vendredi 27 octobre 2017

Seattle's new Apple Store is emerging

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Seattle's new Apple Store is emerging

Work continues on Seattle's upcoming Apple Store, whose metal structure now looks almost complete

AppleInsider is publishing two photos of the site this week, showing a roof that is about to be completed, and many panels waiting to be laid to form the future walls of the store.

Located in the commercial area University Village of Seattle, this new Apple Store will face one of the stalls of Microsoft, and will have a total surface of more than 1000m2, of which nearly 600m2 devolves to the sales area.

Designed by Foster + Partners, this new Apple store should be arranged according to the latest codes set up by Jony Ive and Angela Ahrendts, with beautiful shelves to highlight props, tree-lined walkways and space for "Today at Apple" sessions.

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samedi 21 octobre 2017

the Retraites are the losers of the policy of Emmanuel Macron

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نتيجة بحث الصور عن ‪Retraités : les perdants de la politique d'Emmanuel Macron‬‏

the Retraites are the losers of the policy of Emmanuel Macron

Retirees will see their CSG increase in 2018. In return, their housing tax will decrease except for the wealthiest pensioners.


On September 28, there were many in the street, angry against the rise of the CSG. 60% of the 14 million retirees are affected by this increase. It is the under-65s who receive more than 1,200 euros per month and the over-65s who have more than 1,400 euros. Emmanuel Macron wanted to reassure during his televised speech Sunday, October 15. Retirees lose on one side, but one party will win on the other with the exemption of the housing tax.

2.5 million retirees out of 14


According to Bercy, the winners are singles with incomes below 2,500 euros per month and couples with less than 3,981 euros. In all, 4.5 million pensioners will be exempt from the tax. But there are also the losers: 2.5 million retirees, who will pay the increased CSG and still and always the housing tax.
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vendredi 20 octobre 2017

Electricity crisis in Gaza

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ربما تحتوي الصورة على: ‏‏‏‏شخص أو أكثر‏، و‏ليل‏‏ و‏نار‏‏‏
Electricity crisis in Gaza

The Palestinian enclave is experiencing an unprecedented energy crisis. Due to the conflict with Hamas, the Palestinian Authority stopped two months ago paying for the current provided by Israel in Gaza. The Hebrew state has reduced its delivery of electricity dangerously. The Gazans have only two to four hours of electricity per day. And the crisis is worsening: Egypt has also reduced its delivery of fuel that allows to power the only power station. Palestinian and Israeli officials inaugurated on Monday (July 10th) a new electricity distribution station near Jenin in the northern West Bank. A strong contrast to the situation in Gaza.


All smiles, in this power station near Jenin, Palestinians and Israelis welcome a new energy agreement while Gaza is plunged in the dark. For Rami Hamdallah, the Palestinian prime minister, the measures taken against Hamas are justified. "President Abbas has called on Hamas to cancel the administrative committee it has set up," he said. This is a de facto government. There can only be one government of national consensus approved by Hamas. If Hamas wants it, we will solve the electricity crisis. "

However, these measures are unpopular. According to a recent survey, 84% of Palestinians are opposed. But the Palestinian Authority is holding firm, followed by the Hebrew state which has reduced its supply of electricity to Gaza. Yoav Mordechai is the head of the Israeli military administration which manages the Occupied Territories. "We would like Gaza to have power 24 hours a day, but the problem is that Hamas is stealing electricity," he said, "the houses of their leaders are well fed 24 hours a day they are illuminated like night- clubs. So why do not they give it to their own people? "

media
Gaza, le 11 juin 2017
According to Hamas, the Palestinian Authority has frozen the money transfers to pay Egyptian fuel oil. This fuel was the sole source of energy to power the only power plant in the Palestinian enclave.

Marine Vlahovic
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mercredi 27 septembre 2017

Senate Republicans Say They Will Not Vote on Health Bill

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Senate Republicans Say They Will Not Vote on Health Bill


Senate Republicans on Tuesday authoritatively deserted the most recent intend to rescind the Affordable Care Act, racking a standoff vote on the measure and adequately conceding rout in their last-heave drive to satisfy a center guarantee of President Trump and Republican legislators. 

The choice came under 24 hours after an essential Republican congressperson, Susan Collins of Maine, proclaimed her restriction to the nullification proposition, everything except guaranteeing that Republican pioneers would be shy of the votes they required. 

"We haven't abandoned changing the American social insurance framework," Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the greater part pioneer, said after a noon meeting of Republican legislators. "We are not going to have the capacity to do that this week, yet regardless it lies in front of us, and we haven't abandoned that." 

Mr. McConnell said Republicans would proceed onward to their next enormous authoritative objective: upgrading the expense code, an accomplishment that has not been refined since 1986. 

Democrats, who have spent all year battling to ensure the Affordable Care Act, a law that is a mainstay of President Barack Obama's inheritance, reacted by requiring the resumption of bipartisan transactions to balance out medical coverage markets. Republican pioneers had squelched those discussions as the most recent annulment design, composed by Senators Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, picked up steam. 

