Abstract
Introduction
[N]ations and peoples have an inalienable right to look after their own defence. . .if [we]. . .do not provide countries with means of defending themselves, we will see a proliferation of uncontrolled and unregulated arms sales free from oversight or inhibitions. . .[That] would be vastly irresponsible.
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This statement was made by then-UK International Trade Secretary Liam Fox at the Defence and Security Equipment International (DSEI) arms fair in London in September 2017. It was within the long British government tradition of framing its arms exports as morally justifiable, while claiming stringent regulation and adherence to international law.
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An extreme recent manifestation of this was Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt insisting it would be ‘morally bankrupt’
Relatedly, campaigners have pointed to ‘revolving doors’ between government officials and the arms industry; and both activist and academic critique have lamented lack of transparency, accountability and oversight. What often unites critics are accusations of various complicities and exposing of web-like relationships across governmental and private actors. The notion of web-like relations presents in several heuristic frames: ‘military-industrial complex’; ‘revolving doors’; and ‘arms cycle’. 5 However, as commentators lament with bewilderment, despite such critique, these webs grow in both scale and complexity. 6
The wider problem animating this article, and the question often overlooked in public campaigns and scholarship, is:
Implicit critiques of denial underlie Critical Security Studies and poststructuralist and postcolonial International Relations (IR). Yet, the ontological status of denial, and how they operate in the politics of (in)security, have received little explicit theorisation. Neither are any of the implicit conceptions of denials adequate for such explication. This article contributes to Critical IR and Security Studies literature by theorising denial and exploring its mechanisms in the politics of security. Explicit theorisation of denial and its empirical exposure must be put centre stage in the study of security; while reckoning with its implications must inform a revised
The rest of the article proceeds as follows. Section two first offers a critical review making explicit the often implicit usages of denial in Critical IR and elsewhere extracting a range of conceptions of denial. It then proposes that denial more fundamentally structures the politics of security than any of these conceptions of denial allow. It proceeds developing a theorisation of denial drawing on Dillon’s ‘unstable duality of (in)security’.
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What I argue to be two co-dependent forms of denials –
The main contribution of the article is to Critical IR and Security Studies – through the explicit theorisation of denial’s ontological status in security; and to the field’s on-going retheorisations of ‘security’. In light of this article, ‘security’ becomes the realm of the propagation of new symbioses, bringing ever-new actors into contact and arrangement. While ‘security’ was already theorised in critical literature as the realm of permanent threats, this article provides insight into the conditions of possibility and into
The article also contributes to the more specialised literature on the arms trade: unless the paradigmatic denials of security are confronted, otherwise well-intentioned critique demanding more transparency, accountability, or better-regulated arms trade, may help sustain assemblages of (in)security by demanding the delivery of the very promise of security whose denials had generated and made the assemblages thrive. This demands a revision of our
Theorising Denial in the Politics of (In)security
It is necessary to theorise two aspects of the concept of denial: first, what denial itself denotes – its ontological status in a wider theoretical and empirical analysis; and second, what it is that the denial
Theorising Denial
Poststructuralist and postcolonial treatments of ‘sovereignty’, ‘subjectivity’, ‘security’, ‘state’, and ‘empire’ broadly amount to implicit critiques of what may be called constitutive denial rationalities. Thus, when arguing for ‘national security’ requiring exclusion, forgetting of that which would destabilise state identity, 8 such studies implicitly render denial as constitutive of national security. Denial is also implicit in critical surveys of sovereignty and subjectivity; 9 and in postcolonial studies exposing Western amnesia on race and constitutive ‘encounters between the West and the rest’. 10 In case of postcolonial ‘amnesia’, the status of denial, while implicit, becomes functionally central: it sustains institutionalised mechanisms of erasure and forgetting (from education to migration) denying relational histories and unequal distribution of power emerging from colonial extraction. In turn, directly referring to ‘denial’, Chandler exposes an ‘Empire in denial’: here, the West is in denial of the power relation in state-building interventions that off-load ‘failure’ onto the locals. However, ‘denial’ itself is loosely and varyingly conceptualised – from broader organising logics of concealment/disguising (the power relation), to evasion (from responsibility); to the effects of such logics – depriving the locals their rights/sovereignty. 11
More recently, a special issue of
In debates on climate denialism, recent IR interventions explore interlinked forms of denial, e.g. new authoritarian and right-wing movements merging climate denialism, ‘petrocultures’, racism and misogyny. Patriarchal white-supremacist order and fossil fuel industry are mutually sustained beyond what is immediately denied, i.e. climate change. 15 Thus, the status of denial here may be said to be that of a connective across domains.
