Cabinet wars, derived from the German expression Kabinettskriege (, singular Kabinettskrieg), is a historical term to describe the shift in Europe from the regular, limited, aristocratic conflicts of the eighteenth century to total war following the French Revolution. Historians define cabinet wars as a period of small conflicts not involving standing armies, but with a growing military class arising to advise monarchs. The term derived from the counsel these cabinets provided during the period of absolute monarchies from the 1648 Peace of Westphalia to the 1789 French Revolution. These cabinets were marked by diplomacy and a self-serving nobility.
Cabinet wars, as historically defined, link the evolution of the state with evolution of modern warfare. These conflicts were marked by mercenary forces from different countries who did not identify with an abstract notion of the nation, rather than national standing militaries.
The contrast between Kabinettskriege, cabinet wars, and Staatenkriege, or state wars, was popularized by Helmuth von Moltke the Elder who oversaw the modernization of the Prussian and Ottoman militaries. This classifications of three types of modern war: cabinet war, Total war and guerrilla war built off of Karl von Clausewitz' two types of war.
This classification of cabinet wars stems from the analysis of warfare after the Napoleonic Wars by Clausewitz and other military writers of the time. Debate centered around the question of whether wars should be all encompassing, or more limited in nature. In On War (1832) Clausewitz suggested a third type of war of limited strategy. Over time the classification became adopted in the lexicon of military historians.
Historians generally mark the end of the cabinet wars period with the beginning of the use of conscription and the levée en masse.
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