"We trust we can push ahead and enhance social insurance, not take part in another fight to remove it from individuals, since they will bomb by and by on the off chance that they attempt," said Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, the Democratic pioneer. 

The choice by Senate Republican pioneers may end up being a turning point in the decades-long battle about medical coverage in the United States, proposing that the Affordable Care Act had picked up no less than a respite and maybe a measure of political acknowledgment. 

Representative Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee and the executive of the Senate wellbeing advisory group, and Senator Patty Murray of Washington, the senior Democrat on the board, have been chipping away at enactment to balance out protection markets and hold down premiums in the following couple of years. Both said on Tuesday that they would have liked to continue those endeavors. 

A great many individuals who purchase protection all alone face sharp increments in premiums one year from now, and Trump organization authorities have made various strides that have just undermined the operations of the wellbeing law. 

What's more, human services is certain to be an issue in one year from now's midterm races. 

Representative John Thune of South Dakota, an individual from the Senate Republican administration, said the idea driving the Graham-Cassidy bill would enable Republicans to characterize their disparities with Democrats in the battle season. 

"Single payer, communism — or federalism, returning energy to the states to decide," Mr. Thune said. "I imagine that is an extraordinary difference for us, and I feel that is a contention in the end we can win."
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dimanche 13 août 2017

DEMOCRACY IN AFRICA, MYTHS AND REALITIES

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Democracy in Africa, Myths and Realities


Political parties abounded, bearing in their denomination the word fetish "Democracy." Twenty (20) years later, democratic society according to the definition of democracy: Power of the people; Power of the people, by the people and the people; Power of the majority, application of the will of the majority, is it built? Has an embryo of education for a democratic society been operating in countries for two (2) decades? Has democracy been explained to the people, who is the architect of its construction? One can answer without error, loud and clear, to all these questions by a single answer: No! No, because during the last twenty (20) years throughout Africa, the aspirations of peoples have not been really and sufficiently taken into account. In twenty (20) years, the African intelligentsia has metamorphosed greatly, through the appearance of a new class, the neo-bourgeoisie, whose aspirations and preoccupations are opposed to those of the people. Never in Africa, for twenty (20) years, no government in its project of society has laid down clearly the type of society that it wanted to build, starting with man. Free enterprise with ill-defined obscure contours and its corollaries, of which the affairism which kills the State, has constituted more or less veiled the basis of the projects of society. Africa is mired. Africa is broken down, because it has as its focus, through its thinking heads, societies whose social contradictions are insoluble. Where is Africa going? For two centuries, the world has continued to undergo social upheavals and profound changes, all resulting from the deep aspirations of peoples for greater freedom, justice and social well-being. As a reminder, let us mention a few: 1789 the French Revolution, the birth of Communism 1848, the Commune of Paris in 1871, the Revolution of 1912 and especially that of October 1917 in Russia, the birth of the RDA in 1946 And the right to self-determination of the peoples voted by the League of Nations, the Bandung Conference in 1955, the 1958 referendum in Africa, the Cuban Revolution in 1959, the African Independence in 1960, the two decades 1960-70, 1970-80) coups in Africa supported and encouraged by the West, the Conference of La Baule in 1989. What a way covered by the peoples, with what pitfalls! Can it be asserted in the light of political experience since 1936 that the African continent did not experience democracy until 1990? No, no and no ! It would be foolish to believe it and insult to say it! As evidence, let us rather listen to two African presidents, all of whom left the political scene long before 1990.



1. "A case concerning the Guinean State concerns all Guinean citizens. The program of the party is discussed democratically. As long as a decision has not been made, everyone is free to say what he thinks or wants. But when, after a thorough discussion in congress or assembly, a unanimous vote or a majority vote has been obtained, the members of the majority as well as the leaders of the party are obliged to apply it correctly. »Sékou TOURE (Guinea)

2. "Although we have only one party, free democratic practice is respected in our meetings. All opinions are expressed and the one with the highest number of votes is considered the right one, and therefore the one whose policy is applied. »Modibo KEITA (Mali)

Clear words about democracy, an exercise that best explains the democratic practice within a structure, a group and even a single party and more in line with the definition of democracy as stated above.

Today, democratic practice in institutions such as the National Assembly of Mali, very budgetary, its functioning, the level of expenses, the advantages and rights granted to its members and the abuses of elected municipalities by land speculation , To cite only these examples, do they in fact make of Mali, a democratic state? No ! Because, the people will never share the practices that are there.

Most African governments have been claiming democracy since 1989-90. But among the multitude of democracies: bourgeois or western democracy, popular democracy, democratic debates, democratic centralism, or the dictatorship of the proletariat ... which would they want to build? Undoubtedly, Western democracy, the reference, alas, of the masters of yesterday, their masters to think. Africa is not Europe and will not be. The political foundations of Africa must today be the result of all the positive experiences lived elsewhere and not the correct copy of systems or policies unadaptable to our realities. It is time for Africa to make a clear path for its development. Democracy, a permanent quest, yes! For 20 years of democratic hubbub in Africa, in practice, democracy has remained a word with hollow content, by the facts and behavior of many responsible. Power conquered in the name of the people or the masses, but exercised without them!
In the light of the evolution of the world from 1789 to 2010, the African Union must ask UNESCO to update the concepts of social revolution, democracy and development.