Substantively most related to the current article, in a recent study on Britain’s arms trade, Stavrianakis explores ‘non-knowledge’ with important implications for engaging, albeit still implicitly, the notion of denial. Here, she argues, an institutionalised process of risk assessments for arms exports actively produces non-knowledge about risks of violations of International Humanitarian Law (IHL) at the destination of export despite overwhelming evidence (e.g. on Yemen). Non-knowledge is produced through ‘institutional arrangements for assessing risk. . .[that] structure out certain key concerns [and sources of evidence] before the process of risk assessment even begins’.
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This active production of non-knowledge generates a ‘regime of recklessness’ – pretence of caring by adopting risk as the measure of export licence, while not caring about the actual harm being done. Non-knowledge here refers to ‘the making of things
Elsewhere, most directly, denials have been explored in Genocide Studies and in some IR interventions on genocide. Thus, Akcam reveals how the perpetration of the Armenian Genocide and its denial have been formative of the Turkish Republic by institutionalising denial in the Constitution and Criminal law. 18 Denial here is both constitutive forgetting in national myth-making and a practice of law-making and governance. In turn, contributing to IR debates on ontological security, Zarakol links state denial of historical crimes to the need for ‘a consistent sense of “self”’. 19 Thus, denial is a psycho-social mechanism for Japan’s grappling with its postcolonial condition and relations with the ‘West’, and a means of relating in the international.
Cohen’s seminal sociological study conceives ‘organised denial’ as ‘initiated, structured and sustained by massive resources of the modern state’: cover-up of political violence can lead to ‘entire re-writing of history’, and enunciatively to literal denials of genocide and other forms of violence (‘It did not happen’), or ‘interpretive denials’ (‘it was something else’).
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Cohen also tackles ‘micro-cultures of denial within. . .organizations’: these ‘depend on forms of concerted ignorance, different levels of the system keeping themselves uninformed about what is happening elsewhere’.
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Similar to Stavrianakis’ active production of non-knowledge, but different in actualisation, here micro-cultures of denial produce non-knowledge – deni
In my recent contribution on genocide denial, I argue for a shift from the conventional focus on a
The above critical review made explicit the often implicit usages of denial in Critical IR, linking them to some of the more explicit studies of denial in IR and elsewhere. A range of conceptions of denial emerge – the ontological status of denial from abstract meta-logics of silence and forgetting constitutive of nation, state, identity; to denial as active practices of legitimation, institution-building, law-making and governance; to denial as generative rather than post factum. Below I argue that denial much more fundamentally structures the politics of security than any of the wider implicit or explicit conceptions of denial unpacked above allow explicating. An explicit theorisation of denial needs to be put centre stage in the study of security. In order to explicate the enduring public-private relations in the provision of ‘security’, we need to uncover the generative capacities of denial.
However, what is the denial
The Twin Denials of (In)security: Denial of Complicity and Denial of the Impossibility of Security
The first proposition here is that security ontologically relies on the continuous
A concern with complicity, albeit not articulated as such, is also implicit in debates on ‘the sociology of strategic unknowns’ – ‘the multifaceted ways that ignorance can be harnessed as a resource, enabling knowledge to be deflected, obscured, concealed or magnified in a way that increases the scope of what remains unintelligible’. 28 As McGoey notes, such politics mobilises ambiguity and denies inconvenient facts as ‘the most indispensable tool for. . .exonerating oneself from blame’. 29
The denial of complicity that I am concerned with here is much more than denial of blame through such strategic unknowns or the politics of ignorance. Instead, denial of complicity here is a pervasive and paradigmatic rationale and the very structure of the
However, while resorting to strategic non-knowledge (e.g. ‘new uncertainties’), such denial of complicity through externalising of risk-threats nonetheless relies on knowledge as the ontological foundation of Western politics; just as the strategic non-knowledge of the regime of recklessness described by Stavrianakis can be argued to be still based on knowledge. This is because they deny future complicity (e.g. in Saudi Arabia’s possible use of weapons to violate IHL) by equating ‘not enough knowledge of risk’ with sufficient knowledge to assume compliance of the receiving state and claim legal and moral high ground. These claims would not have been possible without denial of complicity (externalisations) as conceptualised above.
