单项选择题
War has escaped the battlefield and now
can, with modern guidance systems on missiles, touch virtually every square yard
of the earth’s surface. War has also lost most of its utility in achieving the
traditional goals of conflict. Control of territory carries with it the
obligation to provide subject peoples certain administrative, health, education,
and other social services. Such obligations far outweigh the benefits of
control. If the ruled population is ethnically or racially different from the
rulers, tensions and chronic unrest often exist which further reduce the
benefits and increase the costs of domination. Large populations no longer
necessarily enhance state power and, in the absence of high levels of economic
development, can impose severe burdens on food supply, jobs, and the broad range
of services expected of modern governments. The noneconomic security reasons for
the control of territory have been progressively undermined by the advances of
modern technology. The benefits of forcing another nation to surrender its
wealth are vastly outweighed by the benefits of persuading that nation to
produce and exchange goods and services. In brief, imperialism no longer
pays. Making war has been one of the most persistent of human activities in the 80 centuries since men and women settled in cities and thereby became "civilized", but the modernization of the past 80 years has fundamentally changed the role and function of war. In premodernized societies, successful warfare brought significant material rewards, the most obvious of which were the stored wealth of the defeated. Equally important was human labor--control over people as slaves or levies for the victor’s army, and there was the productive capacity--agricultural lands and mines. Successful warfare also produced psychic benefits. The removal or destruction of a threat brought a sense of security, and power gained over others created pride and national self-esteem. War was accepted in the premodernized society as a part of the human condition, a mechanism of change, and an unavoidable, even noble, aspect of life. The excitement and drama of war made it a vital part of literature and legends. |