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Climate change seen as security threat by UN Security
Council, US military experts
By Naomi Spencer
24 April 2007
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On April 17, the United Nations Security Council held its first-ever
discussion on climate change as a serious threat to security and
future political stability. In addition to the 15 council member
states in attendance, 38 other UN member countries sent representatives
to speak. Although no action was taken at the meetings conclusion,
its very convocation reveals growing uneasiness within the worlds
ruling powers about social unrest that would come with global
warming.
British Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett, president of the
Security Council, introduced the topic with the warning, The
Security Council is the forum to discuss issues that threaten
the peace and security of the international community. What makes
wars start? Fights over water. Changing patterns of rainfall.
Fights over food production, land use, she said. There
are few greater potential threats to our economies ... but also
to peace and security itself.
Citing the UNs Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) findings, Beckett outlined the potential for increased
famines, floods, and disease outbreaks leading to mass migration;
increased competition over food, arable land, water, and energy;
and profound economic crises.
The widely accepted scientific projections are grave. The poorest
populations will suffer earliest and worst. Many are already struggling
to cope with extreme climates with little governmental support.
Populations in the Indian subcontinent, China, and the Andes region
of South America are particularly vulnerable to the melting of
glaciers that serve as regional water supplies. Such melting will
result in increased flooding, and, ultimately, extreme water shortages.
Declining crop yields across the already hot and dry African continent
could leave hundreds of millions without the means to produce
food. Coastal populations throughout Southeast Asia, the Caribbean
and Pacific, as well as in large cities such as New York, London,
Cairo and Tokyo, are considered vulnerable to permanent displacement
by the middle of the century.
Without elaborating on these potential human catastrophes,
Beckett alluded to the UK Treasurys recent Stern Review
Report on the Economics of Climate Change, which warned that climate
change would almost certainly cause global economic convulsions
on a scale similar to those associated with the great wars
and the economic depression of the first half of the 20th century.
That alone will inevitably have an impact on the security
of all of usdeveloped and developing countries alike,
she said. Most UN member countries were in agreement that this
presented significant risks to political and economic stability.
However, this assessment also met with predictable resistance.
Russian ambassador Vitaly Churkin insisted that the topic of climate
change did not belong in the Security Council. Pakistani ambassador
Farukh Amil, representing the Group of 77 developing nations,
declared that to entertain the issue of climate change not only
infringes on the authority of the UN but also compromises
the rights of the general membership of the United Nations.
Venezuelan ambassador Pui Leong agreed, remarking that the
subject of energy is an area falling strictly under the sovereignty
of states as part of their national development policies ... every
country, on the basis of its sovereignty, has the authority to
decide on the use of its natural resources and to set its own
environmental and energy policy.
US ambassador Alejandro Wolff embellished this point by praising
the Bush administrations energy policy, including its $5
billion in voluntary business tax incentives and $1.65 billion
in tax credits supposedly aimed at reducing emissions. Fully a
quarter of the worlds annual heat-trapping emissions are
produced by the US.
According to a UN summary of the discussion, Wolff said that
the most effective management strategy to allow states to prepare
for threats to security and stability was to promote
methods that focus on education, rule of law, human freedom
and economic opportunity. In other words, the US answer
to climate change is to implement ineffective tax breaks for corporations
in the US, while supporting capitalist development in other countries.
This would somehow create the resources necessary for addressing
climate change.
Wolff declared that the US had a long history of extending
help so that people could live in democratic societies with robust
economies and strong and stable governments. This, presumably,
includes the US invasion of Iraq, aimed at seizing control of
the countrys oil resources.
The debate over climate change and global warming management
at the UN is a struggle among the national ruling establishments
for their own interests on the international diplomatic stage.
While there is concern that climate change can have unforeseen
political and economic consequences, these competing capitalist
states have no means of seriously addressing the issue, other
than making preparations for cracking down on social unrest.
The US, for its part, defends the short-term interests of its
ruling elite by seizing natural and energy resources through both
privatization and war, and by consistently refusing to acknowledge
international protocols. Tensions among nations have grown over
the non-compliance of the US and other major polluters to international
climate treaties following the release of the Independent Panel
on Climate Change report.
While the Bush administration has done everything it can to
prevent any serious discussion of global warming, sections of
the political and military establishment are planning for the
consequences of this warming and are developing military strategies
to deal with it. In a new report released one day before the Security
Council meeting, US military experts described the dire situation
facing world powers.
Drawing upon peer-reviewed climate studies, the report warns
that within three to four decades, climate change will spawn wars
over water, increasing famine and disease outbreaks, inundation
of populous coastal cities, and mass human migration. The
chaos that results can be an incubator of civil strife, genocide
and the growth of terrorism, it states, urging US military
preparedness.
The report, National Security and the Threat of Climate
Change, was undertaken by the government-funded national security
think tank, the Center for Naval Analyses (CNA), and co-authored
by a military advisory board comprised of retired top-level brass,
including six Navy admirals and five generals.
While not commissioned by the Bush administration or the Pentagon,
some of the authors, who have close ties to officials in the Defense
Department, said several branches of the military are now scrutinizing
the problems posed by climate change.
The sobering and urgent tone of the report is noteworthy. Some
strategists see stonewalling of climate data in the interests
of oil companies as extremely reckless in its shortsightedness.
The more far-sighted layers of the political establishment recognize
that the short-term profits gained from current policy are being
made at the expense of long-term profit and future US hegemony.
In particular, military experts are concerned that the potential
scale of catastrophe could trigger revolution and political upheaval.
Many developing nations do not have the government and social
infrastructures in place to cope with the type of stressors that
could be brought about by global climate change, the report
states. When a government can no longer deliver services
to its people, ensure domestic order, and protect the nations
borders from invasion, conditions are ripe for turmoil, extremism
and terrorism to fill the vacuum.
While developing nation states with large populations are seen
as especially vulnerable to such social unrest, the report also
notes that all regions of the world may experience profound upheavals,
including the developed countries of Europe. The report advocates
bolstering US military bases and key allied governments in unstable
regions of the world.
Like the multitude of scientific studies on climate change
that have been published recently, the report projects that disease,
droughts and flooding will make regions already crippled by humanitarian
crises, such as the Middle East, Asia and Africa, more unstable.
Mass migration from coastal and poor regions into richer countries
is seen as a likely result, exacerbating social strife. Such a
development could enable reactionary governmental appeals to nationalism
and xenophobia and lead to conflagrations throughout Europe and
North America.
Transcripts of the UN Security Council meeting on climate
change can be found here: http://www.un.org/Depts/dhl/resguide/scact2007.htm
The full CNA report can be downloaded in PDF at the following
link: http://securityandclimate.cna.org/report/
See Also:
Climate change report outlines dire impact
of global warming
[10 April 2007]
Congressional hearings detail
political tampering in US climate research
[22 March 2007]
Scientists conclude global
warming is unequivocal
[10 February 2007]
Scientists report rampant
political interference in climate research
[5 February 2007]
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