Hans Joachim Morgenthau (February 17, 1904 – July 19, 1980) was a German-American jurist and political scientist who was one of the major 20th-century figures in the study of international relations. Morgenthau was born in Coburg, Germany in 1904. Morgenthau's works belong to the tradition of realism in international relations theory; he is usually considered among the most influential realists of the post-World War II period.[1] Morgenthau made landmark contributions to international relations theory and the study of international law. His Politics Among Nations, first published in 1948, went through five editions during his lifetime and was widely adopted as a textbook in U.S. universities. While Morgenthau emphasized the centrality of power and "the national interest," the subtitle of Politics Among Nations—"the struggle for power and peace"—indicates his concern not only with the struggle for power but also with the ways in which it is limited by ethical and legal norms.[2]
He taught and practiced law in Frankfurt before emigrating to the United States in 1937, after several interim years in Switzerland and Spain. One of his first jobs in the U.S. was teaching night school at Brooklyn College. From 1939 to 1943, Morgenthau taught in Kansas City and taught at Keneseth Israel Shalom Congregation there.[10] Morgenthau then was a professor at the University of Chicago until 1973, when he took a professorial chair at the City College of New York. In the early 1950s, Morgenthau was a visiting professor at Harvard, teaching a graduate seminar; at that time he met Henry Kissinger, who was working on his dissertation.[11]
On moving to New York, Morgenthau separated from his wife, who remained in Chicago partly because of medical issues. He is reported to have tried to initiate plans to start a new relationship while in New York, with Ethel Person (d. 2012), a psychiatrist at Columbia University.[14]
Morgenthau died on July 19, 1980, shortly after being admitted to Lenox Hill Hospital in New York with a perforated ulcer.[16] He is buried in the Chabad section of Montefiore Cemetery,[17] in proximity to the Lubavitcher Rebbe, with whom he had a respectful relationship.[18]
European years and functional jurisprudence
Morgenthau completed his doctoral dissertation in Germany in the late 1920s. It was published in 1929 as his first book, The International Administration of Justice, Its Essence and Its Limits.[19] The book was reviewed by Carl Schmitt, who was then a jurist teaching at the University of Berlin. In an autobiographical essay written near the end of his life, Morgenthau related that, although he had looked forward to meeting Schmitt during a visit to Berlin, the meeting went badly and Morgenthau left thinking that he had been in the presence of (in his own words) "the demonic".[20] By the late 1920s Schmitt was becoming the leading jurist of the rising Nazi movement in Germany, and Morgenthau came to see their positions as irreconcilable. (The editors of Morgenthau's The Concept of the Political [see below] state that "the reader of [Morgenthau's] The Concept of the Political ... will easily recognize that Morgenthau deplored Schmitt's understanding of the political on moral grounds and conceptual grounds.")[21]
Following the completion of his doctoral dissertation, Morgenthau left Germany to complete his Habilitation dissertation (license to teach at universities) in Geneva. It was published in French as La Réalité des normes en particulier des normes du droit international: Fondements d'une théorie des normes (The Reality of Norms and in Particular the Norms of International Law: Foundations of a Theory of Norms). It has not been translated into English.[22] The legal scholar Hans Kelsen, who had just arrived in Geneva as a professor, was an adviser to Morgenthau's dissertation. Kelsen was among the strongest critics of Carl Schmitt.[23] Kelsen and Morgenthau became lifelong colleagues even after both emigrated from Europe to take academic positions in the United States.[24][25]
In 1933, Morgenthau published a second book in French, La notion du "politique",[26] which was translated into English and published in 2012 as The Concept of the Political.[27] In this book Morgenthau seeks to articulate the difference between legal disputes between nations and political disputes between nations or other litigants. The questions driving the inquiry are: (i) Who holds legal power over the objects or concerns being disputed? (ii) In what manner can the holder of this legal power be changed or held accountable? (iii) How can a dispute, the object of which concerns a legal power, be resolved? and (iv) In what manner will the holder of the legal power be protected in the course of exercising that power? For Morgenthau, the end goal of any legal system in this context is to "ensure justice and peace".
