The Swedish political scientist Rudolf Kjellén (1864–1922) discusses the birth, death, and possible rebirth of the state as a ‘living organism’ (Eberhardt 2012). His concept of
Kjellén first used his concept of ‘geopolitics’ in a paper about Sweden's borders in 1899 (Alvstam & Lundén, 2021), but further defines it as the discipline of the state as a geographical organism or entity in space (Kjellén 1916 p. 39). Domestic geopolitics also influences relations with other states concerning resources and territory, but these are not necessarily inimical. Kjellén sees history as a game between great powers, in which smaller states and buffer states have to try to smoothly adapt to the realities (Marklund 2021). His reasoning includes a precise and important definition of ‘state’: a territory controlled by a centre of power which is recognized in international law. The formation of new states was, to Kjellén, almost always a violation of the principles of law; this was a statement, not an evaluation. A new state had to make itself geopolitically viable by wisely exploiting its material and spiritual resources, where the national feeling was decisive. (Kjellén 1916 pp. 162–164). A ‘nation’ is a group of people with a feeling of togetherness created by the communication of ideas. It is a vague and volatile phenomenon, partly, but not always, dependent on a common religion and language, but also on the influence of the governance of the territorial state. The nation is bound together by emotion, by accepting the state, or by striving for a territory. In other words, an ‘imagined community’, or a ‘daily plebiscite’ – a reference to ‘Rénan’ (Renan 1882, Kjellén 1916 p. 90). Kjellén points out that while the state usually defines its inhabitants as a people, its inhabitants do not necessarily see themselves as
Kjellén, in his studies of the great powers ( [In] Russia, the Poles, the ‘little Russians’ [Ukrainian or Ruthenian], Finns, Baltic peoples, Germans, Caucasians [e.g. Georgians] and others, are long since alienated with the Czarist rule and empire. They are more bent on emancipation into statehood than on integration into Russian society. This has prompted, and now, towards the end of the nineteenth century, deepened a policy of Russification. The old idea of a unifying pan-Slavism turns into a harsh, punishing pan-Russianism.
Discussing the Poles living within the German state, Kjellén begins using a metaphor for the Poles: the ‘sea of people’, populated by German language isles, so that ‘the map looks like an archipelago’. The towns are mainly German. ‘This is the type of an unfinished border between peoples’ (Kjellén 1905:1, p. 205). ‘The Poles count more than 3 million in Germany, and they are “a highly cultivated and socially developed nation, with rich literature, an educated or trained press, and proud traditions from a sovereign past”’ (Kjellén 1905:1, p. 205, Björk 2021b, p. 137–38).
An important discussion in
This policy
belonged in the concept of state, the practical mirror was cabinet politics, and the most radical fruit was the partition of Poland, a partition also of the people; if the people is a mechanical and temporary unification of individuals, then the misgivings to dissolve it will be less.
Concerning the relation between nationalism and the territorial state, he says
that the principle of nationality has been and still is met with much resistance. The reaction shows in a conscious act in such phenomena of regimental politics as Russification, Magyarisation and Germanisation, all directed against alien minorities in the name of a ruling nationality and also in the name of loyalty, all aiming at, in a violent way, complete national unity at the expense of the nationality idea of the internalized elements. On this hostile trail we also find Germany, which, since, with its great idea, solved its own problem of unity, and in the lead of the most pronounced reaction (against the Poles in the East) the same great statesman that was the man for the nation at its unification.
In a note on page 108 (Kjellén 1916), he adds:
… Germanisation and similar phenomena can objectively be seen as another expression of the nationality principle itself as one thus apprehends the principle as implying an identity between state and nation, no difference by which means it is brought about. Germanisation aims at the same end – a nationally unified and purified realm, as, e.g., the Polish national movement.
Kjellén concludes that if the new Europe is founded on the principles of the peoples' right to unity and freedom, two peoples will be without either of them: ‘the 33 million Ukrainians in Russia and Austria-Hungary, and the 20 million Poles in Russia, Austria, and Germany’ (Kjellén 1916, p. 106). In discussing the life and death of states, he points to many European states which disappeared after Poland ceased to exist. ‘There will be a European list of death from the last century, and then we have not [even] counted those artificial and therefore ephemeral polities like … the creation of the Vienna Congress Krakau (1815–1846)’
Kjellén is referring to the ‘
In a note on page 170 (Kjellén 1916), he adds:
These notations are indeed not intended to exonerate Poland's executioners from guilt. As a part in the contemporary national renaissance one can regard Balzer, (1916): an attempt at an ‘Ehrenrettung’ of the old republic in its most vulnerable area, the constitution.
