Some people have got it right. This article is from last year.
Chief
of US Pacific forces calls climate biggest worry
9
March, 2013
CAMBRIDGE
— America’s top military officer in charge of monitoring hostile
actions by North Korea, escalating tensions between China and Japan,
and a spike in computer attacks traced to China provides an
unexpected answer when asked what is the biggest long-term security
threat in the Pacific region: climate change.
Navy
Admiral Samuel J. Locklear III, in an interview at a Cambridge hotel
Friday after he met with scholars at Harvard and Tufts universities,
said significant upheaval related to the warming planet “is
probably the most likely thing that is going to happen . . . that
will cripple the security environment, probably more likely than the
other scenarios we all often talk about.’’
“People
are surprised sometimes,” he added, describing the reaction to his
assessment. “You have the real potential here in the
not-too-distant future of nations displaced by rising sea level.
Certainly weather patterns are more severe than they have been in the
past. We are on super typhoon 27 or 28 this year in the Western
Pacific. The average is about 17.”
Locklear
said his Hawaii-based headquarters — which is assigned more than
400,00 military and civilian personnel and is responsible for
operations from California to India, is working with Asian nations to
stockpile supplies in strategic locations and planning a major
exercise for May with nearly two dozen countries to practice the
“what-ifs.”
Locklear’s
two-day visit to New England, which included meetings with students
at the Naval War College in Newport, R.I., coincides with the Obama’
administration’s recent “pivot” to Asia — the recalibration
of national security strategy after more than decade of war in the
Middle East to reemphasize a region with rising military and economic
powers such as China and India and where most US trade links are.
In
closed-door discussions Thursday and Friday, Locklear met with
security and foreign policy specialists, including the Harvard
Kennedy School’s Graham Allison, who directs the Belfer Center for
Science and International Affairs, and Asia specialist Joseph Nye
Jr..
Nye
said he briefed Locklear on a trip he made last fall at the behest of
the Department of State to meet with the top leaders of China and
Japan to urge them to peacefully settle the disputes over islands in
the South and East China Seas.
China
last month was accused of directing one of its navy radars at a
Japanese warship near the islands where both countries assert
sovereignty and claims to fishing and mineral rights. It came several
weeks after Japan said China took similar action with one of its
military helicopters.
“We
have an ongoing number of disputes,” Locklear said. “It is not
just about China and everybody else, because there are disputes
between other partners down there, too. Sometimes I think the Chinese
get handled a little too roughly on this.
“What
we are concerned most about,” he added, “is that they work
through these things.”
A
larger concern is North Korea, which in recent days has threatened to
launch a nuclear weapon against the United States.
Following
Pyongyang’s recent long-range missile launch and underground
nuclear test, the United Nations Security Council on Thursday voted
unanimously to tighten sanctions on the reclusive Communist regime.
In response the North Korean government threatened to nullify its
nonaggression pacts with South Korea, where the United States
maintains a military presence.
Locklear
said North Korea’s military has taken recent steps to “visibly
increase their levels of readiness” along the demilitarized zone
that has separated the two Koreas since the armistice halting the
Korean War in 1953. “We are watching very closely what’s going on
and we are prepared to defend the alliance as well as our homeland,”
he said.
In
the interview, he stressed the need for a global set of guidelines
for the Internet and cyberspace, which he called the modern version
of the 19th century’s “Wild West,” where “the only security
you brought with you was what you carried on you.”
“We
made cyberspace as kind of an ungoverned territory . . . and we
haven’t been able to get our arms around how to govern it yet,”
Locklear added.
But
when it comes to pragmatic military planning, Locklear said he is
increasingly focused on another highly destabilizing force.
“The
ice is melting and sea is getting higher,” Locklear said, noting
that 80 percent of the world’s population lives within 200 miles of
the coast. “I’m into the consequence management side of it. I’m
not a scientist, but the island of Tarawa in Kiribati, they’re
contemplating moving their entire population to another country
because [it] is not going to exist anymore.”
The
US military, he said, is beginning to reach out to other armed forces
in the region about the issue.
“We
have interjected into our multilateral dialogue – even with China
and India – the imperative to kind of get military capabilities
aligned [for] when the effects of climate change start to impact
these massive populations,” he said. “If it goes bad, you could
have hundreds of thousands or millions of people displaced and then
security will start to crumble pretty quickly.’’
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