Hence, denial theorised in this article is the fundamental organising logic of security and not one of its strategies or practices as in the politics of ignorance or non-knowledge. This logic then may, and does, enable strategies and practices that combine, prioritise or else oscillate between knowledge claims and strategic non-knowledge. Put otherwise, the denial of complicity underlying security is the rationale that provides the wider condition of possibility for these knowledge and non-knowledge practices. The practices of strategic ignorance, including Stavrianakis’ regime of recklessness; and both the institutional ‘structuring out of certain knowledges’ described by her, 32 and the structuring in of organisational designs promoting ignorance described by Cohen, 33 become some of the mediums to uphold the necessary denial – denial indispensable to security.
Howeve to understand why denial of complicity holds such generative force, we must explore a much deeper denial that underlies the very politics of security –
Such denial is inherent in the
Subsequently, we can argue that this promise simultaneously requires the
In turn, this denial is dependent on denial of complicity. To recall Dillon, securing is an assault on ‘the very thing which [it] claims to have preserved. . .[d]estruction, disfiguration, violence, transformation and change. . .that is how the thing to be secured is translated into the object susceptible to be secured’.
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However, this cannot be conceived without the other side of this ‘assault’: the technologies and violence that securing the subject of denial entails simultaneously co-produce – in non-linear and mediated ways proposed by Kutz’s notion of complicity
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– that which the security subject is being secured against, thus becoming complicit. Security ontologically relies on the denial of the impossibility of security
Indeed, the promise of security itself has undergone qualitative change with the rise of ‘risk’ as technology of governance. As Dillon contends, the biopolitical characterisation of life as emergent and radically contingent leads to different form of securing: if contingency constitutes life itself, life cannot be secured from or against contingency, but must be secured
These changes – not a shift from, but coexisting with, conventional rationales of security
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–have important consequences for our theorisation of security’s paradigmatic denials. The emphasis on emergence itself inheres adaptation of denial of complicity: since things are emergent, subject to radical contingency (a claim closely linked to growing discourses on complexity), then we are not complicit. Indeed, ‘global uncertainty and complexity’ have often been recalled by Western governments and by the global capitalist interest both to justify further intervention and the production of security technologies,
Assemblages of (In)security, Denial, Critique
However, how do we trace and explicate such politics of denial, as well as make visible and importantly critique it without unwittingly reproducing or strengthening the rationales of denial? This section first contends that without an assemblage-based thinking we are methodologically ill-equipped to trace, expose as well as critique denial in the politics of (in)security: it draws on Deleuze and Guattari to theorise what I call assemblages of (in)security. If Dillon allowed theorising that denial
Assemblages of (In)security
Assemblages of (in)security are here conceived as amalgam of entities and relations variously coming together in both the promise of security and the purported delivery of secur
However, what do we gain by examining these actors and relations
Deleuze and Guattari caution against asking what an assemblage
This question is in turn inseparable from their concern with durability and change. What Deleuze and Guattari call ‘the politics of the assemblage’,
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i.e. what it does and how it works, can only be explicated through tracing its durability and change. The theorisation here, too, is concerned not with what assemblages of (in)security
The assemblage lens employed here is conceived contra certain limiting assumptions/misconceptions common in secondary literature: thus, Buchanan cautions against misplaced commitment to ‘multiplicity’ as complete indeterminacy or contingency. While assemblages are heterogeneous and contingent, what they produce is not: an assemblage always tends towards coherence.
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While heterogeneous, assemblages have what Buchanan calls an ‘operational sense’.
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Moreover, and importantly for the current concern, the assemblage lens draws attention to the continuous encounters of assemblages with their ‘milieu of exteriority’:
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they form and adapt via constantly (re)establishing liaisons and inventing relations
Assemblages, according to Deleuze and Guattari, have three features: their conditions of relations (the abstract machine), their elements (the concrete assemblage), and their agents (personae).
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The abstract machine denotes the conditions of possibility for the assemblage, i.e. the set of relations that hold the given elements together and make them meaningfully related.