So, African historians, philosophers, sociologists, politicians, researchers and thinkers for a truly African new Africa. Long live the revolution !
Sékou KEITA
published on 15/10/2011

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mercredi 9 août 2017

Is democracy in crisis?

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Is democracy in crisis?


Political impotence, lack of confidence of the citizens towards the ruling class ..., democracy is not doing well. How can this apathy be explained? And above all, can we remedy this?

Not even twenty years ago, with the fall of the Berlin Wall in particular, the triumph of democracy seemed to be over. Today, the euphoric discourse has become bitter. Democracy has not kept its promises. Interventions in Afghanistan or Iraq after September 11, 2001 have instrumentalized it in order to satisfy imperialistic imperialist interests.The center of the world is imperceptibly moving towards a China whose economic growth in no way favors democratization. More seriously, from the inside, democracy is undermined by the rise of extremes, the chronic abstentionism, the lack of confidence of the citizens towards the political class, the political impotence ... What harm evil therefore ? Is it necessary to take note of a crisis of democracy? 

The rights of the individual rather than collective control 

This, in any case, is the conviction that animates Marcel Gauchet. "The fact that democracy no longer has declared enemies does not prevent it from being worked by an intimate adversity, which is unaware of itself, but which is none the less formidable in its effects" . According to him, democracies are experiencing, for the second time in their history, a crisis of growth. The first was after the First World War. Universal suffrage saw the establishment of disappointing parliamentary regimes, while society was torn by the antagonism between social classes.The consequence of this crisis is well known: the advent of totalitarianism in the 1930s. But after 1945 liberal democracies, through profound political, administrative and social reforms, were able to overcome the crisis.
In spite of similarities, the democracy of today is mainly due to the deepening of liberalism, which is expressed by mass individualism and the triumph of human rights. Henceforth the sovereignty of the individual has supplanted the sovereignty of the people. There is a recess and even a "soft self-destruction" of democracy. Its universalism leads it to want to dissociate itself from any historical or political framework and makes it lose its meaning. "It has attacked the principle of power in general and everywhere. It has universally undermined the basis of collective authority in the name of freedom. (...) It has brought to the forefront the exercise of individual rights, to the point of confusing the idea of ​​democracy with it and of forgetting the requirement of collective control that it entails . "Disenchantment of the World (2002), this crisis of democracy corresponds to an acceleration of the process of exit from religion. 
Finally, for Gauchet, who here extends his analyzes of the Disenchantment of the World(2002), this crisis of democracy corresponds to an acceleration of the process of leaving religion.

A democracy of defiance 

Pierre Rosanvallon's statement in La Contre-démocratie (2006), if it partially overlaps that of M. Gauchet, is probably less sombre. First, because it recalls that democracy always appeared at first as a problem, as a reality that was not fulfilled. Secondly, because he aggressively refuses the eternal refrain on the disaffection of citizens. Petitions, strikes, demonstrations, activism on the ground show that there is implication and that one can not speak of withdrawal on the private sphere and political apathy. It would be less of a decline than of a change in citizenship, which is organized around a principle of defiance.Democracy, says P. Rosanvallon, is not limited to its electoral dimension. Mistrust can be truly democratic by demonstrating the demands of citizens on power. Still, today, there is a flurry of distrust that risks degenerating into a populism devaluing the political sphere. The affairs of the city are not less interesting to citizens, but they often do not have a political apprehension of the problems. How to find more confidence?

Local dimension and deliberation 

"Participatory democracy", which brings together new forms of citizen involvement in decisions such as neighborhood councils, is one of the important developments in democracy, although it refers to very different practices. It responds to a strong social demand, but if it is insufficient to renew democracy on its own, it is often characterized by its local dimension and often appears in a depoliticized form. Deliberation, which is the other important axis of renewal of democracy, is equally inadequate for P. Rosanvallon.There is no silver bullet, but a set of reforms to be implemented to restore the confidence of citizens and also an effort to argue and give greater clarity to political action. Double talk ? The conclusion may appear disappointing to the already unconfident citizen. That of Mr. Gauchet risks not arousing much more enthusiasm: "In the short term, in all probability, at this stage, the crisis can only get worse. But he does not leave us without hope. "It does not seem unreasonable to me to believe that the democracy of the 2100s could be a substantially improved democracy compared to the one we know." Difficult on these bases to" re-enchant "democracy ...

Published on 13/03/2008
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lundi 7 août 2017

Why is the Arab world not democratic?

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Why is the Arab world not democratic?
Today in Tunisia, and in all other Arab countries, there is no shortage of experts in democracy. Indeed, you will find those who focus on the fundamental meaning of democracy and related notions such as freedom, participation and equal rights. You will also find those who focus on the institutional changes necessary to establish to become a true democracy, such as independent justice, a new constitution and a functional parliament. Finally, there are those who call for change by civil society as the expression of a citizen democracy. These healthy and necessary discussions help us to understand the issues surrounding the establishment of a true democracy and to understand its different meanings. However, they do not tell us much about the factors that contribute to the creation, development and development of democracy. They can not, in any case, give answers for the whole region, because of the specificity of cultural, religious and economic experiences and the complexity of the historical context of each Arab country. I would like to contribute here to explain the deficit of democracy in the Arab countries and analyze certain myths and demystify certain hypotheses. 