In his work in the 1920s and 1930s, Morgenthau sought a "functional jurisprudence," an alternative to mainstream international law. He borrowed ideas from Sigmund Freud,[28]Max Weber, Roscoe Pound, and others. In 1940 Morgenthau set out a research program for legal functionalism in the article "Positivism, Functionalism, and International Law".[29]
Francis Boyle has written that Morgenthau's post-war writings perhaps contributed to a "break between international political science and international legal studies."[30] However, Politics Among Nations contains a chapter on international law, and Morgenthau remained an active contributor to the subject of the relationship between international politics and international law until the end of his career.[31]
American years and political realism
Hans Morgenthau is considered one of the "founding fathers" of the realist school in the 20th century. This school of thought holds that nation-states are the main actors in international relations and that the main concern of the field is the study of power. Morgenthau emphasized the importance of "the national interest," and in Politics Among Nations he wrote that "the main signpost that helps political realism to find its way through the landscape of international politics is the concept of interest defined in terms of power." Morgenthau is sometimes referred to as a classical realist or modern realist in order to differentiate his approach from the structural realism or neo-realism associated with Kenneth Waltz.[32] Recent scholarly assessments of Morgenthau show that his intellectual trajectory was more complicated than originally thought.[33][34] His realism was infused with moral considerations—though not always acknowledged as such—and during the last part of his life he favored supranational control of nuclear weapons and strongly opposed the U.S. role in the Vietnam War (see below).[35]
Realism and Politics Among Nations (1948)
Morgenthau's Scientific Man versus Power Politics (1946) argued against an overreliance on science and technology as solutions to political and social problems. The book presented a "pessimistic view of human nature"[36] centered on a universal lust for power and the inevitability of selfishness.[37]Scientific Man versus Power Politics also argued that, in Robert Jervis's words, "much of modern Liberalism fails to understand the contingent nature of its own knowledge."[38]
Starting with the second edition of Politics Among Nations, Morgenthau included a section in the opening chapter called "Six Principles of Political Realism".[39]
The principles, paraphrased, are:
Political realism believes that politics, like society in general, is governed by objective laws that have their roots in human nature.[40][41]
The main signpost of political realism is the concept of interest defined in terms of power, which infuses rational order into the subject matter of politics, and thus makes the theoretical understanding of politics possible.[42] Political realism avoids concerns with the motives and ideology of statesmen. Political realism avoids reinterpreting reality to fit the policy. A good foreign policy minimizes risks and maximizes benefits.
Realism recognizes that the determining kind of interest varies depending on the political and cultural context in which foreign policy is made. It does not give "interest defined as power" a meaning that is fixed once and for all.
Political realism is aware of the moral significance of political action. It is also aware of the tension between the moral command and the requirements of successful political action. Realism maintains that universal moral principles must be filtered through the concrete circumstances of time and place, because they cannot be applied to the actions of states in their abstract universal formulation.[43]
Political realism refuses to identify the moral aspirations of a particular nation with the moral laws that govern the universe.[44]
The political realist maintains the autonomy of the political sphere; the statesman asks "How does this policy affect the power and interests of the nation?" Political realism is based on a pluralistic conception of human nature. The political realist must show where the nation's interests differ from the moralistic and legalistic viewpoints.
Morgenthau argued in Politics Among Nations that skillful diplomacy drawing on these principles could lead to stability via the balance of power. He wrote that "the balance of power and policies aiming at its preservation are not only inevitable, but an essential stabilizing factor in a society of sovereign nations."[45] (For further discussion, see section on Criticism, below.)
