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NOTES AND RELECTIONS
EXAMINING REALISM & ITS LIMITATIONS IN INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
ANMOL MUKHIA
anmol.mukhia@gmail.com
Assistant Professor, Department of International Relations, Faculty of International Studies,
South Asian University, New Delhi (India). https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9815-5729, LinkedIn
profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anmol-mukhia-94880822/
Realism has long been regarded as the cornerstone of international relations (IR) theory,
tracing its roots back to ancient thinkers such as Thucydides, Thomas Hobbes, Niccolò
Machiavelli, and Kautilya. Yet, this perception is not only historically dubious but also
analytically misleading. When examining the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, the emergence
of new actors such as China and India, and research on “Cold War 2.0,” realism theory
dominates the discussion in international forums on topics of power, security, survival,
and state strengthening. However, my ambition in this essay is to offer an analysis of
the readings by Mehmet Tabak, Jonathan Kirsher, and Alexander Vidman on Realism.
Their book needs to be analysed in the forum of intellectual tradition, such as the Realism
paradigm, Realism in IR, Realism in Foreign Policy, and its shortcomings, which they
attempt to rewrite on Realism. This essay is divided into three parts. First, I examine
Tabak’s position of realism as a disarrayed tradition both philosophically and in scientific
traditions. He analyses Realism in International Relations, and forcefully challenges the
so-called “consensus view” that reflects realism as a unified, ancient, and self-contained
school of thought. Secondly, I then discuss Kirsher realism in an uncertain world,
emphasising the realism and its basis for the American world order. Thirdly, I analyse
Vidman’s folly of realism in relation to the “realist” philosophy of US foreign policy in
Russia and Ukraine. As this essay will demonstrate, realism’s disjointed evolution,
contested foundations, and practical failures expose it not as a timeless doctrine but as
a backfilled, unstable tradition that continues to construct more confusion than
consensus.
Realism as a disarrayed tradition
Mehmet Tabak argues that realism should be neither considered an ancient nor a sui
generis intellectual tradition. His book critically examines the “consensus view” of realism
from three interconnected points: First, realism emerged during the inter-war period and,
until the early 1980s, was conceived by every reputable IR scholar as a relatively
theoretical development. Second, this actually existing realism has evolved into a
disarrayed tradition to the present, lacking internal coherence. The third section
demonstrates that, following incremental development throughout the 1970s, the full-
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formed consensus view took shape in the early 1980s. This delayed formulation raises
an interesting question: Why was such a narrative constructed so late, and without
convincing evidence to support it? Tabak argues that the consensus view was created to
meet the needs of certain scholars at a time when intellectual trends, such as those
influenced by Kuhn and Lakatos, were in vogue, and new developments in the practice
of international politics necessitated the formulation of new theories.
In the early 1970s, calls for a new paradigm in IR grew louder, given the proliferation of
the Kuhnian discourse and the perceived shifts from the state-centric international
system to “transnational relations.” This desire urged the invention of the claim that IR
had been dominated by a state-centric paradigm. For example, Joseph S. Nye and Robert
O. Keohane among the prominent figures of this movement, contended in 1971 “that the
state-centric paradigm,” which “assumes that states are the only significant actors in
world politics and that they act as units” is “becoming progressively more inadequate as
changes in transnational relations take place” (Nye & Keohane, 1971, p. 721). Their
influential work, Power and Interdependence, built on these critiques and proposed an
alternative paradigm, explicitly positioning it against what they now labelled as realism.