From 1990 to 1995, the world witnessed the birth of about 40 new democracies, bringing the total number of democratic countries to almost 117, or 60% of the total of independent countries. In 2010, this number reached 200, or nearly 88% of the total sovereign countries. Each region of the world, each continent, or ethnic group is represented in this group, except the Arab countries in the Middle East and North Africa. This absence is a flagrant anomaly in the phenomenon of democratic globalization. Is there, then, an Arab exception in the field of democratic expression and why are Arab countries still not a true democracy apart from the specific case of Lebanon? 

The main common denominator of the Arab countries is that they are predominantly inhabited by Arab Muslims. Their inhabitants share common values ​​and a homogeneous cultural and religious base, that of Arab-Muslim culture. Is it possible that this culture is the reason for the democratic deficit of the Arab countries? Another common factor that predominates in Arab countries is economic underdevelopment. So countries such as Egypt, Jordan, Morocco or Yemen would not be democratic because they are not economically developed? Perhaps also being flooded with petro-dollars is also the cause of the lack of technological innovation and economic leadership in the Gulf monarchies. 

I will try to show that the deficit of democracy in the Arab world can be explained first and foremost by the policies and the failing economic choices made by these countries and not by their culture or their religion. In order to join the ranks of democratic countries, the Arab countries have no choice but to work on the economic models they should focus on. 

Culture and religion 


When we compare the 16 Arab-Muslim countries with the other 29 Muslim but non-Arab countries (such as Bangladesh, Senegal, Turkey, Indonesia or Malaysia), we find that the second group has been able to ensure reasonable democratic rights To its populations. Of the 16 countries in the first group, only Lebanon can have such a claim. Moreover, with regard to the political elections, eight Muslim countries, also non-Arab countries, conducted free elections (apart from those carried out in Algeria in 1991). These observations enable us to affirm, even if it is not in a scientific way, that the Muslim religion is not the cause of the democratic deficit of the countries where it predominates. Other studies, such as the NGO Freedom House, have also concluded that Islam and democracy are not mutually exclusive. 

What about culture? In our history of Arab and Muslim people, the idea of ​​communities organized around representative governments is practically unknown, whereas non-Arab Muslim countries have experienced multiple experiences of organized political groups that are representative of the population.Can we then say that the Arabs have become accustomed to the autocracy and passive obedience of their rulers, as has been the case in Tunisia for the last 55 years? Why did this passive obedience remain so strong as to constitute an insurmountable obstacle to democracy in the Arab world, unlike the other non-Arab countries which were able to overcome it and adopt democratic principles? 

Would it be possible to imagine that Arabs in general do not attach importance to democratic elections as a form of autonomous governance? This is not the case if the elections in the West Bank, Algeria and Kuwait are remembered. Almost 80 per cent of citizens of the age of election in these countries endorse democratic principles. Moreover, according to studies by the Arab Barometer conducted between 2005 and 2008, Arabs would only participate in a large number of elections if they believed their votes would be taken into account. In 2008, they ignored the elections in Egypt. The same scenario was repeated in Morocco and Tunisia, when citizens were convinced that the results of the political elections were determined in advance. 

Economic and social policies 


Can the well-being of a country be linked to its ability to engage and to achieve a democratic process?The levels of per capita income in 2009 show the following results. Kuwait is practically as rich as Norway, Bahrain is on an equal footing with France, Saudi Arabia with South Korea, Oman with Portugal and Lebanon with Costa Rica. Only Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Syria and Yemen are far behind but are not poorer in terms of per capita income than countries like India or Indonesia, where democracy operates despite a deficit Of general prosperity. And even when we consider the distribution of per capita income according to different social classes or regions, the same results are observed, that is, economic indicators are not worse in poor Arab countries Compared with non-Arab poor countries. 

What about human development (education and health)? The ranking of most Arab countries is even lower in terms of human development than it is in terms of per capita income. Saudi Arabia is ranked 31 places lower and Algeria 19. Moreover, when comparing levels of human development, for example, those of the rich Gulf states are at best equivalent to those of Portugal and Of Hungary, while Saudi Arabia has the same rank as Bulgaria and Panama. If we turn to the Arab states with little or no oil exporters, we can see, for example, that Egypt has the same rank as Indonesia and Morocco the same rank as South Africa. In other words, a large number of democracies can be found at all levels of development, and using different criteria, on the same level as non-democratic Arab countries with which they share the same economic indicators . 

