Kirkpatrick Doctrine
The
Kirkpatrick Doctrine was a political
doctrine expounded by
United States Ambassador to the
United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick in the early
1980s which attempted to justify US support for
Third World anti-Communist dictatorships in the context of the
Cold War. Kirkpatrick claimed that pro-
Soviet communist states were
totalitarian regimes while pro-
Western dictatorships were
authoritarian ones. Kirkpatrick claimed that totalitarian regimes were stabler than authoritarian regimes, and thus had a greater propensity to influence neighboring states.
Kirkpatrick's tenet that totalitarian regimes are stabler than authoritarian regimes has come under criticism since the collapse of the
Soviet Union in
1991, particularly as Kirkpatrick predicted that the Soviet system would persist for decades. Others counter that the Soviet Union fell only amid steady US-led Western opposition to
Communism during the Cold War. Still others argue that the transition from totalitarianism to
democracy in the
Eastern Bloc has not been nearly as smooth as several authoritarian states' transition to democracy.
According to Kirkpatrick, authoritarian regimes merely try to control and/or punish their subjects' behaviors, while totalitarian regimes moved beyond that into attempting to control the thoughts of their subjects, using not only
propaganda, but
brainwashing,
re-education, widespread
espionage on private citizens, and mass
political repression based on state
ideology. The
Soviet Union, particularly during
Joseph Stalin's rule and
Nazi Germany are usually cited as archetypical examples of totalitarian regimes.
Totalitarian regimes also often attempt to undermine or destroy community institutions deemed ideologically tainted (e.g.,
religious ones, or even the
nuclear family), while authoritarian regimes by and large leave these alone. For this reason, she argues that the process of restoring democracy is easier in formerly authoritarian than in formerly totalitarian states, and that the former are more amenable to gradual reform in a democratic direction.
The Kirkpatrick Doctrine was particularly influential during the
presidency of
Ronald Reagan. The Reagan administration gave varying degrees of support to anti-Communist dictatorships, including those in
Guatemala (to 1985), the
Philippines (to 1986), and
Argentina (to 1983), and armed the
mujahideen in
Afghanistan,
UNITA in
Angola, and the
Contras in
Nicaragua, as a means of ending Communist rule in those countries.