Unlike human beings, states can reappear:
… under certain circumstances can states that have died, be born anew, into participation in a later system of states. … foreign slavery can to a nation become a suffering baptism into improvement. Here is a hope also for Poland – that the World War now seems to bring into fulfilment.
Judging by Kjellén's perspective in 1916, Poland is a victim of decisions taken by the great powers of the day without considering international law, but adds ‘perhaps we might enjoy the glimpses of international law that, in spite of everything, has been accomplished’(Kjellén 1916, p. 176).
The third, 1920, edition of There the Polish ethnic sea went into Germany, flooding ‘Oberschlesien, Posen’, and Western Prussia, almost isolating German East Prussia. This sea was certainly filled with German language islands so that the ethnic map looked like an archipelago, which on the other hand stretched into Russian Poland, where especially the towns were German strongholds. … Weichsel is the river of the Poles… Poles are a cultural people, [they have] their social development, rich literature, educated press, and great traditions from an independent past. Only within Germany's borders were thus all conditions for a national separation movement. The racial strife was thus going on within the realm, and this with an earnest[ness] that made the Polish question perhaps the greatest trouble of German (Prussian) domestic politics.
Discussing the Polish national awakening, Kjellén puts Germany in an intermediate position between an oppressive Russia and a more liberal Austria, leading to a more open conflict:
The Polish question became particularly virulent because Poland's 15 million people concentrated their fight for independence in this, while in Russia the oppressive power of the state, and in Austria its great accommodation put particular checks on it. Germany also from the 1880's found itself obliged to take to special defence measures in the part of the country in the form of colonization paid by the state. But the result did not meet the expectations, the Polish element increased even more; if the parts in Posen were fairly equal half a century ago, the Germans had by the entrance of our century sunk down to the same minority position as in Bohemia, and the position was still on the decline.
Kjellén is usually rather sceptical about the role of religion in forming nationalism, but in the Polish case he mentions the political role of the Catholic Church in the Polish areas of Germany as being ‘the main hearth of agitation’ (Kjellén 1920, p. 56).
On Russia, Kjellén asserts the following, after discussing possible Russian irredentism concerning the Galician Ruthenians:
From a pan-Slavic viewpoint, Russia could have similar claims on the rest of Galicia plus Posen etc., on behalf of the Poles (9 million, almost as many as within the Russian border). But such claims do not correspond to any sympathetic currents beyond the border; on the contrary, the centrifugal power is valid in Russia's Polish and Ukrainian question, at least in the first case as pure separatism.
The Russification policy is seen by Kjellén as an old-fashioned reaction against the subjugated nations' attempts at revolt, fighting for independence and self-determination:
Two modern West European ideas, nationalism and freedom of conscience have thus, in the rim of Europe, mobilized against Oldrussia, that through counterattack and violence has intended to master them. ‘The policy of Russification’ became programmatic after the last Polish revolt and continued in a full half century, steadily increasing its scope and its energy. After the revolution of 1905 … came the reaction, stronger than ever…. Its victims were, above all, Poland and Finland, the first through the excretion of a new government, Kolm (‘Poland's fourth partition’).
In the final part of the book, written shortly after the 1919–20 Treaty of Versailles, Kjellén comments on the dichotomy between a principle of nation states based on professed ethnicity or allegiance (as proposed by President Wilson) and claims for German reparations and territorial truncations. Wilson's ‘fourteen points’ are generally accepted by Kjellén; they
included the establishment of a Polish nation state with free access to the sea. It is clear that this program deprives Germany [of] its future as a world power, and even in certain points, (Lothringia, Poland) even truncates its territorial stato quo.
But the Peace agreement does not solve all problems, it creates new ones:
The Peace thus creates more evil from an objective point of view than it cures. If there was of irredenta in Germany one great case (Poland) and two small (Schleswig, Lothringia), there are now at least seven (Alsace, Saar and Rhen[ania]) in the west, Schleswig, Danzig, Oberschlesien and E-Prussia in the east.