So if the problem of democratic absence is not linked to the level of economic and social development, would it be due to the economic model favored by the Arab countries in question? In most Arab countries, the largest employers are the public institutions themselves. Governments can support a colossal over-staffing in their public bureaucracies by using mass recruitment as a check with which they buy social peace. Civil society is weak and co-opted by state-controlled bodies. The rules of operation of the private sector are distorted. There is no real entrepreneurialism because most people who do business do so for the public sector, are fed on public contracts or represent foreign companies.With such structures, there are few incentives to invest and create businesses with real risk taking.Indeed, why take risks while stable wages are available and that one can guarantee oneself profits without taking risks. 

The majority of jobs based on government, the participation of individuals as members of large communities sharing values ​​is discouraged. Similarly, the dynamics of innovation, an independent economy, competition, individual ownership and a strong work ethic do not exist. 
Yet in another era, the Western world was able to recover, improve and transmit the knowledge built by the Arab-Muslim civilization, which then held the leadership in science, medicine, astronomy and science Human and social rights. But nowadays, in the Arab countries, the entrepreneurial spirit is not encouraged, leading to an economic fabric consisting of small and medium-sized enterprises and a high rate of unemployment and underemployment. Egypt and Tunisia offer excellent examples of countries where it is extremely difficult to create businesses. Combined, these forces create an economic structure that discourages the creation of political and economic freedoms, which generally lead to the full adoption of democratic ideals. To speak the language of the computer world, we can say that all these concepts are applications that the Arab world can not download on its iphones and computers. 

There is, therefore, a deficit in the design and implementation of economic policies that would explain the lack of democracy in the Arab world and is linked to how the government creates distortions in markets, incentives , Social classes and in the overall functioning of society.


Lotfi Saïbi
published 29/03/2011

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dimanche 6 août 2017

The theory of democratic peace

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The theory of democratic peace