In practice, however, countries "actively engaged in the struggle for power must actually aim not at a balance -- that is, equality -- of power, but at superiority of power in their own behalf," Morgenthau wrote.[46] The reason is partly that the relative strength of countries can be difficult to calculate, since key elements of national power, such as "the quality of government," are elusive and frequently change.[47] Because "no nation can foresee how large its miscalculations will turn out to be, all nations must ultimately seek the maximum of power obtainable under the circumstances. Only thus can they hope to attain the maximum margin of safety commensurate with the maximum of errors they might commit."[48]
Center for the Study of American Foreign and Military Policy
In the 1950s, Morgenthau directed the University of Chicago’s Center for the Study of American Foreign and Military Policy. Among other things, he sought to rebuild the center’s resources on “China Studies,” after many experts on the country had been publicly discredited during the Second Red Scare. Morgenthau approached Chinese immigrant and political scientist Tsou Tang to explore the Sino-American relationship using both American and Chinese materials. Morgenthau trusted Tsou, having served on Tsou's committees for his master's and PhD theses. Tsou's 1963 book, America’s Failure in China, 1941-50, drew upon his research at the center.[49]
Morgenthau was a strong supporter of the Roosevelt and Truman administrations.[54] When the Eisenhower administration gained the White House, Morgenthau turned his efforts towards a large amount of writing for journals and the press in general. By the time of Kennedy's inauguration in 1961, he had become a consultant to the Kennedy administration. After Johnson became president, Morgenthau became much more vocal in his dissent concerning American participation in the Vietnam War,[55] for which he was dismissed as a consultant to the Johnson administration in 1965.[8] Morgenthau sparred with Johnson's advisors McGeorge Bundy[56] and Walt Rostow.[57] Morgenthau's dissent concerning American involvement in Vietnam, which he viewed mainly as a civil war whose "global significance" was "remote,"[58] brought him considerable public and media attention.
On 21 June 1965, Morgenthau debated Bundy live on television under the title Vietnam Dialogue: Mr. Bundy and the Professors with Eric Sevareid as the moderator.[59] During the debate, Bundy accused Morgenthau of being a defeatist and pessimist, citing his 1961 statement that the Pathet Lao were destined to win the Lao civil war, leading Morgenthau to reply: "I may have been dead wrong on Laos, but it doesn't mean I am dead wrong on Vietnam."[60] Bundy then brought up a statement Morgenthau made in 1956, praising President Diem of South Vietnam for creating a "miracle." The American journalist A.J. Langguth wrote that Bundy's point was irrelevant as Diem had been assassinated in 1963, but Bundy made it sound as if Morgenthau was opportunistic and inconsistent.[60] Bundy was generally regarded as having won the debate by viewers at the time.[60]
In these years Morgenthau continued to write prolifically, publishing a three-volume collection of his essays in 1962.[61]
American years after 1965
Starting in 1960, Morgenthau became increasingly concerned with the revolutionary implications of nuclear weapons and the possibility of nuclear war, which he maintained would be a moral calamity of an unprecedented kind.[62] He remarked in the journal Christianity and Crisis that "no such radical qualitative transformation of the structure of international relations has ever occurred in history."[63] While in the 1950s and earlier, Morgenthau had tended to emphasize, in William Scheuerman's words, "the continuities of human history," his recognition of the radical novelty of nuclear weapons led, from the early 1960s onward, to a stress on discontinuity, as represented by the possibility of a civilization-ending nuclear conflict.[64] Morgenthau's views on this issue were influenced by Karl Jaspers' The Future of Mankind, which he reviewed in 1961 for Saturday Review.[65]
After 1965, Morgenthau became a leading voice in the discussion of just war theory in the modern nuclear era.[66] Just war theory was further developed in the work of Paul Ramsey, Michael Walzer, Jeff McMahan, and other scholars.
Morgenthau's book Truth and Power, published in 1970, collected his essays from the previous decade dealing with both foreign policy, including Vietnam, and U.S. domestic politics, e.g. the civil rights movement. Morgenthau dedicated the book to Hans Kelsen, "who has taught us through his example how to speak Truth to Power." Morgenthau's last major book, Science: Servant or Master, was dedicated to his colleague Reinhold Niebuhr and published in 1972.[67]