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In case of assemblages of (in)security, among others, the relations conditioning dedicated sections within trade ministries promoting arms trade – and the
In turn, Deleuze and Guattari conceive of four ‘types’ of assemblages or socio-political machines: Territorial, State, Capitalist and Nomadic. 58 Territorial assemblages ‘divide the world into coded segments’. . .(‘codes of kinship, codes of worship’, etc.); while State assemblages arrange relations hierarchically: the State is ‘an apparatus of capture’ (of populations, commodities or commerce) through (over)coding, i.e. inscribing them with significations submitting them to state regulation. 59 Conversely, the Capitalist assemblage relies on constant decoding: if the State, redistributes coded flows along hierarchised lines, capitalism operates through capturing and evacuating flows of previously established meanings; then commodifies them through imposing the logic of capital. 60
However, any actual assemblage works through a mixture of these types of machines.
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In turn, this involves asking: ‘how is this arrangement of things justified. . .legitimated, what makes it seem right and proper?’ The assemblage thus becomes
In Deleuze and Guattari’s assemblage thinking, debtor-creditor relations are formative of the State. Here, social relations are arranged hierarchically, while debt is rendered infinite: tributes to the state can never be fully paid;
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‘the debt becomes a debt of existence. . .of the subjects themselves’.
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It is here that Dillon’s theorisation on security meets Deleuze and Guattari. It, too, implies infinite debt: the promise of secur
To make this more intelligible, we must consider how such denials operate by traversing the four types identified above. Clarifying the assemblages on (in)security vis-à-vis the notion of the ‘war machine’ becomes due here. Deleuze and Guattari theorise how a certain instantiation of the nomadic assemblage type – what they call the ‘war machine’ – has been formative of the State and is in constant change and relation with it. Being historically and conceptually prior to any actualised state, it is a type of relation to space, movement and connecting. This ‘nomadic invention’ exploits movement to escape capture and centralisation/hierarchisation. 65 Rather than actual wars, its objective is maintaining smooth (unhierarchised) space, preventing State emergence/capture. In a long process capturing flows, the State has appropriated the war machine itself to create the State military. 66 Today, the two movements (appropriation by and escape from the State) have become indistinguishable: capitalism has integrated global financial, industrial, and military technologies, leading to pervasive militarisation of states, and unlimited wars on omnipresent threats and permanent terror. 67 The global war machine has appropriated the State, ‘tak[ing] charge of its aim, worldwide order,. . .and assum[ing] increasingly wider political functions’. 68 However, while ‘war machine’ describes a type of relations between State and nomadic assemblage as ideal types, assemblages of (in)security are concrete configurations of actors, relations and practices traversing ideal types of assemblages, upheld by the very appropriation of security’s promise and its twin paradigmatic denials.
These assemblages of (in)security sustain themselves through movements of both escape from the State (regulation)
In assemblages of (in)security, the twin denials become the binding-together of elements coalescing around the promise of security, and profiting from its infinite ‘delivery’. Thus, the twin denials of security become the operational sense for assemblages of (in)security around which multiplicity of actors and practices coalesce.
And this is where the ontological insights drawn from Deleuze and Guattari translate into epistemological tools: if denials as theorised above fundamentally structuring Dillon’s unstable duality of (in)security have become the operational sense – the way of connecting and coalescing – of various private and public actors and practices around the promise of security, then we must be able to recognise and trace denials in ways that make the assemblage ontology, along with the ontology of denial developed above (i.e.
UK Arms Sales to Saudi Arabia: Symbioses of Promise and Denial
This section continues the discussion through the example of the UK’s arms sales to Saudi Arabia. Rather than comprehensive case study, this illustrative and exploratory example serves to illustrate how the above-theorised notion of denial and its role in the assemblages of (in)security help explicate empirical problems and situations; and also serves a via media for continued theoretical exploration. The section unpacks dynamics around the UK arms sales to Saudi Arabia by demonstrating a) a growing symbiosis of denials across government and private arms industry; b) the appropriations of security’s paradigmatic denials by private actors, and c) how this assemblage of (in)security adapts and endures in relation to critique. This was chosen as a suitable example for the following reasons. The UK arms sales to Saudi Arabia have been a theme of controversy for decades while becoming most ‘overtly politicized’ since the latter’s involvement in Yemen since 2015, attracting accusations of UK complicity in Saudi Arabia’s violations of IHL by NGOs, campaigners and journalists.