Introduction
Let us not, however, assert that democracy is the panacea. Like all political models, this one has its limits and corresponds above all to a historical reality. If democratic peace exists, it can not be perpetual . 
After a major crisis (war, revolution, economic crisis) disrupting the international system, man, faced with a conceptual vacuum created by an unprecedented situation, finds himself obliged to create new tools to explain the world surrounds.This intellectual duty does not escape the field of international relations, since the State is generally one of the first actors whose functioning and existence are affected by such crises.
Following the First World War, Woodrow Wilson's idealist liberalism was proposed to rebuild a security system based on the territorial integrity and equality of all nations. Though theoretically attractive, he is confronted with a political reality not yet ready for such a change, which the advent of the Second World War a few years later will confirm. In the aftermath of the conflict and throughout the Cold War, realism became the dominant paradigm of international relations by explaining the security system of the time by the balance of powers. Once the USSR dissolved, the principle of equilibrium became de facto obsolete.
Thus, a new geostrategic space aimed at establishing a stable security regime seems to be established under the benevolent control of the newly created "superpower", as Zbigniew Brzezinski calls it in his Grand Chessboard . This space, which Blin calls " geodemocratic ", is that of democracy, international institutions and human rights. This is reflected, on the one hand, in the scientific field where the notions of "human security" or "just war" are gradually asserting themselves, and on the other hand, in practice, by a global wave of democratization and by The global spread of western liberal capitalist values ​​due to the phenomenon of globalization. It is in this context that many scientific studies on the benefits of democracy will be rediscovered. Of the latter, a trend emerges that will quickly quasi-consensus in the literature, namely that democracies do not make war.
This resurgence of the so-called theory of democratic peace, as Michael Doyle, one of his leading modern thinkers, explains, in that " democracies are in a state of peace between themselves and only among themselves " Will soon be taken up politically and put into true doctrine by the President of the United States Bill Clinton when he will in turn declare in 1994 that " the democracies do not make war " . Political doctrine in the sense that he succeeded-where Wilson had failed earlier because it was out of step with the post-World War I context-to make freedom, democracy the pillar of the security system on the ashes Conceptual models of the Cold War.
Although seductive on paper, the empiricists quickly demonstrate that they can not freeze a theory with very different ambitions from the perpetual peace project idealized by Emmanuel Kant in 1795. Indeed, if the world after the Cold War is that The advent of democracy and human rights, it is also that of violence. Never has society separated itself from its warlike culture (military parades, hymns, respect for the army, virile glory of war) and never seems to have been so much conflictual. Worse still, the change in violence (terrorism) is testing the security of democracies. So how can democracy be reconciled with democratic insecurity?
Consequently, considering on the one hand that democracies are not alien to the phenomenon of war and, on the other hand, that the theory of democratic peace is intended to be verifiable only within the  world; It seems pertinent to question the real legitimacy of this theory as the basis for the current security system. In other words, the question is whether - without questioning the empirical observation that democracies do not wage war between themselves - the stability of the security system is due to the establishment of democracy as an ideal political regime And whether its exportation will serve the future stability of this system. Ultimately , the debate opens with Fukuyama's words: " The correlation between democracy and peace is for me one of the few things that political science can affirm in international relations . "
The aim of this duty is therefore not to question the causes of democratic peace - literature is already heavily prolix of this type of considerations - but rather to equate the notions of peace and democracy in order to understand how They act on each other. Beyond the weight given to empirical observations, it will be a question of trying to verify the thesis of perpetual peace within the democratic space (Part One) but also to question the capacity of democracy, As a political and values ​​regime, to be a promoter of peace beyond the western world (Part Two).
Part I: After the happy globalization, the rediscovery of war and realism within the global democratic space
  For Bruce Russet, democracies do not make war on each other because " the structure of power and the nature of the values ​​that characterize the internal political life of democracies neutralize the security dilemma in their mutual relations" but also " On the other hand "because respect for the fundamental human rights and freedoms of the democracies deprives them of any reason for intervening in favor of the protection or promotion of these values. "
By reading too strictly this quote, some would be tempted to conceive of democratic space as a hermetic space for war by virtue of the very structure and values ​​of democratic regimes. However, the veil of post-Cold War globalization must not hide the fact that war remains prevalent in the West (A), nor do it spread an unshakable faith that democracy is the sole cause of peace within the same space (B).
A: The theory of democratic peace as a prism of insufficient analysis to apprehend the phenomenon of war in the West
If peace is democratic, it can not be perpetual. Thus if the democratic space is for the moment peaceful, the latter continues to arm itself. Indeed, among the 15 countries with the highest military spending in 2013, no fewer than 10 are democracies . In addition, the top 10 arms-producing groups in 2012 also turn out to be either American or European . This militarization of democratic space demonstrates that even with the disappearance of major international conflicts and the certainty of democratic peace, states do not exclude war as an emanation of their foreign policy.
First, the war between democracies. This idea would like to see the theory of democratic peace conceptually obsolete in relation to the present reality and would see a permanent state of war between the democracies. Not a war in the classic sense of the term, that is, understood as a militarized conflict, but a war in a new dimension, the economy. Thus, since the economy has become the prime factor of power in the 21st century, states and firms clash to secure economic benefits to the detriment of other states and firms. Hence, must we conceive of this confrontation as a war or as a simple competition? If for some the economy is the new terrain that allows the democratic states to wage war, for others (Krugman) talk of economic war is an ineptitude, the economy being by nature creative and not destructive .Whatever the reality, the existence of the debate clearly shows that the border between war and peace is not perfectly defined within the world democratic space.
Secondly, between democracies and non-democracies. One corollary of the theory of democratic peace is that democracies are quite inclined to go to war against non-democracies. So it seems an ineptitude to say that the democratic world is peaceful. The best example to transcribe this reality remains to date the one of the Global War on Terror launched in 2001 by the United States. Established as a global security threat, the war on terrorism (which was largely carried out by the West) would have cost nearly $ 800 billion since 2009, but was mostly fatal for the Committed democracies. Thus over 2000 American soldiers have fallen in combat in Afghanistan since 2001 .Another element is the constant increase in the number of peacekeeping operations (OMPs) mandated by the United Nations, of which there have been 69 since 1948. Conflicting terrain - although the latter can be analyzed in a positive way in favor of a search for peace.
