The “First” Cold War

 

     So you thought there has been only one cold war ? think again . what if i told you that the first cold war occurred before the birth of christ ? The Peloponessian war which was between the Spartans and the Athenians shared similar characteristics of the Cold War, and thus has been dubbed as the “first cold war.” One defining characteristic which both wars shared was that they were both wars of ideologies. Also, the Peloponessian war featured  mistrust and security dilemma which was very evident in the Cold war during the 20th century.

     Ideologies play an important role in relations between people, more so among countries. It has been a major cause for both wars, the Peloponessian war and the Cold War. The democratic camp is represented by the USA (20th century) and Athens ( of the Medieval Age ), where as the autocratic regimes were the USSR (20th century) and the Spartans. Like the Cold War, the spartans did not like the idea that the Athenians were spreading democracy, especially when they tried to get the Melians to surrender to Athens. To the Spartans this was unacceptable because it made the authoritarian regime seem  less important. Unlike in  Athens where citizens were given the rights to vote, the Spartans ran a very militaristic government, where the citizens had very little democratic rights and instead they focused on trying to build a perfect utopia. Eventually these differing ideologies clashed.This mirrors the bipolar world of the 20th century, which saw the war between democracy and authoritarianism.

   As happened in the cold war when the USSR and the US teamed up against the  Axis powers, the Athenians and Spartans started off as allies against Persian Empire.However they had a falling out after the war against the Persians. An important  reason for the launch of the war was the Spartan fear of Athen’s growing power and prosperity. Athens become the leader of the Dellian and its naval power was growing day by day. Additionally, the Athenians created a wall to protect themselves from a Spartan attack on land after the Persians had left Greece .This can be likened to the Americans creating the atomic bomb and using it as a means to intimidate the Soviet Union (revisionist school of thought.)   Just as the actions of the americans  angered the soviets, so did the actions of the Athenians anger the Spartans. This brewed mistrust between the to former allies. Like the Cold war which began in the mid 20th Century, a major cause for the Peloponessian war was mistrust between two allies.

   What is strikingly similar to the cold war of the 20th century is that most of the fighting in the Peloponessian war took place in satellite states   In the Archidamian War, Sparta launched repeated invasions of Attica, which was an island owned by the Athenians, while Athens took advantage of its naval supremacy to raid the coast of the Peloponnese.This is similar to the Korean war, where communist Korea launched an attack on South Korea (democratic). In reaction to this, United states intervened and asked the United Nations for troops to help them fight the North Koreans. and the fighting went on for about 3 years, until both sides reached a cease-fire. Once again, both wars share the similarity of both superpowers fighting hot wars  on proxy states. This is one of the reasons why i think the Peloponessian war is a cold war, just an  earlier form of the cold war which occurred in the 20th century.

   A cause of the cold war , Security Dilemma is featured in the Peloponessian conflict. Like the Soviets, the Spartans did not like t when the Athenians created an navy.  According to the Athenians, the navy was means to ward off the Persians, which sounded similar to the American reason for the creation of the atomic bomb, it was a means of deterrence. to make sure that they don’t get attacked again by Germany.  However, the disbelieving  Spartans, decided to mobilize, much like the Soviets who decided to create and test their own atomic bomb. they then attacked the small island which belonged to Athens. This sparked a start of the Peloponessian war. In the 20th century, Soviets also tried to make their own atomic bomb, which in turn led to the nuclear arms race.

   However,the cold war analogy fails because the Spartans defeated the Athenians. In the 20th century, the American “won” the battle of ideologies.  The peloponessian war has been described as the “first” cold primarily because it was seen as a war where there was a battle of ideologies between two bipolar worlds.

source : http://militaryhistorypodcast.blogspot.ca/2007/11/peloponnesian-war-part-one.html

sources : 

https://zoklet.net/bbs/showthread.php?t=39474

 

Is the Korean War over

 

  Is the Korean War over? To give a brief background, the  Korean war started on the 25th of june when North Korea invaded South Korean and the South Koreans asked the UN for help. The war went for another 3 years before they signed an armistice on July 27th 1953, which gave South Korea an extra 1,500 square miles of territory; and created a 2-mile-wide “demilitarized zone”  (DMZ) that still exists today. 

 Did you think that the Korean War ended in 1953?! Bless your heart! I know that it seems like  the Panmunjom agreement which was concluded on June 27, 1953 was the end to the war, but it provided for a cease-fire, and created a demarcation line between North and South Korea.The basic definition of a cease-fire is really just a temporary truce between warring parties. It is a “total cessation of armed hostilities” between groups that are too far apart to even begin discussing a peace treaty. A peace treaty is an agreement bounded by international law. According to these two definitions, North and South Korea are technically still at war with each other.

Wars do not necessarily end when the warring factions stop firing shots at each other. It lives on in the psychological scars of the people. Some Korean people still have so much hatred,    and  are caught up in the mindset of deep conflict with a sense of antagonism for their counterparts who live across the border. A Korean girl in my  security studies class said even when she was in the  DMZ she could feel the tension between the two sides.With this much tension between the two countries, you really believe the war is over ? 

 Openness about a war is one of the ways to end a war. With open talks about the Korean war, North and South Korea can learn each other motives for the war, and possibly forgive each other. Open talks will be a difficult thing to achieve though especially since some cultures do not like talking about certain things upfront. Such cultural sensitivities might attribute to the proliferation of the Korean War. Talking about the war might ease the tension associated with the Korean War, and possibly lead to peace talks. However, if the memories of war continue to be bottled up, it becomes continually difficult for North and South Korea to forgive each other. Lack of forgiveness prolongs the lifespan of the Korean War.

The sad but honest  truth is that the Korean War will continue to prevail as long as both countries don’t want to be reunited.  Even though it is in the world’s collective  interest to end the War, do these countries want the war to end? One of the biggest questions many Koreans ask about reunification is who will preside over this new and unified Korea?North Korean leaderships will not want to surrender to democracy, likewise, South Korean leadership as well as people will not want to give up democracy for communism. As long as these two countries cannot agree on a government for a unified Korea, no party will sign a peace treaty that reunifies both countries and consequently ends the war. The Korean war doesn’t involve only North and South Korea, but other international actors like the United States, China, and Canada. Some of these international actors may want this war to end, but we forget that the Koreans may not want the war to end. Like Oscar Wilde said “ we are all in the gutters, but some of us are looking at the stars.” We want the Korean war to end , but will the Koreans do what it takes to end the war ? 

 

 

 

references : 

http://opiniojuris.org/2007/10/04/is-it-time-to-end-the-korean-war/

http://www.history.com/topics/korean-war