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The case is also given a lot of prevalence and centrality in the narratives and strategies by anti-arms campaigners; while their accusations of complicity have been most publicly and vehemently denied by the UK government and arms producers. And yet, despite such overt politicisation and visible public exchange, the deeper basis – the conditions of possibility – for such public (articulated) denials, and the role of critique therein, is least understood. This is evidenced by continued astonishment at the on-going arms sales despite all evidence of violations and critique by journalists and scholars. Thus, it is chosen as a most publicly visible case, and ‘most likely’ case of the structuring status of denial. Conversely, at the end of this section, I briefly touch on the example of US development of marine organisms (e.g. dolphins, microbes) for military purposes as a least publicly visible example to reflect on some of the implications of the above theorisations and arguments for future research – to explore how (in)security’s paradigmatic denials, as well as adaptation in relation to critique, may be present in the
Symbioses of Denial
The UK arms sales to Saudi Arabia have been extensively scrutinised both by campaigners and scholars; and basic background will not be reproduced here. Suffice it to recall the problematisation posed at the start, namely, why (through what mechanisms) has the arms sales continued
The main argument in this analysis is that an assemblage of (in)security makes possible the continued arms sales to Saudi Arabia because it has formed, continues to operate, as well as adjusts/adapts in relation to critique, precisely by making the paradigmatic denials of (in)security theorised above its primary operational sense. This first of all requires the appropriations of the promise of security by private actors.
Appropriations of the promise of security here are found chained together across actors and contexts forming
However, the promise of security unavoidably means appropriation of the twin denials of security, as the theorisation of the paradigmatic denials of security proposed. The enunciative symbioses of the promise of security (and of spending efficiency, and of jobs) mutually fortify public and private actors’ denials of complicity. Thus, both logics – that ‘we rely on Saudi Arabia for our security’, and that ‘they have the right to their own defence’ – symbiotically bind with the denial statements of arms producers. Responding to accusations of complicity, the arms producers demand that the debt of existence be paid to them for contributing to national and international security. For example, BAE Systems urges, ‘we manufacture equipment in order to ensure that those who protect and serve us are equipped appropriately’, 76 thus engaging in the promise of security and in the same externalisation of risk-threats that constitutes the paradigmatic denial of complicty in security.
Importantly, the articulated form of such denial reveals further insights into the nature of the assemblage. Thus, BAE Systems claims: ‘we are not an aggressive company. We don’t conduct wars’;
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further asserting that they do not load bombs on planes dropped on Yemen but only supply them to those having the right to defend themselves. This is despite evidence that BAE provide both the bombs and the technology and training to those who drop them on Yemen. They continue: ‘We separate ourselves from the war itself. . .[and] supply equipment government-to-government to enable the job to be done as seen fit’.
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Claiming separation between the manufacture and end use of arms – a separation that itself denies complicity – they also externalise the risk-threat in Yemen on behalf of the Saudi government, and by extension the UK; thus denying complicity through reliance on the statist promise of security. Simultaneously, they deny complicity through establishing a distance from responsibility for the violence of secur
This demonstrates how private actors in this assemblage of (in)security sustain themselves through a double movement. On the one hand, this involves decoding – commodifying their role symbiotically hinging on the logics of cost-efficiency and the provision of jobs to government while escaping responsibility for end use. On the other hand, it involves encoding (classically, what a State assemblage does) – through assigning meanings to their services and technologies by incorporating the statist promise of security nationally and internationally, and with it, unavoidably, security’s paradigmatic denials.
Such appropriations of the promise of security by arms companies constitutes capture of the Statist imaginaries (of social contract and national security); but also imaginaries of the ‘international’. Thus, BAE claims that providing arms to the Saudis, ‘will avoid [sic.] others being aggressors’, 79 chiming with the government justification that opened this article: ‘If [we] . . .do not provide countries with means of defending themselves, then we will see a proliferation of uncontrolled and unregulated arms sales free from oversight or inhibitions’. 80 The appropriation reinforces a self-given obligation of the UK as a superior global actor providing regulated and responsible arms sales while relying on security’s twin denials – denials of complicity and of the impossibility of security.