The rebirth of Poland was a fact in 1920, but the eastern delimitation was still unsolved. There is no mention of Poland's Jewish and Protestant populations, but by mentioning the political agitation of the Catholic Church, Kjellén indirectly points to the relation between Polishness and Catholicism. (Kjellén 1920, p. 56). Protestant Polish speakers mainly voted for Germany in the plebiscites, or with their feet in the Polish-West German agreements after World War II (Kossert 2001, p.2006). In the case of the Jews, Kjellén asserts that in the states of Western Europe, they ‘appear as fully naturalized, as embedded into the local nationality’, while the Eastern Jews are ‘Orientals’ and should therefore be seen as a nation in their own right, however not likely to form a state because of their racial purity' (Kjellén 1916, p. 114).
What is specific to Kjellén's geopolitics is his focus on autarky – for a country to be self-sufficient in resources (Björk 2021a, p. 126). The state territory should not be uniform but harmonic, and the state can make its realm ‘more natural than it
The territorial configuration of Poland has, over the centuries, often been strategically and economically unfavourable. Great cities – Riga, Kiev, Kraków, Gdańsk, Szczecin – have, during Poland's history, through the drawing of state borders close to these cities, lost their importance for both neighbouring states. Even after the plebiscites which were held around 1919, and partly as a result of the ethnic disparities between towns and their surroundings, the economic landscape became truncated. The redrawing of the railways, and the foundation of Gdynia are obvious examples of territorial adaptation in order to attain autarky.
Concerning the use of rivers as borders between independent states, Kjellén points out that even if a river has an advantage as a definition of a boundary, it also has strong disadvantages:
By its character as a communication artery, the river works to
The Oder-Neisse delimitation was definitely a political rather than an economic adaptation. It was not only the border towns but also Szczecin and Świnoujście which would lose much of their economic areas of influence. ‘The good boundary… must not be absolute or exclusive … but the right middle line between seclusion and mediation…. The seashell is not an ideal for the house of the state’ (Kjellén 1916, pp. 56f).
Kjellén is pessimistic about the possibility of solving territorial issues through arbitration. In Poland's case, the relatively small border rectifications with Czechoslovakia in 1920 seem to be the only case which was handled by arbitration by an international legal organization (Davies 1981, p. 496; Jesenský 2014). Almost anticipating the coming conflicts over territories (Memel, Danzig), Kjellén points to the awkward situation of a state having part of their territory under superimposed legislation from other powers or international bodies: ‘Nobody can obey two masters’. And he refutes, as being stillborn, a proposal by Grabowsky (1916) aimed at a type of German-Polish condominium (Kjellén 1916, p. 49). The Pölitz/Police exclave in Poland in the Soviet Occupation Zone of Germany (1945–1946) (Aischmann 2008, pp. 135–149), and the Soviet military base at Świnoujście (1945–1991) (Jędrusik 2013, p.144) confirms Kjellén's observation.
Kjellén's treatment of Poland as a state and the Polish people as a nation has been more or less neglected. In his discussion on the state as a realm, he deplores that the ethnic element, being historically earlier than the territorial one, has long been neglected by scientists (Kjellén 1914 p. 77; 1916 p. 41). His discussion on ethnopolitics (1916 p. 77–121) is a light and essayistic forerunner to Anthony D. Smith's opus of 1986. His concept of nation as an imagined community resembles that of Benedict Anderson's (1983 p. 6) and Gellner's (1983, p. 1). Kjellén's discussion about the formation of nationhood was developed and interpreted as a result of social communication by Karl Deutsch (1953). In his condemnation of Russification and Germanisation efforts by territorial powers attempting to create loyalty, he precludes Brubaker's (1995, 1996) discussion about nationalising states. It is remarkable, however, that none of these Anglo-Saxon scholars refer to Kjellén. Only Ladis Kristof, (Kristof 1960 p. 21–28) touches on Kjellén's discussion on these matters, while most later scholars only mention Kjellén as the father of geopolitics (Lundén 2021b).
Poland has, since 1945, and particularly after 1991, reached an existence as a nation-state without any significant ethnic (or even religious) minorities. This goal was, however, attained through external pressures and decisions, and after enormous sufferings: by territorial truncation and extension. These changes also implied an ethnic Polonization of the areas at the expense of almost all ethnic and religious minorities, through the Nazi extermination policies in occupied Poland, the expulsion of Germans, and the exodus of protestants and the remaining Jews. Unlike the geopolitical situation during the 1000 years of Polish identity, the country has now reached a territorial status which is accepted by both its inhabitants and its neighbours. In this way, Poland seems to have fulfilled Kjellén's two principles – of an accepted national identity and of popular loyalty to the territorial state, but certainly did not attain it in the peaceful way he had hoped.