[Mb-civic] The Coming Resource Wars
ean at sbcglobal.net
ean at sbcglobal.net
Wed Mar 8 21:57:27 PST 2006
The Coming Resource Wars
Michael T. Klare
March 07, 2006
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/03/07/the_coming_resource_w
ars.php
Michael T. Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at
Hampshire College and the author of Resource Wars and Blood and
Oil, both available in paperback from Owl Books.
It's official: the era of resource wars is upon us. In a major London
address, British Defense Secretary John Reid warned that global
climate change and dwindling natural resources are combining to
increase the likelihood of violent conflict over land, water and energy.
Climate change, he indicated, will make scarce resources, clean
water, viable agricultural land even scarcerand this will make the
emergence of violent conflict more rather than less likely.
Although not unprecedented, Reids prediction of an upsurge in
resource conflict is significant both because of his senior rank and the
vehemence of his remarks. The blunt truth is that the lack of water
and agricultural land is a significant contributory factor to the tragic
conflict we see unfolding in Darfur, he declared. We should see this
as a warning sign.
Resource conflicts of this type are most likely to arise in the developing
world, Reid indicated, but the more advanced and affluent countries
are not likely to be spared the damaging and destabilizing effects of
global climate change. With sea levels rising, water and energy
becoming increasingly scarce and prime agricultural lands turning into
deserts, internecine warfare over access to vital resources will become
a global phenomenon.
Reids speech, delivered at the prestigious Chatham House in London
(Britains equivalent of the Council on Foreign Relations), is but the
most recent expression of a growing trend in strategic circles to view
environmental and resource effectsrather than political orientation
and ideologyas the most potent source of armed conflict in the
decades to come. With the world population rising, global
consumption rates soaring, energy supplies rapidly disappearing and
climate change eradicating valuable farmland, the stage is being set
for persistent and worldwide struggles over vital resources. Religious
and political strife will not disappear in this scenario, but rather will be
channeled into contests over valuable sources of water, food and
energy.
Prior to Reids address, the most significant expression of this outlook
was a report prepared for the U.S. Department of Defense by a
California-based consulting firm in October 2003. Entitled An Abrupt
Climate Change Scenario and Its Implications for United States
National Security, the report warned that global climate change is
more likely to result in sudden, cataclysmic environmental events than
a gradual (and therefore manageable) rise in average temperatures.
Such events could include a substantial increase in global sea levels,
intense storms and hurricanes and continent-wide dust bowl effects.
This would trigger pitched battles between the survivors of these
effects for access to food, water, habitable land and energy supplies.
Violence and disruption stemming from the stresses created by abrupt
changes in the climate pose a different type of threat to national
security than we are accustomed to today, the 2003 report noted.
Military confrontation may be triggered by a desperate need for
natural resources such as energy, food and water rather than by
conflicts over ideology, religion or national honor.
Until now, this mode of analysis has failed to command the attention of
top American and British policymakers. For the most part, they insist
that ideological and religious differencesnotably, the clash between
values of tolerance and democracy on one hand and extremist forms
of Islam on the otherremain the main drivers of international conflict.
But Reids speech at Chatham House suggests that a major shift in
strategic thinking may be under way. Environmental perils may soon
dominate the world security agenda.
This shift is due in part to the growing weight of evidence pointing to a
significant human role in altering the planets basic climate systems.
Recent studies showing the rapid shrinkage of the polar ice caps, the
accelerated melting of North American glaciers, the increased
frequency of severe hurricanes and a number of other such effects all
suggest that dramatic and potentially harmful changes to the global
climate have begun to occur. More importantly, they conclude that
human behaviormost importantly, the burning of fossil fuels in
factories, power plants, and motor vehiclesis the most likely cause of
these changes. This assessment may not have yet penetrated the
White House and other bastions of head-in-the-sand thinking, but it is
clearly gaining ground among scientists and thoughtful analysts around
the world.