Crucially, the denials of security make possible not only the arms companies’ own enunciations. Fundamentally, these denials drive the knowledge production on security, risk-threats and required technologies of secur
Having traced some of the actors and ways of the appropriations of both the promise and the attendant denials of security, it is important to emphasise that these actors become part of the assemblage of (in)security precisely
This symbiosis goes even further. As theorised above, with the promise risk technologies, denial of complicity itself has become
Thus, denials binding the assemblage of (in)security become transactional
Critique and Reproductions of Denial
It is in light of the above that the most recurring forms of academic as well as activist critique 86 become paradoxical, as it becomes visible how they may inadvertently reproduce and deepen the very denials that hold together assemblages of (in)security. Among such recurring forms of critique are frequent calls for increased transparency, accountability and legitimacy dominant in both scholarship and activism on the arms trade. For instance, Rufanges, having exposed an ‘arms cycle’ in the European Union (EU) arms trade of actors and practices from research to production to end use of weapons, ends up lamenting that the arms industry lobbies ‘are not as transparent as they should [be]’. 87 This type of critique unwittingly demands the normalisation of arms lobbying and its expected part in democratic process, thus legitimising its operation. Another analyst is concerned with ‘good conduct’ in arms exports to ensure that ‘one does not wilfully arm and support repressive or belligerent states’. 88 These critiques imply a differentiation between ‘good’ arms exporters (assumedly, Western democracies) and ‘bad’ ones (lacking democratic scrutiny); but also between acceptable and non-acceptable destinations for arms. In turn, this trend dominates resistance activism, illustrated by the UK-based Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT), consistently framing arms trade as unethical to countries ‘with human rights abuses’ or to ‘repressive regimes’. This trend has been critiqued by Stavrianakis, and Rossdale for reproducing hierarchical North-South relations, and for normalising war. 89
However, in light of the theorisation and empirical analysis above, such forms of critique become problematic in
Instead, what we see in the predominant modes of critiques of the arms trade is the reaffirmation of precisely what makes assemblages form, adapt and endure. The moment such critique recognises actors and interests as web-like relations, it falls back into reinstating hierarchies – ‘legitimate’ vs ‘non-legitimate’ provision of security; ‘good’ vs ‘bad’ arms exporters, ‘ethical’ vs ‘unethical’ arm trader – and thereby demanding the delivery of security – a promise ironically appropriated and creatively utilised by private actors precisely to create and sustain the assemblage. Moreover, demands for better delivery of security do not merely reproduce the denials of security but more consequentially enable assemblages of (in)security to fortify, adapt and expand through establishing new liaisons with critique itself. This is so because by re-enforcing the statist promise of security, these critics
Thus, through their reliance on the same operational sense that ties together the assemblage of (in)security, these critics unwittingly produce resources for the assemblage to capture and fortify itself. Most visibly this unfolds through responding to critiques’ various demands by both private and public actors, which generates ever-more creative ways of asserting that they
Deleuze and Guattari’s main concern with assemblages was how they change (through adapting), or how they transform (by becoming something else): in this distinction, an assemblage changes through adaptation in order to maintain and reproduce; whereas transformation emerges out of processes that create a new assemblage, e.g. through a revolutionary movement. 91 The above-explored forms of critique not only reproduce denials, but thereby actively create mechanisms, through their demands, for the very adaptation and thus fortification of assemblages of (in)security. In turn, how both assemblages of (in)security and critique may undergo transformation is beyond the scope in this article. However, it may be suggested that in assemblages of (in)security what are often claimed by actors as transformations (e.g. the sustainability turn) are further adaptations and thus fortification of assemblages of (in)security.
Moreover, the type of critique described above enables further change and fortification of the assemblage through amplifying risk-based logics: by demanding a risk-based regulatory system of arms trade (risk here assumed to be assessed for and in relation to distant humans and their rights/well-being), these campaigners and critiques unwittingly promote the assemblage’s adaptation and reinvention of denials. This happens already through commodifying and re-coding of contingency itself, allowing what Dillon noted to be the paradoxical satisfying of the desire for security – through ‘massively increasing exposure to contingency. . . [while] engendering an exponential increase in the ways in which everything is open to being addressed, valued and measured in terms of everything else’.