Examining the consensus view, K. J. Holsti asserted that realism has its roots in the
writings of Hobbes and Rousseau, although it was, by the 1980s, considered to be in
disarray (Holsti, 1985, p. 1). Others, like Richard N. Rosecrance and Arthur A. Stein, the
realist tradition,” is virtually as old as recorded history, tracing its origins to Thucydides’
History of the Peloponnesian War (Rosecrance & Stein, 1993, p. 6, 14). However, the
actual consent of early realist discourse, particularly in 1930s America, was highly
inconsistent and consisted of an “array of contradictory positions” (Vitalis, 2015, pp. 88
89). During this period, “realism was not so much a well-articulated doctrine as a general
Zeitgeist understood to transform simultaneously politics, literature, science, and
philosophy” (Guilhot, 2017, p. 79). A standard survey of IR, published a year later,
reported that “Thucydides is usually credited with being the first writer in the realist
tradition as well as the founding father of the international relations discipline” (Viotti &
Kauppi, 1987, p. 25). Authors like Mansbach and Vasquez also treated the “realist
paradigm” as a historical tradition since, in their view, these three “fundamental
assumptions” “have been passed down from generation to generation by historians as
varied as Thucydides, Machiavelli, Hobbes, and Ranke,” and were received by such
twentieth-century realists as “Nicholas Spykman, E. H. Carr, Hans J. Morgenthau, George
Kenan, and Robert Osgood” (Mansbach & Vasquez, 1981, pp. 35). To make a long story
short, the consensus view had become the “consensus view” by the mid-1980s, often
based on the assumption that it had been sufficiently validated by the likes of Keohane
and Gilpin. The consensus view” was inspired by the debates in the 1960s and 1970s
about scientific thinking and research, including Kuhn’s use of the term “paradigm” to
describe well-defined scientific disciplines.
Moreover, like Carr and Morgenthau, many other IR scholars have justifiably regarded
realism as a new theory. For instance, the historian Frank Tannenbaum lamented in 1952
that realism had recently “won wide acceptance by teachers and scholars in the field of
international relations”. Despite this, international theory, including realist strands, was
seen as underdeveloped even into the 1960s. In 1960, Martin Wight observed in 1960s
that earlier international theory was fragmented and largely inaccessible to the layman
(Wight, 1966, p. 20). Similarly, scholars like Cox and Harrison described that field as
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unsettled and chaotic and in confusion as the contemporary world scene which it seeks
to comprehend” (Cox, 1962, p. 261; Harrison, 1964, p. 3). In 1972, Hedley Bull noted
that it would be a mistake to suggest that the principal realist theories, as realist thinkers
agreed on only a few basic points, such as the importance of power, and otherwise lacked
a shared doctrine (Bull, 1995, p. 189).
The publication of Kenneth N. Waltz’s seminal work Theory of International Relations in
1979 marked a major turning point by significantly advancing neorealist thought. Yet
Robert Gilpin, while embracing the consensus view of ideological and methodological
diversity among so-called realists like Waltz, admits that they often had little in common,
“except perhaps that they have all written on international relations from a rather
disparate set of professional and political perspectives” (Gilpin, 1984, p. 287). Unsatisfied
with Waltz’s approach, many new-generation scholars opted to self-identify as non-
realists, including Keohane, who eventually spearheaded competing theories, such as
liberal institutionalism (Keohane, 1986, p. 7). As Tabak notes, until the early 1980s, the
prevailing view among IR scholars was that realism was a modern theoretical
development, one that lacked the consistency or coherence required by a distinct
intellectual tradition. This actually-existing realism is too disarrayed to be meaningfully
classified as a sui generis intellectual tradition. As Guilhot succinctly puts it, realism in
international relations is mainly “a twentieth-century phenomenon.”
In parallel, neoclassical realism further complicated the picture with idiosyncratic
outlooks and numerous insights borrowed from many neorealists and the vast pool of
“classical realists,” ranging from Thucydides to Morgenthau. This proliferation has
resulted in what some have called “an embarrassment of Realisms” (Wagner, 2007, p.
12). Thus, the field is now populated by numerous sub-variants: Christian realism,
democratic realism, Enlightenment realism, leftist realism, liberal realism, progressive
realism, radical realism, realistic Wilsonianism, utopian realism, willful realism, and
environmental realism or ecological realism, illustrating that realism has never truly been
a singular, well-defined tradition (Raschi & Zambernardi, 2018, p. 371; Lieven, 2020;
Patrick, 2020).