In a third phase, it must also be stated that the political regime of a state may change in the course of history and that the absence of a war between democracies can be biased. Thus a democratic A-State may enter into conflict with a non-democratic B-State long before that B-State becomes democratic and now has peaceful relations with State A. The example of Germany is an example of The idea of ​​a subjective and self-constructed democratic peace.
Ultimately , it is clear that the exploitation of the theory of democratic peace does not make it possible to mention a pacified or peaceful democratic space. One of the current representations of this trend is certainly that terrorism, a new form of political violence, has led to war within democracies. The redefinition in 2008 of the French White Paper on Defense and National Security thus de facto emphasizes the awareness in the West that the democratic regime is no longer an inviolable haven of peace.
B: The relativisation of the political regime as the main source of absence of peace in the democratic space
If one can not accurately measure how much the nature of a political regime influences its foreign policy, it is obvious that this component is important. This varies considerably depending on other factors, such as the geostrategic environment and historical circumstances .
For the vast majority of the current "unrealistic" doxa of international relations - if it is possible to call it that - the peace that seems to prevail in the world democratic space is due precisely to the very nature of the political regime  .This critical theory of democratic peace - the so-called name, whose main authors reply to the names of Paine, Tocqueville and Russet - seems to be challenged by four hypotheses breaking the incestuous link between Democracy and peace. It will be in this part to discuss the latter.
First comes the hypothesis of a pax americana as the economic guarantor of peace within the world democratic space.Synonymous with GHERVAS of hegemonic peace, the hypothesis would advocate a post-Cold War social order led by a " supreme entity " , namely the United States. Thus, once the demise of the USSR and with it the bipolar world, the democratic states would have been channeled by the new "gendarme of the world" imposing by its military power, economic but also its Soft Power (Nye) an order Secured by hegemony (Mearsheimer). By analogy, it is possible to push the analysis further, that is to say until the period of the Cold War itself by asserting that stability was then due to a balanced order ( balance of powers ) . This hypothesis, although it may have been welcomed in the early 1990s, is today criticized by many authors seeing the decline of the United States already under way.
Next comes the idea of ​​the pax europea . The latter in its contemporary conception obviously refers to the construction of Europe and more particularly to the European Union. The pooling of coal and steel production will change the destiny of those regions which have long been devoted to the manufacture of weapons of war, of which they have been the most constant victims . The idea of ​​the pax europea , which closely resembles that of federal peace, is none other than the intellectual emanation of Robert Schuman when he intends in 1957 to pool the resources of Germany And France in order to make these two states prosper: the beginning of European functionalism. The monitoring of this method makes the European Union one of the most foreign areas of war by welcoming in its midst all the states that have been acquired (in appearance) for the cause of democracy. But if the EU receives the Nobel Peace Prize in 2012 , this must not hide the flaws of this system, which can not achieve a serious political union (CFSP / CSDP difficulties) and whose inequalities are glaring. As in the case of pax americana , pax europea is finally reducing in the sense that it is confined to the study of the simple European continent and prosperous in favor of a rather favorable historical context.
Third, the peace of the Directory appears. A state of affairs which would correspond to the guarantee of a system of co-operation by a small number of powers. In its contemporary form, the peace of the Directory is assimilated to the sacrosanct institution of the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). This peace of victors established in the aftermath of the Second World War was supposed to be the guarantor of multilaterally managed stability in full respect of the rules of newly established international law. Today, however, it is clear that the shortcomings of such a system are so profound that its questioning and increasingly announced. Ultimately , the UNSC, in addition to being relatively inefficient (gives the table of PKOs in the world, right of veto, discretionary freedom of States to apply the law) is increasingly criticized as no longer responding to a historical reality And geostrategic very different from what it was in 1945 .
Finally, it is a question of mentioning belonging to a security community. This hypothesis would verify that the absence of war between democracy is due to the creation of alliances and the distribution of powers. This is of course referred to NATO. Once the Cold War was over, the debate on the legitimacy of such an organization did not seem meaningless.Indeed, NATO now seems closer to an American shield than to a real collective security body. If the news (the Ukrainian crisis) seems to reactivate its natural existence via ill-founded reflux of the Cold War, its "competition" with a possible full European CSDP echoes its conceptual vulnerability. But again, what could happen in the event of the disappearance of such a body? The answer is probably on the side of the neo-realists and the supporters of the theory of democratic peace.
Emmanuel Kant's idea was that of a perpetual but universal peace, destined to be applied to every nation. It is clear that the theory of democratic peace is now only verifiable within the world democratic space. Thus it seems interesting to be interested in his attempts to export out of the liberal Western world.
Second part: The obvious finding of a restricted scope to the theory of democratic peace
If the communist model has been able to compete for nearly half a century with the liberal model proposed by the United States, it is above all because it has managed to export beyond the borders of Russia to form the USSR.Similarly, the world today would have no more than 1.5 billion Muslims if Islam, when it appeared in the seventh century, had confined itself to spreading over the unique Arabia. In other words, it is the export and dissemination of a model that largely defines its viability over time and its legitimacy to govern a given social order. The theory of democratic peace does not escape this rule. As a religion the "word" of democracy, mainly since the early 1990s, has made use of proselytism (A) but has also by its attractiveness diffused its essence (B). The purpose of this part is to attest to the peaceful influence of these two movements.
A: The advent of an era of "democratic crusades": political consequence of capitalist liberal ideological interpretation
The American administration's view since Bill Clinton's mandate, referring to the theory of democratic peace, was that an export of the Western democratic model under strong American tropism would be beneficial to peace and Security of unstable areas, but above all would enable us to design new commercial and economic agreements that would benefit the US market.
Iraq's invasion of Kuwait in 1991 and the 2001 World Trade Center attacks were the two catalysts for what might be called the democratic war waged by the United States and some of its democratic western allies. These interventions, whose disastrous consequences are still being felt today in Iraq and Afghanistan, have proved by the large number of victims they have caused and the fact that the rule of law and democracy still do not exist. Prospered in these countries that the doctrine of regime change was completely ineffective. Thus it appeared that democracy could only emerge from a military solution, and this one even less imported from abroad. If this method has not been unanimous in the western camp (conferring the speech of Dominique de Villepin then French Minister of Foreign Affairs at the UN), it nevertheless proved the warlike appetite of a supposedly peaceful world.
