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The War Machine & Stateless Organisations
or The Nomadology of Anti-States

"Indra, the warrior god, is in opposition to Varuna no less than to 
Mitra"1 



In their "Treatise on Nomadology" 2, Deleuze and Guattari 
present two axioms regarding what they name the War Machine. 
Firstly, that "the war machine is exterior to the State apparatus"; 
and secondly, that "the war machine is the invention of the 
nomads (insofar as it is exterior to the State apparatus and 
distinct from the military institution)".3 

The first axiom is exemplified by the role of the nomadic warrior 
in mythology, and also by the various kinds of 'occupation' of 
space in war games such as Go and chess. In the former case, 
drawing from the work of George Dumezil on Indo-European 
mythology, war is positioned outside the binary poles of violence 
that are accessible to the State. Either the state channels war 
through its police and jailers, whose operations are 'magical 
capture' and seizure, which prevent combat, or else it acquires 
an army upon which it imposes 'juridicial and institutional rules' 
4. Thus the war machine is never reducible to the State 
apparatus, but the State constantly appropriates the war 
machine to serve its mechanics of violence and control. In short, 
the State divests the war machine of its power of 
metamorphosis- its nomadicism. It is worth noting also that the 
war machine does not have war as its object, but "necessarily 
adopts it as its object when it allows itself to be appropriated by 
the State apparatus" 5

In the case of games, the comparison between chess and Go 
allows a metaphor for comparing the features of 'State space' 
and the 'nomadic space' of the war machine, respectively. In the 
former case, space is striated into lines of tension and the 
closing-off of regions by pieces endowed with intrinsic powers 
and qualities. Chess is a game of interiority. On the other hand, 
Go pieces are empowered not by intrinsic rules but by situational 
properties. There are no front lines or battles in Go, which 
operates within a 'smooth' space.

As to the second axiom, D & G refer to the work of Pierre 
Clastres, who proposed that so-called 'primitive societies' are 
not only societies 'without a State' 6 , but have (usually complex) 
mechanisms for warding off the formation of a State. Further, that 
war in primitive societies is the surest mechanism in preventing 
the formation of the State. In the words of D & G, "war maintains 
the dispersal and segmentarity of groups, and the warrior 
himself is caught in a process of accumulating exploits leading 
him to solitude and a prestigious but powerless death". This 
organisational form is closer to that of bands and packs than to 
the organs of power in any State apparatus. Leadership is a 
volatile relation between pack members, and does not 
necessarily promote the strongest but instead inhibits the 
installation of stable powers. Thus, instead of an institution of 
power structures which pre-exist their occupation, power is a 
fabric of immanent relations, constantly undergoing 
metamorphosis and threatening the dispersion of the pack. This 
cannot be seen simply as a mere "unevolved" system, but is 
instead a complex assemblage of multiple micro-mechanisms 
that prevent the formation of power institutions proper to the 
State.

Thus, by breaking with the evolutionist's position of "from bands 
to kingdoms", a certain self-sufficiency of the bands is assumed 
and the emergence of the State is transferred to entirely different 
mechanisms 7.

At this point it is necessary to clarify that the war machine does 
not have war as its object, but rather as its means of averting the 
formation of 'organs of power'. While the nomads can be 
accredited with the invention of the war machine, they cannot be 
accredited with its secrets, as any "ideological, scientific or 
artistic movement can be a potential war machine, to the precise 
extent to which it draws, in relation to a phylum 8 , a plane of 
consistency, a creative line of flight, a smooth space of 
displacement. It is not the nomad who defines this constellation 
of characteristics; it is this constellation that defines the nomad, 
and at the same time the essence of the war machine" 9.

So one does not create a war machine, one creates in such a 
way as to operate as a war machine. And war only becomes its 
object when it is directed against the State apparatuses that 
appropriate it and make war its object. The war machine is 
inherently volatile and the power relations within it are 
necessarily fragmented or distributed- it is this tendency to 
rupture that prevents the formation of power-hierarchies and the 
State apparatus. The ruptures and schisms that guarantee the 
metamorphosis of the war machine are essential to maintaining 
the exteriority of the war machine to the State. And it is the 
operation of the State to reterritorialise and appropriate the war 
machines that deterritorialise or escape from it in its attempt to 
disempower them. Thus, without the internal ruptures of the war 
machine that ensure its nomadic movements, it would inevitably 
be conquested by the State apparatus, either by capture (a police 
raid) or domination (military destruction or incorporation). 

Schisms break up the war machine, being an integral part of it, 
and thus they ensure the war machine's continuation. 

Dnyl
05/03/96

Footnotes:
(1) Dumezial, The Destiny of the Warrior, University of Chicago 
Press, 1970.
(2) Deleuze & Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, Minnesota Press, 
1987. p351
(3) ibid., p351, 380.
(4) Dumezial, in Mitra-Varuna, thus concludes that Mars-Tiwaz is 
not a warrior god, but a jurist of war.
(5) D & G, ibid, p513
(6) Orthodox ethnology posits primitive societies as simplistic 
societies that, historically, 'evolve' from nomadic to agricultural 
societies and, eventually, form complex power relations which 
form a State apparatus. 
(7) So, if the formation of the State is not the product of war, then 
it must contain internal mechanisms that make people 
voluntarily seek out or accept subordination to the State 
apparatus. 
(8) In this context a phylum can be interpreted as a specific 
power-institution of the State.
(9) D & G, ibid, p422-423 


c/

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