Posted by Ilya Somin:
More on Libertarianism and War:
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_07_15-2007_07_21.shtml#1184706624


   I agree with most of the points Randy Barnett makes in his excellent
   [1]op ed on libertarianism and war. Both the Iraq War specifically and
   defense policy more generally have historically divided libertarians,
   as I explained in two posts last year ([2]here and [3]here).

   Randy makes a good case that libertarians who accept the idea of
   defensive war cannot categorically reject the possibility that
   sometimes the best defense is a good offense. They can, of course,
   ultimately conclude that limiting war to narrow defensive efforts
   against truly "imminent threats" is the best policy. But that
   conclusion requires additional evidence to support it, and cannot be
   deduced from the nature of libertarianism itself on a priori grounds.

   I would go one step further than Randy, and suggest that even
   nondefensive humanitarian military intervention is potentially
   compatible with libertarianism. This is a paradoxical claim. After
   all, libertarianism is nothing if not an ideology of deep skepticism
   about government-controlled enterprises and wars of any kind clearly
   fall into that category. Certainly, libertarians oppose all or most
   large-scale government programs in the domestic realm; if they didn't,
   they would no longer be libertarians.

   Why is warfare different? Because in foreign policy, unlike in
   domestic policy, the alternative to US government action is often not
   the free market or civil society, but instead the continued rule of
   other governments. If the US government abolishes Domestic Program X,
   that usually means that the field is left open to private sector
   actors. Libertarians generally assume that the private sector will
   handle the issue more effectively - and with less infringement on
   individual rights - than the government would.

   By contrast, let us assume that President Reagan decided not to invade
   Grenada in 1983. The alternative to Reagan's action was not private
   sector control of Grenada or a libertarian minimal state in that
   country, but the continued rule of Grenada's communist dictatorship.
   That dictatorship was, of course, itself a government. Moreover, it
   was a much worse government - in libertarian terms - than the liberal
   democratic regime that the US installed after the invasion Reagan
   ordered. On balance, it is highly likely that the US invasion of
   Grenada was a net gain in terms of promoting libertarian values, even
   when one factors in the loss of life and property in the fighting.
   Grenada is perhaps an easy case for pro-intervention libertarians.
   Other cases, including Iraq, may be much harder. Nonetheless, it does
   illustrate one example where military intervention clearly advanced
   libertarian values far more than it undermined them.

   The key insight here is that question of humanitarian military
   intervention is not a tradeoff between government and the private
   sector, but is usually a tradeoff between two different governments -
   the status quo and the one the invaders plan to install. Sometimes,
   the latter government will be much better from the standpoint of
   libertarian values than the former. Obviously, one also has to factor
   in the lives and resources lost in the fighting. Sometimes, these will
   be so great as to counsel against intervention even in a case where
   the status quo government is extremely oppressive. The current
   government of North Korea is perhaps the worst in the world, but its
   possession of a large army and nuclear weapons ensures that trying to
   forcibly remove it maybe even worse - from a libertarian point of view
   - than leaving it alone.

   Whether or not humanitarian military intervention can be justified on
   libertarian grounds will vary from case to case. It depends on how
   unlibertarian the current government is, how much better the new one
   is likely to be, and how much loss of life and property will occur as
   a result of the fighting. Libertarianism gives clear, determinate
   answers on most questions dealing with tradeoffs between the
   government and the private sector. It is not nearly so unequivocal on
   issues dealing with tradeoffs between two or more governments. The
   question of war and military intervention usually falls into the
   latter category.

   None of this suggests that one cannot be a libertarian and still
   oppose virtually all military action other than narrowly defined
   self-defense. If you believe that offense is rarely an effective form
   of defense and that humanitarian intervention nearly always leads to
   the installation of governments as bad or worse than those they
   replace, libertarian isolationism becomes the right policy
   prescription. However, such a conclusion does not flow from the
   intrinsic nature of libertarianism itself. It requires extensive
   additional empirical and theoretical analysis to justify it on
   libertarian grounds. For that reason, libertarians will continue to
   disagree over war and military intervention.

References

   1. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_07_15-2007_07_21.shtml#1184647054
   2. http://volokh.com/posts/1153624105.shtml
   3. http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2006_07_23-2006_07_29.shtml#1153776955

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