![]() ![]() In the beginning, there is a set of speeches in Sparta debating the possibility of going to war with Athens. In Thucydides’ history, human emotion made conflict inevitable, and at several points where peace was possible, emotion propelled it forward. The true trap is countries going into, and continuing, war clouded by passions like fear, hubris and honor. ![]() This is based on the famous quote from Thucydides: “It was the rise of Athens and the fear that this inspired in Sparta that made war inevitable.” This usage has even spread to Chinese President Xi Jinping who said “We all need to work together to avoid the Thucydides trap – destructive tensions between an emerging power and established powers … Our aim is to foster a new model of major country relations.” However, those like Graham Allison who talk about a Thucydides trap only capture half the meaning of the History of The Peloponnesian War. ![]() Professor Graham Allison of the Harvard Kennedy School has popularized the phrase “Thucydides’ trap,” to explain the likelihood of conflict between a rising power and a currently dominant one. ![]()
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