In summer 1978, Morgenthau wrote his last co-authored essay titled "The Roots of Narcissism," with Ethel Person of Columbia University.[68] This essay was a continuation of Morgenthau's earlier study of this subject in his 1962 essay "Public Affairs: Love and Power," where Morgenthau engaged some of the themes that Niebuhr and the theologian Paul Tillich were addressing.[69] Morgenthau admired Tillich's book Love, Power and Justice, and he wrote a second essay related to the book's themes.[70] More recently, Anthony Lang has recovered and published Morgenthau's extensive course notes on Aristotle (for a course Morgenthau taught while at the New School for Social Research during his New York years).[71] The comparison of Morgenthau to Aristotle has been further explored by Molloy.[72]
Morgenthau was a tireless reviewer of books during the several decades of his career as a scholar in the United States. He wrote nearly a hundred book reviews, including almost three dozen for The New York Review of Books alone. Morgenthau's last two book reviews were not written for The New York Review of Books and were of the books Soviet Perspectives on International Relations, 1956–1967, by William Zimmerman[73] and Work, Society and Culture by Yves Simon.[74] The last book review Morgenthau wrote for The New York Review of Books appeared in 1971.[75] Morgenthau's first book review, written in 1940, was of Law, the State, and the International Community, by James Brown Scott.[76] Morgenthau also commented on the Pentagon Papers.[77]
Like Hannah Arendt, Morgenthau dedicated time and effort to the support of the state of Israel.[78] Both Morgenthau and Arendt made annual trips to Israel to lend their established academic voices to its still young and growing academic community during its inaugural decades as a new nation.[79] Morgenthau's interest in Israel also extended to the Middle East[80] more generally,[81] including the politics of oil.[82] Morgenthau's interest in Israel extended further to related issues of geopolitics, and issues related to Andrei Sakharov and Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.[83]
Morgenthau remained throughout the Cold War an active participant in the discussion of U.S. foreign policy. He wrote in this connection about Henry Kissinger and his role in the Nixon administration.[84] In a 1975 essay, Morgenthau criticized Kissinger's approach toward internal upheaval in the Third World, arguing that the root of "instability" was not "Communist subversion" but popular dissatisfaction with the status quo. A foreign policy that failed to recognize this could lead to the support of "tyranny," Morgenthau wrote: "[I]n an essentially unstable world, tyranny becomes the last resort of a policy committed to stability in the last resort."[85] Morgenthau in 1977 also wrote a brief "Foreword" on the theme of terrorism as it began to emerge in the 1970s.[86] In addition to addressing current political issues, Morgenthau also wrote about the philosophy of democratic theory[87] when faced with situations of crisis or tension.[88]
Criticism
The reception of Morgenthau's work can be divided into three phases. The first phase occurred during Morgenthau's life up to his death in 1980. The second phase was between 1980 and the one hundred year commemoration of his birth that took place in 2004. The third phase of the reception of his writings is between the centenary commemoration and the present, which shows a vibrant discussion of his continuing influence.
Criticism during European years
In Morgenthau's early career, the book review of his dissertation by Carl Schmitt had a lasting and negative effect on Morgenthau. Schmitt had become a leading juristic voice for the rising Nazi movement in Germany, and Morgenthau came to see their positions as incommensurable, although it has been argued that Schmitt and Morgenthau engaged in a "hidden dialogue" in which they influenced each other.[89] Morgenthau subsequently met Hans Kelsen at Geneva while a student, and Kelsen's treatment of Morgenthau's writings left a lifelong positive impression upon the young Morgenthau. Kelsen in the 1920s had emerged as Schmitt's most thorough critic and had earned a reputation as a leading international critic of the then rising National Socialist movement in Germany, which matched Morgenthau's own negative opinion of Nazism.
Criticism during American years
While Morgenthau's Politics Among Nations had a large influence on a generation of scholars in global politics and international law, Morgenthau's views did not go unchallenged. On the one hand, some critics rejected the basic premises of Morgenthau's realist perspective. On the other hand, some theorists working within a realist framework, such as Kenneth Waltz and John Mearsheimer, took issue with aspects of Morgenthau's approach even while sharing some of his basic assumptions.