For the most part, public discussion of global climate change has
tended to describe its effects as an environmental problemas a
threat to safe water, arable soil, temperate forests, certain species and
so on. And, of course, climate change is a potent threat to the
environment; in fact, the greatest threat imaginable. But viewing
climate change as an environmental problem fails to do justice to the
magnitude of the peril it poses. As Reids speech and the 2003
Pentagon study make clear, the greatest danger posed by global
climate change is not the degradation of ecosystems per se, but rather
the disintegration of entire human societies, producing wholesale
starvation, mass migrations and recurring conflict over resources.
As famine, disease, and weather-related disasters strike due to abrupt
climate change, the Pentagon report notes, many countries needs
will exceed their carrying capacitythat is, their ability to provide the
minimum requirements for human survival. This will create a sense of
desperation, which is likely to lead to offensive aggression against
countries with a greater stock of vital resources. Imagine eastern
European countries, struggling to feed their populations with a falling
supply of food, water, and energy, eyeing Russia, whose population is
already in decline, for access to its grain, minerals, and energy supply.
Similar scenarios will be replicated all across the planet, as those
without the means to survival invade or migrate to those with greater
abundanceproducing endless struggles between resource haves
and have-nots.
It is this prospect, more than anything, that worries John Reid. In
particular, he expressed concern over the inadequate capacity of poor
and unstable countries to cope with the effects of climate change, and
the resulting risk of state collapse, civil war and mass migration. More
than 300 million people in Africa currently lack access to safe water,
he observed, and climate change will worsen this dire
situationprovoking more wars like Darfur. And even if these social
disasters will occur primarily in the developing world, the wealthier
countries will also be caught up in them, whether by participating in
peacekeeping and humanitarian aid operations, by fending off
unwanted migrants or by fighting for access to overseas supplies of
food, oil, and minerals.
When reading of these nightmarish scenarios, it is easy to conjure up
images of desperate, starving people killing one another with knives,
staves and clubsas was certainly often the case in the past, and
could easily prove to be so again. But these scenarios also envision
the use of more deadly weapons. In this world of warring states, the
2003 Pentagon report predicted, nuclear arms proliferation is
inevitable. As oil and natural gas disappears, more and more
countries will rely on nuclear power to meet their energy needsand
this will accelerate nuclear proliferation as countries develop
enrichment and reprocessing capabilities to ensure their national
security.
Although speculative, these reports make one thing clear: when
thinking about the calamitous effects of global climate change, we
must emphasize its social and political consequences as much as its
purely environmental effects. Drought, flooding and storms can kill us,
and surely willbut so will wars among the survivors of these
catastrophes over what remains of food, water and shelter. As Reids
comments indicate, no society, however affluent, will escape
involvement in these forms of conflict.
We can respond to these predictions in one of two ways: by relying on
fortifications and military force to provide some degree of advantage in
the global struggle over resources, or by taking meaningful steps to
reduce the risk of cataclysmic climate change.
No doubt there will be many politicians and punditsespecially in this
countrywho will tout the superiority of the military option,
emphasizing Americas preponderance of strength. By fortifying our
borders and sea-shores to keep out unwanted migrants and by fighting
around the world for needed oil supplies, it will be argued, we can
maintain our privileged standard of living for longer than other
countries that are less well endowed with instruments of power.
Maybe so. But the grueling, inconclusive war in Iraq and the failed
national response to Hurricane Katrina show just how ineffectual such
instruments can be when confronted with the harsh realities of an
unforgiving world. And as the 2003 Pentagon report reminds us,
constant battles over diminishing resources will further reduce
[resources] even beyond the climatic effects.
Military superiority may provide an illusion of advantage in the coming
struggles over vital resources, but it cannot protect us against the
ravages of global climate change. Although we may be somewhat
better off than the people in Haiti and Mexico, we, too, will suffer from
storms, drought and flooding. As our overseas trading partners
descend into chaos, our vital imports of food, raw materials and energy
will disappear as well. True, we could establish military outposts in
some of these places to ensure the continued flow of critical
materialsbut the ever-increasing price in blood and treasure required
to pay for this will eventually exceed our means and destroy us.
Ultimately, our only hope of a safe and secure future lies in
substantially reducing our emissions of greenhouse gases and working
with the rest of the world to slow the pace of global climate change.
--
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"A war of aggression is the supreme international crime." -- Robert Jackson,
former U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice and Nuremberg prosecutor
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