The
main difference being that terrorism as a threat to the US is largely
a chimera: climate change is very real.
Climate
change trumps terrorism as threat to national security
by
Brent Blackwelder
12
November, 2012
Climate
destabilization eclipses all other security threats to human
civilization except for a major nuclear war. But the current global
economy gives no signals to investors and consumers about the
profound implications of climate destabilization on water cycles,
agriculture, and humanity’s ability to grow food for seven billion
people.
The
latest weather disaster, the monster Hurricane Sandy, demonstrated
that changing environmental conditions pose a huge threat to U.S.
security and stability. In the aftermath of the storm, thousands of
people in New York and New Jersey face grim conditions, with $50
billion in damages, over 20,000 homeless, and some dying of
hypothermia.
The
American public, however, has been conditioned to think of national
security in terms of terrorist threats. The Washington Post’s
veteran Pentagon reporter Greg Jaffe makes the case that the world
has never been safer, if security is to be measured by acts of human
sabotage and terrorism. Jaffe asserts that according to “most
relevant statistics, the United States — and the world — have
never been safer… global terrorism has barely touched most
Americans in the decade since Sept. 11, 2001.”
Jaffe
appropriately criticizes presidential candidates and other
politicians for exaggerating the national security threat from
terrorism because they want to “cast themselves as potential
saviors in an increasingly dangerous world.” During this time, he
notes, more U.S. citizens have been crushed to death by furniture and
televisions falling on them than have been killed in terrorist
attacks (Washington Post 11/4/12).
Despite
the way politicians are talking about national security, the reality
is that over the past twenty years, national security has become more
closely tied to environmental factors such as energy, water, food,
and climate disruption. President Clinton’s State Department made
the formal acknowledgment that deteriorating environmental conditions
can cause conflicts and constitute threats to stability.
Rampaging
global weather disasters pose serious challenges to governments
around the world. According to Swiss Re, the world’s largest
reinsurance company, twenty to forty percent of losses from disasters
are uninsured. The company says economic losses from climate-related
disasters are substantial and rising. One news release states, “Over
the last 40 years global insured losses from climate-related
disasters have jumped from an annual USD 5 billion to approximately
USD 60 billion.” Another news release says that “without further
investments in adaptation, climate risks could cost nations up to 19%
of their GDP by 2030, with developing countries the most vulnerable.”
To
address the root causes we must move from our current global system
of cheater economics and casino economics to a true-cost economy. In
a true-cost sustainable economy, the climate-disrupting effects of
coal and oil would be factored into their prices, and prices would
rise beyond most people’s idea of affordability. Ironically, the
current method for calculating national economic well-being (GDP),
counts the billions spent on fixing storm damages as a plus.
In
the presidential debates Romney and Obama competed to see who could
be more supportive of oil and gas and who would accelerate the
movement of tar sands oil from Canada the fastest. It was as if they
were saying, “Let’s see who can generate the most greenhouse
gases the fastest and create even more gigantic storms and weather
disruptions.”
The
extraction of tar sands oil is devastating the homes of native people
in Canada and creating a wasteland scene reminiscent of Dante’s
Inferno. Utilization of such a filthy fuel on the scale now being
advocated means “game over for the climate,” according to NASA
climate scientist James Hansen.
At
least the victorious President Obama stressed that he wanted more
renewable energy, whereas Romney opposed wind power, belittled
concerns about climate destabilization, and joked about rising sea
levels. Now is the time to demand that Obama fulfills the
clean-energy promise he made in his first term. Along the way, we
might even alleviate some threats to national security that are
already on our shores.
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