In his Theory of International Politics (1979), Kenneth Waltz urged more attention to purely "structural" elements of the international system, especially the distribution of capabilities among states.[90] Waltz's neorealism was more self-consciously scientific than Morgenthau's version of realism.[91] Waltz argued that balances of power recurrently form whether or not states intend that result.[92] Waltz criticized Morgenthau for seeing the maintenance of a balance of power as dependent on states' motives and conscious aims, leading to what Waltz called a "distortion" of balance-of-power theory.[93]
In contrast to Waltz's "defensive" realism, John Mearsheimer presented a theory of "offensive realism" in The Tragedy of Great Power Politics (2001). Mearsheimer agreed with Morgenthau that states seek to maximize their relative power but disagreed about the cause: whereas Morgenthau posited, in Mearsheimer's words, "a will to power inherent in every state," Mearsheimer argued that the "anarchical" character of the international system pushes states to acquire as much power as possible to maximize their chances of survival.[94]
Another area of criticism concerned Morgenthau's treatment of the concept of the national interest. One scholar has suggested that Morgenthau erred in thinking that "the 'rational core of the national interest' can be ascertained by objective analysis."[95] On this account, "the concept of the national interest simply cannot bear the weight Morgenthau assigned to it."[96]
Morgenthau's concept of politics itself has been seen, at least by some writers, as a firmer basis for his position. While Morgenthau viewed politics as a struggle for power, he also viewed it as a struggle conducted by specific means and within certain limits. From this perspective, Morgenthau's distinction between political power and military power represented an effort "to insulate" the properly political realm "from the intrusion of physical violence and domination."[97]
The conceptual distinction between political and military power may not always have influenced Morgenthau's views on specific policy issues, but it probably did so in the case of nuclear weapons. His concern with nuclear weapons and the arms race [98] led to discussions and debates with Henry Kissinger and others.[99] Morgenthau saw many aspects of the nuclear arms race as a form of irrationality requiring the attention of responsible diplomats, statesmen, and scholars.[100] However, Morgenthau's view that a world state would be required to solve the problem of nuclear weapons is in tension with the skepticism about global governance that his realist perspective implies.
Criticism of Morgenthau's legacy
Christoph Frei's intellectual biography of Morgenthau, published in English translation in 2001 (from the earlier German edition)[101] was one of the first of many substantial publications about Morgenthau in the 2000s. Christoph Rohde published a biography of Morgenthau in 2004, still available only in German.[102] Also around 2004, commemorative volumes were published on the occasion of the centenary of Morgenthau's birth.[103]
John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago has contrasted Morgenthau's political realism to the neo-conservativism prevailing during the Bush administration in the context of the 2003 Iraq War.[104] Morgenthau saw the ethical and moral component of international politics as an integral part of the reasoning process of the international statesman and the essential content of responsible scholarship in international relations.[105] Scholars continue to explore various aspects of Morgenthau's thought, as well as his place in relation to twentieth-century intellectual currents and the disciplinary history of political science and international relations.
Crossroad Papers: A Look Into the American Future (ed.) (1965) New York, New York: Norton.
Truth and Power: Essays of a Decade, 1960–70 (1970) New York, New York: Praeger.
Essays on Lincoln's Faith and Politics. (1983) Lanham, Maryland: Univ. Press of America for the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia. Co-published with a separate text by David Hein.
The Concept of the Political (2012; original 1933) Intro. by H. Behr and F. Roesch. Translated by M. Vidal. Palgrave Macmillan.
For a complete list of Morgenthau's writings, see "The Hans J. Morgenthau Page" at Google Sites.[106]
^Douglas Klusmeyer, "Beyond Tragedy: Hannah Arendt and Hans Morgenthau on Responsibility, Evil and Political Ethics," International Studies Review 11, number 2 (2009): pages 332–351.
^ abZambernardi, L. (2011). "The Impotence of Power: Morgenthau's Critique of American Intervention in Vietnam". Review of International Studies. 37 (3): 1335–1356. doi:10.1017/S0260210510001531. S2CID145583770.
^See e.g. Hans Morgenthau, In Defense of the National Interest: A Critical Examination of American Foreign Policy, with a new introduction by Kenneth W. Thompson (Washington, D.C.: University Press of America, 1982).
^Hartmut Behr and Felix Roesch, intro. to Hans Morgenthau, The Concept of the Political, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, page 13.
^Barry Gewen, The Inevitability of Tragedy: Henry Kissinger and His World, W.W. Norton, 2020, page 229.
^Morgenthau, Hans. Die internationale Rechtspflege, ihr Wesen und ihre Grenzen, in the Frankfurter Abhandlungen zum Kriegsverhütungsrecht book series (Leipzig: Universitätsverlag Noske, 1929), still untranslated into English.
^"Fragment of an Intellectual Autobiography: 1904–1932," in Kenneth W. Thompson and Robert J. Myers, eds., Truth and Tragedy: A Tribute to Hans J. Morgenthau (New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1984).
^Behr and Roesch, Intro. to Hans Morgenthau, The Concept of the Political, trans M. Vidal, page 19. For a different view of the relation between Morgenthau's ideas and Schmitt's, see, e.g., W. Scheuerman, "Carl Schmitt and Hans Morgenthau: Realism and Beyond" (see note 3).