Lastly, realism is internally disarrayed. As there are many different sets of alleged
“realist” core beliefs in the existing literature, meaning that there is no consensus on just
what these beliefs are Mearsheimer’s well-known version of the “three core beliefs” of
pan-realism, that states are central actors in world politics; that they behave as unitary
actors; and that power calculations drive their decisions (Mearsheimer, 2001, pp. 17
18). Yet these are not universally accepted, nor do they set realism apart as a distinct
paradigm. In short, the commonly supposed three core beliefs of realism do not qualify
as the differentiating specifics of any sui generis paradigm or research program. This
verdict also applies to additional assumptions that are commonly depicted as realist core
assumptions. One of them is pessimism regarding “power politics” in international
relations (Gilpin, 1984, pp. 289 90; Grieco, 1990, p. 27). Also, many realists are not
such chronic pessimists. For example, Carr was not a chronically pessimistic thinker
either, given his efforts to incorporate a good dose of optimism into his theory of
international politics (Chapter 2). Although some of Morgenthau’s works are
unrealistically pessimistic, many of them exhibit different shades of strong optimism and
utopianism, namely, a belief in the possibility and desirability of a world government
(Chapter 3). Due to his optimistic, “utopian views, John H. Herz, another famed
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“classical realist,” was decried by some as an unauthentic realist (Thompson, 1979, pp.
94142). Their respective works do not individually or collectively provide a coherent
definition of realism, nor do they offer a progressive research program.
Realism in Practice
Jonathan Kirshner, in his An Unwritten Future, argues that classical realism now
represents a minority perspective within contemporary International Relations (IR)
theory. The broader realist community is largely dominated by structural realism, a
framework that models states as identical units distinguished only by their relative power
capabilities. Since the 1980s, this school of realist thought has become so predominant
that both its supporters and critics often equate realism entirely with structural realism.
Not surprisingly, as Tabak’s illustration shows, while classical realism and structural
realism do share some foundational ideas - since both identify under the realist label
they differ significantly in scope and assumptions. In fact, the theorists who, in the middle
of the twentieth century, developed the approach now called classical realism do not see
themselves as part of a sub-school; they simply thought of themselves as realists, just
as Mozart and his contemporaries never labelled their music “classical”. Structural
realism, by contrast, confines its analysis to states operating within an anarchic
international system, focusing solely on relative capabilities and systemic power
dynamics.
Classical realism, on the other hand, includes much more than just power. It considers
both ‘power’ and ‘purpose,’ and insists that understanding world politics requires
attention to both material and normative dimensions. Classical realist also holds to a
reserved analytical modesty due to their dyed-in-the-wool sensitivity to the fundamental,
unbridgeable distinction between the natural and social sciences. Moreover, classical
realism emphasises the persistent dangers inherent in anarchy, the need to respect the
limitations and strengths of power, and the inevitability of recurring conflicts, all within
the context of irretrievable uncertainty.
Krishner uses Thucydides as a case in point. While his History of the Peloponnesian War
recounts an ancient conflict between two slaveholding city-states, filled with battles
between spear-wielding hoplites, its insights into the dynamics of power and politics
remain highly relevant. Despite the text’s age, incomplete structure, and disputed
authorship, IR scholars still find it valuable. In The Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War,
Donald Kagan’s scholarship is often eager to contest Thucydides’ accounts; he blames
Athens for the conflict (Kagan, 1969, p. 269). For Kagan, Athens’s serial troublemaking
eventually “put the Spartan war party into power,” and even then, a sluggish Sparta had
to be roused into action by the Corinthians and other allies that had suffered at the hands
of Athenian aggression (ibid. pp. 285).
