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Containment and intensification in political war: Carl Schmitt and the Clausewitzian heritage
Ist Teil von
History of European ideas, 2017-08, Vol.43 (6), p.649-673
Ort / Verlag
Oxford: Routledge
Erscheinungsjahr
2017
Quelle
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
Beschreibungen/Notizen
This article provides the first comprehensive and chronological analysis of Carl Schmitt's reception of Carl von Clausewitz. While earlier scholarship has mostly stressed Schmitt's shift from Clausewitzian 'instrumentality' to an 'existential' view of war, I note some inherent difficulties in this dichotomy and instead promote the parallel distinction between two argument types: those of containment and intensification. Schmitt theorized both limited political war and the intensification of war out of traditional bounds, and focusing on one should not eclipse the other. Further, both elements are identifiable already in Clausewitz. I analyse Schmitt's oscillation between containment and intensification arguments chronologically from the mid-1920s to the 1960s. Despite sometimes nominally rejecting Clausewitz's famous thesis of war as the continuation of politics, Schmitt nevertheless affirmed the idea of war's political nature. I conclude that Schmitt's view can be read as a radicalized version of the Clausewitzian political theory of war rather than a strict deviation from it. This becomes evident as soon as we place Schmitt's partly incoherent observations on Clausewitz in their argumentative contexts.