^Morgenthau, Hans. La Réalité des normes en particulier des normes du droit international: Fondements d'une théorie des normes (Paris: Alcan, 1934).
^The complete set of the articles published in the debate between Kelsen and Schmitt during the 1930s has been collected by Lars Vinx and published by Cambridge University Press in English translation in 2015. The Guardian of the Constitution: Hans Kelsen and Carl Schmitt on the Limits of Constitutional Law. Cambridge Studies in Constitutional Law, Series Number 12, ed. Lars Vinx, 2015.
^Olechowski, Thomas (2021). Hans Kelsen. Biographie eines Rechtswissenschaftlers (2 ed.). Vienna: Mohr Siebeck. pp. 586, 841.
^Jütersonke, Oliver (2022). "Kelsen and Morgenthau in America: Between Legal Philosophy and International Politics". Austrian Journal of Political Science. 51: 72.
^Morgenthau, Hans (2012). The Concept of the Political, Palgrave Macmillan.
^Schuett, Robert. "Freudian Roots of Political Realism: The Importance of Sigmund Freud to Hans J. Morgenthau's Theory of International Power Politics." History of the Human Sciences 20, number 4 (2007): pages 53–78.
^Morgenthau, Hans J., "Positivism, Functionalism, and International Law," American Journal of International Law, volume 34, 2 (1940): pages 260–284
^Francis Boyle, World Politics and International Law, page 12
^Morgenthau, Hans (1974). "International Law and International Politics: An Easy Partnership," Proceedings of the Annual Meetings of the American Society of International Law (1974), pages 331–334.
^Cf. Jack Donnelly, Realism and International Relations (Cambridge University Press, 2000), pages 11–12, though he prefers the label "biological realist" to "classical realist". For an argument that the differences between classical and structural realists have been exaggerated, see Parent, Joseph M.; Baron, Joshua M. (2011). "Elder Abuse: How the Moderns Mistreat Classical Realism". International Studies Review. 13 (2): 192–213. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2486.2011.01021.x.
^William E. Scheuerman, Hans Morgenthau: Realism and Beyond (Polity Press, 2009); Michael C. Williams, ed., Reconsidering Realism: The Legacy of Hans J. Morgenthau (Oxford Univ. Press, 2007); Christoph Frei, Hans J. Morgenthau: An Intellectual Biography (LSU Press, 2001).
^E.g.: Hans J. Morgenthau, "We Are Deluding Ourselves in Viet-Nam", New York Times Magazine, April 18, 1965, reprinted in The Viet-Nam Reader, ed. M. Raskin and B. Fall (Vintage Books, 1967), pages 37–45.
^Michael J. Smith, Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger (LSU Press, 1986), page 137.
^Smith, Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger, page 136.
^Robert Jervis, "Hans Morgenthau, Realism, and the Scientific Study of International Politics," Social Research volume 61, number 4 (Winter 1994), page 863.
^Russell, Greg. Hans J. Morgenthau and the Ethics of American Statecraft. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1990.
^Morgenthau, Hans (1974). "Macht und Ohnmacht des Menschen in technischen Zeitalter," in Oskar Schatz, Hrsg., Was wird aus dem Menschen? Analysen und Warnungen bedeutender Denker (Graz: Verlag Styria, 1974) [in HJMP, Container No. 175].
^Cozette, Murielle. "Reclaiming the Critical Dimension of Realism: Hans J. Morgenthau on the Ethics of Scholarship." Review of International Studies 34 (2008): pages 5–27.
^Murray, A. J. H. "The Moral Politics of Hans Morgenthau." The Review of Politics 58, number 1 (1996): pages 81–107.
^H. Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations, as quoted in Smith, Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger, page 144.
^Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations, 4th edition, page 198.
^Morgenthau, Politics Among Nations, 4th edition, page 202.
^Liu, Qing (May 2020). "To Be an Apolitical Political Scientist: A Chinese Immigrant Scholar and (Geo)politicized American Higher Education". History of Education Quarterly. 60 (2): 129–130, 143–147. doi:10.1017/heq.2020.10. S2CID225899443.