In contrast, G.E.M. Croix in The Origins of the Peloponnesian War reaches the opposite
conclusion. Engaging Kagan explicitly as a foil, Croix rejects the view “that Athens was
the aggressive party in 433–1” and reports that he has no “doubt that the real aggressors
were Sparta and her allies” (Croix, 1972, p. 65). Both Kagan and Croix, if with somewhat
different shadings, highlight the role of the Corinthians in considering the origins of the
war. Thucydides reminds his readers of the stark consequences of anarchy, where
behaviours may be restrained, norms may be respected, and actors might behave in a
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civilised fashion. Also, everywhere, the balance of power profoundly shapes decisions.
This is considered the peripheral conflict that emerges as the proximate cause of the war,
the confrontation between Corinth and Corcyra. This is why the attentiveness to power
dynamics, where balance of power is much more consequential than its distribution at
any moment in time, is Thucydides’ most visible influence on contemporary IR theory.
Classical realism emerged as a recognisable school of thought in the middle of the
twentieth century, in response to the international traumas of that time. To establish the
contours and core elements of the paradigm, Kirshner draws principally on the
contributions of five figures: E. H. Carr, George F. Kennan, Hans Morgenthau, Raymond
Aron, and Robert Gilpin. In so doing, it remains necessary as always to take note of the
usual truckload of qualifications, of which three in particular stand out.
But for realism, or it should be said for classical realism, which focuses on what goes on
within states and societies (whereas structural realism, of course, tends to “black box”
such things). It is an oversimplification, but a productive one, to describe the contours
of world politics in the seventy-five years from 1945 to 2020 as shaped and characterised
by “an American order.” Later, the United States chose a different path after World War
II, as it sought to learn from the past and avoid the catastrophic blunders of the interwar
years. The intervention of the Americans had decisively brought the mass slaughter of
the Great War to a conclusion, but after flirting with internationalism, the United States
chose not to join the League of Nations, and then to pursue shortsighted economic
policies, and finally to hide behind isolation and timid neutrality as the fascist powers
embarked on their bids to conquer Europe and Asia.
Contradictory Realism
In The Folly of Realism, Alexander Vindman deliberately uses what seems like a
contradiction in his book title to highlight a central issue: the long-standing overreliance
on the “realist” philosophy of US foreign policy has played a major role, though not solely,
in the blame for the persistence of Western delusion regarding Russia.
The realist school of thought, championed by figures such as Henry Kissinger, John
Mearsheimer, Stephan Walt, and Kenneth Waltz, rose to prominence during the Cold War
in reaction to the idealism of leaders like Woodrow Wilson. Wilsonian idealism held that
the US had a moral vision to spread democracy and freedom in foreign lands. In contrast,
realists argue that advancing vital US interests, defined as aggressive national defence,
immediate commercial prosperity in trade, and short-term crisis aversion in pursuit of
greater stability, should serve as the main standard for American engagement abroad.
This realism dominated US policy during the George H. W. Bush administration, and to
some extent, in the Clinton administration (Chapter 2). A key example was their intense
focus on nuclear disarmament after the fall of the Soviet Union. Ukraine and other newly
independent states were pressured to give up their nuclear weapons to Russia, with little
concern for the broader implications. During the late 1980s, there was no serious effort
to tie denuclearisation to Russia’s behaviour or to support the democratic aspirations of
the post-Soviet republics.
That narrow focus, Vindman argues, backfired. Without a commitment to Western
democratic values, even the realist supposed priority of projecting US interests was
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ultimately undermined. Realism's tendency to avoid immediate conflict led not to a long-
term but a deeper crisis. The results of the 2014 and 2022 crises stemming from the
Russian war on Ukraine were shaped by these early post-Cold War decisions (Chapter
7).
At that time, US leaders feared nuclear proliferation more than anything else. They saw
the collapse of the USSR as a threat that could create multiple new nuclear states or
result in a loose nukes scenario. So, realism at its most short-term and transactional
prevailed, against any supposedly misguided idealism about supporting the self-
determination of the new republics as a fundamental Western value. Well before the fall
of the USSR, the goal of Bush’s administration prioritised preserving arms control deals
with the Soviets over supporting independence movements in the Soviet republics.
