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Book Review: Why Nations Still Fight - Richard Ned Lebow

April 25, 2026 11:46 PM | Anonymous

WHY NATIONS STILL FIGHT

BY RICHARD NED LEBOW
JANUARY 6, 2026
PUBLISHER: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS

 

 



Drawing on an original data set of interventions and wars from 1945 to the current day, as well as numerous short case studies, Richard Ned Lebow offers a novel account of their origins and outcomes – one that emphasises miscalculation, failure to conduct meaningful risk assessments, and cultural and political arrogance. 

 

In a successive work to Why Nations Fight (2010), he explains why initiators routinely lose militarily and politically when they resort to force, as well as accounting for why the great powers, in particular, have not learned from their failures. Lebow offers both type- and region-specific forecasts for the future likelihood of interventions and wars. His account reveals the inapplicability of theories nested in the realist and rationalist paradigms to the study of war.  He argues what is needed instead is an “irrationalist” theory, and he takes the initial steps in this direction.

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 'In everything he writes, Richard Ned Lebow combines a deep commitment to a better, more peaceful world, with meticulous research, great erudition and careful argument. 'Why Nations Still Fight' explains both why wars so often fail to achieve their aims, yet governments still resort to them.' Lawrence Freedman, Emeritus professor of War Studies, King's College London

'Richard Ned Lebow has studied war and peace for over half a century. 'Why Nations Still Fight' builds on that remarkable scholarly edifice to present a global rethinking of the causes of war. Studying all wars since 1945, Lebow develops a new and unique typology and offers distinct findings and arguments about each kind. The true tragedy of most wars, he argues, is their fundamental irrationality. Still, Lebow offers reasons to hope that humans can rise to the challenge of overcoming the biases, miscalculation and hubris that push leaders toward tragically counterproductive bellicosity.' William C. Wohlforth, Daniel Webster Professor, Dartmouth College

'Direct warfare between states seems to have declined, particularly in the developed world. However, Lebow finds in this thoughtful, engaging, provocative, and well-researched book that states around the world are still willing to use armed force in wars and especially in interventions. He details 88 instances since World War II - about one a year - all but 7 in what used to be called the Third World. What is particularly impressive is that this happens even though the efforts mostly fail to achieve their military, and especially their political, goals. In the process he details case after case of chronic self-delusion and miscalculation by initiators.' John Mueller, Ohio State University, Cato Institute and author of The Stupidity of War: American Foreign Policy and the Case for Complacency.
 

 

See also:

Why Nations Still Fight as reviewed by John Ikenberry for Foreign Affairs  – May June 2026 

  

About the book: 
Why Nations Still Fight

by Richard Ned Lebow
Cambridge University Press – 480 pages $51.95  (Kindle)
Publication Date: January 6, 2026 

 



About the Author: Richard Ned Lebow

Dr Richard Ned Lebow is an Emeritus Professor of International Political Theory in the Department of War Studies, King's College London and James O. Freedman Presidential Emeritus Professor at Dartmouth College. He is also a Honorary Fellow of Pembroke College, University of Cambridge. He has taught strategy and the National and Naval War Colleges and served as a scholar-in-residence in the Central Intelligence Agency during the Carter administration.

Dr Lebow has held visiting appointments at the University of Lund, Sciences Po, University of Cambridge, Austrian Diplomatic Academy, Vienna, London School of Economics and Political Science, Australian National University, University of California at Irvine, University of Milano, University of Munich and the Frankfurt Peace Research Institute. He has authored and edited 40 books and nearly 300 peer reviewed articles and book chapters. He is a Fellow of the British Academy.

Biography Credit: King’s College London

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