- Status quo ante bellum
The term "status quo ante bellum" comes from
Latin meaning literally, "as things were before the war".The term was originally used in treaties to refer to the withdrawal of enemy troops and the restoration of prewar leadership. When used as such, it means that no side gains or loses territory or economic and political rights. This contrasts with "
uti possidetis ", where each side retains whatever territory and other property it holds at the end of the war.The term has been generalized to form the phrase "
status quo " and "status quo ante ". Outside this context, the termantebellum is in theUnited States usually associated with the period before theAmerican Civil War , while inEurope and elsewhere with the period beforeWorld War II .Examples
An early example was the treaty that ended the great 602–629 War between the Eastern Roman and the Sassanian Persian Empires. The Persians had occupied
Asia Minor ,Palestine andEgypt . After a successful Roman counteroffensive inMesopotamia finally brought about the end of the war the integrity of Rome's eastern frontier as it was prior to 602 was fully restored. Both empires were exhausted after this war and neither were ready to defend themselves when the armies of Islam burst out ofArabia in 632.Another example of a war that ended "status quo ante bellum" was the
War of 1812 between the US and Great Britain, which was concluded with theTreaty of Ghent in 1814. During negotiations, British diplomats had suggested ending the war "uti possidetis ", but the final treaty, due in large part to a resounding American victory in theBattle of Lake Champlain , left neither gains nor losses in land for theUnited States and the United Kingdom's Canadian colonies.Also, the
Seven Years' War (1756–1763) between Prussia and Austria concluded "status quo ante bellum." Austria tried to regain the region ofSilesia , lost in theWar of the Austrian Succession eight years previously, but the territory remained in the hands of the Prussians.Another example is
Iran–Iraq War (September 1980 - August 1988): "The war left the borders unchanged. Two years later, as war with the western powers loomed, Saddām recognized Iranian rights over the eastern half of the Shatt al-`Arab, a reversion to the "status quo ante bellum" that he had repudiated a decade earlier." Another example is theFalklands War (1982). The war ended in British military victory, but did not resolve the sovereignty dispute over theFalkland Islands .ee also
*
Status quo
*Antebellum
* Fait accompli
*Revanchism
*Irredentism
*Reset button technique External links
* [http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1183702 Translation of 'status quo ante bellum'] by Everything2.com
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.