There was a viable alternative, one that wasn’t blind idealism or zombie liberal
internationalism, nor isolationism couched as restraint, or morally bankrupt realism,
which served short-term interests and was, in that sense, purely transactional (Chapter
5). But a mix of those short-sighted strategies that dominated US foreign policy only
helped Russia regain a position to re-engage in regional aggression and nuclear extortion
of the West.
This deeply ingrained realpolitik approach persisted through both Republican and
Democratic administrations. The US remained focused on the war on terror as a
paramount concern, confident in its global dominance and slow to adapt. The realist
school, operating across party lines throughout the Clinton and Bush presidencies, was
quick to deride the statement as nothing but chest-beating provocation. According to
McCain, Henry Kissinger, the father of foreign-policy realism himself, called him to say
the speech had gone too far or used such rhetoric as unnecessarily provocative. As
reported by the New York Times, Charles King, a professor of international affairs at
Georgetown University, encapsulated the objections, blaming rhetoric like Mr McCain’s
for encouraging “Georgia to try to push maximalist positions ‘We’ve got to get this
territory back at all costs, and if we get it back, the United States will support us’” (Cooper
& Bumiller, 2008).
In the end, the realism approach for achieving security through denuclearisation had not
brought about a real threat reduction but had only left Ukraine and the West vulnerable
to new forms of nuclear blackmail. Despite McCain’s cogent and pointed advice, it was
not taken in 2008 and 2009, either by the outgoing Bush administration or the incoming
Obama administration, which did not take his advice seriously. The post-Soviet history
of US relationships with Russia and with Ukrainepresented in this book as a test case
for the prevailing US approach to international relations in general makes overwhelmingly
clear that realism isn’t, in its own too-simplistic terms, realistic. Vidman’s account of the
US relations with Russia and Ukraine offers a broader lesson: realism, for all its claims
to hard-nosed pragmatism, has failed in practice. By sacrificing the West’s values, the
West failed to deter a dangerous but deterrable adversary and missed the chance to build
a strong alliance with a strategically vital partner, i.e., Ukraine. Vindman concludes that
the history of missteps in US policy for Russia and Ukraine demonstrates the folly of
realism, and while it is now very late to abandon our folly, it’s still not too late.
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Conclusion
Realism, as presented in the essay, is a complex and fragmented tradition, which is not
a unified or ancient doctrine, as many believe. It functions more as a label for a variety
of loosely connected approaches than as a coherent theory or even a paradigm. So, an
attempt to classify or canonise realism is historically dubious and often serves strategic
academic or political ends rather than reflecting the true evolution of international
thought. As Tabak argues that realism is not a timeless, unified school of thought, which
is what he highlights, the consensus view of realism was just constructed in the 1980s,
shaped more by academic and political needs than historical continuity. It was scholars
like Keohane and Nye who pushed the idea of a dominant state-centric paradigm, i.e.,
realism, in order to propose their own alternatives, such as liberal institutionalism.
Despite historical evidence, realism has always been internally fragmented and
inconsistent. In Kirshner’s view, classical realism is a minority view today compared to
structural realism. However, thinkers like Thucydides still offer insight due to their focus
on uncertainty, power dynamics and human motivation. While in practice, the
overreliance on realist thinking in US foreign policy is heavily criticised in The Folly of
Realism. The theory of realism that focuses on stability, deterrence, and short-term
national interests often fails to account for long-term strategic concerns, which include
moral concerns of self-determination. Thus, realism is less a coherent school of thought
and more contested, often reshaped to serve the evolving needs of scholars and
policymakers, sometimes at the expense of clarity, consistency or effectiveness.
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How to cite this note
Mukhia, Anmol (2026). “Examining Realism & its Limitations in International Relations. Janus.net,
e-journal of international relations. VOL. 17, Nº. 1, May 2026, pp. 650-657. DOI
https://doi.org/10.26619/1647-7251.17.1.01