But what further darkens the picture is surely the observation that, in spite of unfounded theories of complo- tics, these wars have found in their successive extensions the satisfaction of many actors. The idea, developed by David Keen , is that in developing the preventive war doctrine, the United States has made the war on terrorism an endless war.Indeed, in addition to engendering the resentment of the Muslim populations and thus widening the specter of the threat, it enabled many actors to take advantage of this situation of stalemate without, however, trying to ensure that the Situation improves. Conventional criminals, traffickers, defense industrialists, generals, the media and even political decision-makers took advantage of the war. The bitter observation that war fueled war then seems to impose itself on the democratic regimes which took part in this terrorist "witch hunt" but also on the democratic societies which suffered as a whole from the vicissitudes of these operations.
It is in this context of attempts to impose democracy that greater clarity is made on regimes calling into question, or at least criticizing the Western security order based on the liberal democratic model. These so-called "revolutionary" states thus come into conflict with the representatives of what they consider to be an order to be overthrown. Today very few states can boast of such status, but the current evolution of international relations could make a difference. The most striking example would be that of Iran, proposing a new grid of reading based on religion, in particular Shiite Islam, and would try to export this grid of reading in its near vicinity first, then away then. To a lesser extent, China and Russia appear to be "dissidents" of the liberal democratic order, although they join it in many respects. This being explained, the whole question is what will become of these hotbeds of contention. Will they succeed in imposing their model so that it comes to compete with the established ones? Or will they socialize, as the author suggests, to integrate this so-called model? The example of the USSR, the only veritable protesting state of this order governing the world since 1945, shows that the second hypothesis remains statistically the most probable. However, the scale taken into account for this analysis remains compared to the very short history of history and the hindsight is certainly missing to dare a clear affirmation.
The question of socialization mentioned above ultimately takes on its importance when it comes to dealing with the theory of democratic peace in a non-democratic framework. Indeed, if it has been demonstrated that the mere "crusade" for democracy is in no way effective and promotes peace, then what can be done about the gentle diffusion of democracy, in which notions of Soft Power and globalization have a full place.
B: Accelerating the spread of democracy as an agent of security instability
Democracy is commonly considered today as the only ideal political regime with a universal vocation. Thus, since 1945, there has been a movement to democratize the world, not by arms, but this time due to the spread of democratic values ​​beyond the world, but also to the hopes aroused by this regime for the states which, adopt. However, the empirical evidence shows that even soft, democratization is likely to create insecurity and imbalances.
Insecurity at first. Indeed, Edward Mansfield and Jack Snyder warn against the undesirable effects of democratization processes. For these authors, a state in a period of democratic transition would be much more inclined to enter into conflict with a war against a foreign actor than an undemocratic state. Indeed, during these periods, the institutions of the rule of law and democracy are not yet in place. As a result, it is not the only freedom of voting that can prevent a leader from taking any actions he deems necessary to increase his security or power. A state in transition can also take advantage of the unrest in such a situation to establish its legitimacy by triggering a war, thus reinforcing the national sentiment. Or a State in transition may be prey to neighboring States wishing to influence the decisions of the first or even to annex a part of its territory. The most striking example of such a contemporary case is certainly that of the war between Iraq and Iran between 1980 and 1988. In the middle of the Islamic Revolution, the new power of Ayatollah Khomeini was very fragile . Saddam Hussein's neighboring Iraq took advantage of this to launch a war against its Shi'ite neighbor on the grounds that it wanted to recover territory that was returned to him by law. Although this war threatened the Islamic Republic, the Islamic Republic relied on it to reinforce the feeling of national unity and the full commitment of the population against the foreign aggressor. The result was a war that lasted 8 years and claimed over a million lives. However, Mansfield and Snyder relativize their explanation by stating that the potential instability resulting from democratization depends, of course, on the environment of the state concerned. Thus such a process will be more at risk in the Middle East than it could be at the borders of Europe.
An imbalance then. The phenomenon of globalization must theoretically allow the world to have access to the world market, and thus in this way to obtain resources in a peaceful way and consequently to prosper . What Wallerstein learns in his so-called theory of world economics is that the entry of the so-called peripheral states (third world, southern states) into the economy of the central (western) states, A process of double polarization. On the one hand, they are on the margins of the liberal capitalist system, and on the other hand their very society is polarized between a rich elite and a poor majority. But it is freely accepted that poverty leads to disorder and in some cases inevitably to war.Consequently, what can be deduced from this demonstration is that what liberal democracies would diffuse would not be so much democratic values ​​but above all a model of liberal capitalism. This postulate would then lead to talk, like Blin, of liberal peace and not of democratic peace, which would mean that capitalism precedes democracy and not that the former is an emanation of the latter.
These somewhat gloomy findings in the export and diffusion of democracy in the world thus make it possible to relativize the role of the democratic political system in the development of peace.
Conclusion
  The object of this duty was not to try to explain why the democracies do not make war, since such a thing has already been treated prolificly by literature. The ambition was rather to shed light on the reality of the link between peace and democracy. Whether the future can be thought of according to the vision of Fukuyama or that of Huntington, or in any other way.
Winston Churchill said of democracy that it is the worst of regimes with the exception of all the others already tried in the past. The aim of this duty, however, is not to sink into pessimism and skepticism, but to nourish hope. Monique Castillo, a French philosopher, said that " there is no other happiness than that which consists in making oneself worthy of happiness ." Indeed, the aim here is to make democracy worthy of the ideals and values ​​it likes to disseminate, in the most perfect Kantian spirit.
Peace will be perfectly democratic when democracy is fully synonymous with peace. Today there is a consensus that democracy is in crisis. Everywhere in the world (democratic and undemocratic) people rise up against an inegalitarian and flawed world order, a "new world order" enacted in the Second Gulf War, that is, in times of war. The goal of future generations is to rethink democracy, to actualize it in the present era and to make globalization a virtuous and non-destructive vector.
Ultimately , the real goal, at least on a respectable scale, is to create a true climate of peace within the democratic space rather than pursue millennial myth of perpetual peace.
 THIBAULT GERBAIL

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