^Scheuerman, William E. "Realism and the Left: The Case of Hans J. Morgenthau." Review of International Studies 34 (2008): pages 29–51.
^Morgenthau, Hans (1973). "The Lessons of Vietnam," in John H. Gilbert, ed., The New Era in American Foreign Policy (New York: St Martin's Press, 1973); Morgenthau, Hans (1975). "The Intellectual, Political, and Moral Roots of U. S. Failure in Vietnam," in William D. Coplin and Charles W. Kegley, Jr., eds., Analyzing International Relations: A Multimethod Introduction (New York: Praeger, 1975); Morgenthau, Hans (1975). "The Real Issue for the U.S. in Cambodia," The New Leader, volume 58, issue 6 (March 17, 1975), pages 4–6.
^Gordon Goldstein, Lessons in Disaster: McGeorge Bundy and the Path to War in Vietnam, 2009; Kai Bird, The Color of Truth: McGeorge Bundy and William Bundy: Brothers in Arms, Simon and Schuster, 2000.
^David Milne, America's Rasputin: Walt Rostow and the Vietnam War, Hill and Wang, 2008, page 153.
^H. Morgenthau, Truth and Power: Essays of a Decade, 1960-70, page 408.
^A.J. Langguth, Our Vietnam, Simon and Schuster, 2000, page 368.
^Hans Morgenthau, Politics in the Twentieth Century (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962), volume 1 The Decline of Democratic Politics, volume 2 The Impasse of American Foreign Policy, volume 3 The Restoration of American Politics.
^See W. E. Scheuerman, Hans Morgenthau: Realism and Beyond, pages 142ff.
^E.g., Hans Morgenthau, "Vietnam and Cambodia" (exchange with Noam Chomsky and Michael Walzer) Dissent, volume 25 (Fall 1978), pages 386–391.
^Hans Morgenthau, Science: Servant or Master? (New York: New American Library, 1972).
^Hans Morgenthau and Ethel Person (1978). "The Roots of Narcissism," The Partisan Review, pages 337–347, Summer 1978.
^Morgenthau, Hans (1962). "Public Affairs: Love and Power," Commentary 33:3 (March 1962): page 248.
^Morgenthau, Hans (1974). "Justice and Power," Social Research, volume 41, number 1 (Spring 1974), pages 163–175.
^Lang, Anthony F., Jr., ed. Political Theory and International Affairs: Hans J. Morgenthau on Aristotle's The Politics. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 2004.
^Molloy, Sean. "Aristotle, Epicurus, Morgenthau and the Political Ethics of the Lesser Evil." Journal of International Political Theory 5 (2009): pages 94–112.
^Morgenthau, Hans (1971). "Review of Book: Soviet Perspectives on International Relations, 1956–1967, by William Zimmerman," Political Science Quarterly, volume 86, number 4 (December 1971), pages 675–676,
^Morgenthau, Hans (1974). "Review of Book: Work, Society and Culture by Yves Simon," The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, volume 411 (January 1974), page 229.
^Morgenthau, Hans (1971). "Wild Bunch", The New York Review of Books, 16 (February 11, 1971), pages 38–41 (review of: Naïve Questions about Peace and War, by William Whitworth; The Tuesday Cabinet, by Henry F. Graff; Alliance Politics, by Richard E. Neustadt; Alternative to Armageddon, by Colonel Wesley W. Yale, Gen. I. D. White, and Gen. Hasso E. von Manteuffel; Militarism, U. S. A., by Colonel James A. Donovan.)
^Morgenthau, Hans (1940). "Review of Book: Law, the State, and the International Community, by James Brown Scott," Political Science Quarterly, volume 55, number 2 (June 1940), pages 261–262.
^Morgenthau, Hans (1972). "The National Interest and the Pentagon Papers" (Exchange with Noam Chomsky), Partisan Review, volume 39, number 3 (Summer 1972), pages 336–375.
^Hans Morgenthau, "The Geopolitics of Israel's Survival," The New Leader, volume 56, issue 25 (December 24, 1973), pages 4–6.
^"Address Delivered by Professor Hans Morgenthau at the Inauguration Ceremony of the Reuben Hecht Chair of Zionist Studies at the University of Haifa," (May 13, 1975) MS in HJMP, Container No. 175.
