both realism and geopolitics.