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This is how the assemblage of (in)security explored above both responds to critique and at the same time re-invents the denials of its operational sense that allow its endurance and adaptation, by proposing that
If the exploratory example engaged with above was chosen as a most visible and ‘most likely’ case of the generative force of denial, future work could fruitfully explore how (in)security’s paradigmatic denials, and adaptations in relation to critique, become generative in
Conclusions: Denials ‘From Seabed to Space’, and Epistemology of Critique
This article proposed that by taking seriously the ontological status and modes of circulations of denials in the politics of security, we gain an indispensable entry point into the otherwise vast question posed at the start of this article. A starting point for this was an explicit theorisation of the twin denials – denial of complicity and denial of the impossibility of security – as the ontological basis of the politics of (in)security, drawing on Dillon’s conception of security. Denials as theorised here are ontologically necessary
Through a Deleuze and Guattarian assemblage approach, it was proposed, rather than asking why webs of public–private actors and interests emerging around the arms trade and more broadly the provision of security endure despite long-standing critique, we should ask: what sort of assemblage is capable of producing such outcomes? The main finding and argument was that assemblages of (in)security thrive on denial in ever-new and creative ways: through private actors’ appropriations of the statist promise of security, and thereby the twin denials of security, such appropriations form symbioses of denial with governmental and other actors.
In turn, mapping and exposing ever-new ways of connecting in relation to critique and activism demonstrated how certain forms of critique may unwittingly deepen denials. It becomes costly not to recognise the generative force of these denials; and to continue offering activist and scholarly critiques that may serve the endurance of such assemblages.
The article contributes to several current debates. First, it contributes to Critical IR literature on state, sovereignty, subjectivity and security by making explicit their implicit critiques of denial; and by offering a theorisation of denial as ontologically necessary for the politics of (in)security. Second, more specifically, it contributes to Critical Security Studies’ on-going retheorisations of ‘security’: in light of this article, ‘security’ becomes the realm of the propagation of new symbioses, bringing ever-new actors into contact and arrangement (
Related is the issue of new forms of power. Assemblages of (in)security produce a peculiar form of power diffusing denial itself. This is the ultimate form of de-politicisation: complicating the politics of the permanent state of emergency where ‘[y]ou cannot. . . debate emergency’, 100 the politics of denial gives pretence of debating, ironically, often of denial itself – through abundance of public accusations of complicity, their public and routinised denials, and demands for more transparency and accountability. Simultaneously, we are deprived of new imaginaries beyond the promise of security and its unstable duality.
Third, the article contributes to the literature on the arms trade: unless the paradigmatic denials of security are confronted, otherwise well-intentioned critique demanding transparency, accountability, or better-regulated arms trade may help sustain assemblages of (in)security by demanding the delivery of the very promise of security whose denials had generated and made the assemblages thrive. Literature concerned with worrying effects of the arms trade must not only be more cognizant of their own implicit assumptions and thus own denials, but also commit to continuous tracing, disentangling and confronting the symbioses of denials, that sustain assemblages (in)security.
Several implications ensue for future scholarship and activism. First, is for further theorising of assemblages, especially concerning what Deleuze and Guattari propose as two socio-economic assemblage types – the State assemblage and the Capitalist assemblage – having distinct relations to coding. The theorisation of denial in security, and the twin denials as the operational sense holding the assemblages of (in)security together suggest the following: the Capitalist assemblage as a decoding/commodifying machine, at least when it comes to security and the arms trade, becomes impossible in itself: my argument showed that not only it is often combined with re-coding – giving meaning, and requiring our belief in the statist promise of security – but the very decoding comes into existence via/by dint of this very appropriation of the statist promise.
Second, wider implication is for further theorisations of assemblages. I demonstrated how the twin denials of security had become the ‘operational sense’ of the assemblages of (in)security – the holding-together of various elements and relations coalescing around the promise and delivery of security; and that such operational sense is driving not only the formation, but also the expansion of these assemblages, and thereby the propagation of ever-new technologies of (in)security. Any assemblage – even nomadic ones – would inhere, and rely on, some form of denial; but the challenge would be to unpack the specifics of such denial and their ontological status case-by-case: What forms of denials does the holding-together (
Third, the empirical explorations point at further research that must scrutinise and critique the multiple ways through which the twin denials of security not only condition the formation and endurance of assemblages of (in)security, but also crucially enable their
The critical task must be a shift to an