^Hans Morgenthau, "Facing Mideast Realities," The New Leader, volume 61, issue 9 (April 24, 1978), pages 4–6.
^"Daniel Berrigan and Hans Morgenthau Discuss the Moral Dilemma in the Middle East," Progressive, volume 28 (March 1974), pages 31–34; Hans Morgenthau, "Israel's Future," Conversation with Daniel J. Berrigan, aired as a Segment of WHET/13's "The 51st State" (January 1974) MS in HJMP, Container No. 175.
^Hans Morgenthau, "World Politics and the Politics of Oil," in Gary Eppen, ed., Energy: The Policy Issues (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1975).
^Hans Morgenthau, "On Solzhenitsyn, Sakharov," (Exchange with Harrison Salisbury) War/Peace Report, volume 13 (October 1974), pages 7–13.
^Hans Morgenthau, "The Aborted Nixon Revolution: Watergate and the Future of American Politics," The New Republic, volume 169, issue 6 (August 11, 1973), pages 17–19; "The Danger of Détente," The New Leader, volume 56, issue 19 (October 1, 1973), pages 5–7.
^Hans Morgenthau, "Three Paradoxes," The New Republic (October 11, 1975), as quoted in Smith, Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger, page 210.
^Hans Morgenthau, "Foreword," in Yonah Alexander and Seymour Maxwell Finger, eds., Terrorism: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1977).
^Hans Morgenthau, "Democracy and Totalitarianism," (n. d.) MS in HJMP, Container No. 110.
^Hans Morgenthau, "Power and Powerlessness: Decline of Democratic Government," The New Republic, volume 171, issue 19 (November 9, 1974), pages 13–18.
^See W. Scheuerman, "Carl Schmitt and Hans Morgenthau: Realism and Beyond" (see note 3). See also Hans-Karl Pichler, "The Godfathers of 'Truth': Max Weber and Carl Schmitt in Morgenthau's Theory of Power Politics," Review of International Studies, 1998, volume 24, pages 185-200.
^Kenneth Waltz, Theory of International Politics, McGraw-Hill, 1979.
^Hartmut Behr and Amelia Heath. "Misreading in IR Theory and Ideology Critique: Morgenthau, Waltz and Neo-Realism," Review of International Studies 35 (2009): pages 327–49.
^Waltz, Theory of International Politics, page 119.
^Waltz, Theory of International Politics, pages 119-120.
^John J. Mearsheimer, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics (W.W. Norton, 2001), pages 17-22.
^Michael J. Smith, Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger (1986), page 154.
^Smith, Realist Thought from Weber to Kissinger, page 160.
^Michael C. Williams, "Why Ideas Matter in International Relations: Hans Morgenthau, Classical Realism, and the Moral Construction of Power Politics," International Organization volume 58 number 4 (2004), page 649.
^Hans Morgenthau, "Some Political Aspects of Disarmament," in David Carlton and Carlo Schaerf, eds., The Dynamics of the Arms Race (London: Croom Helm, 1975).
^Hans Morgenthau, "Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State," Encounter, volume 43, number 6 (November 1974), pages 57–61.
^Hans Morgenthau, "Superpower Politics," The New Leader, volume 55, issue 13 (June 26, 1972), pages 11–12; Joel Rosenthal, Righteous Realists (1991).
^Christoph Frei, Hans J. Morgenthau: An Intellectual Biography. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2001.
^Hans J. Morgenthau und der weltpolitische Realismus: Die Grundlegung einer realistischen Theorie. P. Weidmann und Christoph Rohde von VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften (2004).
^Christian Hacke, Gottfried-Karl Kindermann, and Kai M. Schellhorn, eds. The Heritage, Challenge, and Future of Realism: In Memoriam Hans J. Morgenthau (1904–1980). Göttingen, Germany: V&R unipress, 2005; G.O. Mazur, ed. One Hundred Year Commemoration to the Life of Hans Morgenthau. New York: Semenenko Foundation, 2004.
^John J. Mearsheimer, "Hans Morgenthau and the Iraq War: Realism Versus Neo-Conservatism." openDemocracy.net (2005).
^Lorenzo Zambernardi, I limiti della potenza. Etica e politica nella teoria internazionale di Hans J. Morgenthau. Bologna: Il Mulino, 2010.
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