Pentagon
Report Admits Disastrous Drought, Not Assad Caused Syrian Crisis
A
US Department of Defense report says that a six-year drought in Syria
caused vast suffering and social dislocation before the 2011 Arab
spring protests and the start of the civil war there.
30
July, 2015
WASHINGTON
(Sputnik) — A six-year drought in Syria caused vast suffering and
social dislocation before the 2011 Arab spring protests and the start
of the civil war there, a US Department of Defense report on global
climate change said.
“[F]rom
2006-2011, a severe multi-year drought affected Syria and contributed
to massive agriculture failures and population displacements,” the
report, which was released on Wednesday, said.
Large
movements of rural dwellers to city centers coincided with the
presence of large numbers of Iraqi refugees fleeing the conflict and
miserable economic conditions in that country, and gathered in Syrian
cities, the report acknowledged.
These
mass migrations effectively overwhelmed the “institutional
capacity” of the Syrian state to deal with them, the document
noted.
The
study named “Report on National Security Implications of
Climate-Related Risks and a Changing Climate” was ordered by the US
Senate Committee on Appropriations to accompany the Department of
Defense Appropriations Act for the fiscal year ending in September
30, 2015.
The
report cited the 2006-2011 drought crisis in Syria as a classic case
where environmental disasters caused by global warming triggered the
collapse of civil society and ruinous internal conflicts.
“Persistently
recurring conditions such as flooding, drought and higher
temperatures increase the strain on fragile states and vulnerable
populations by dampening economic activity,” the report warned.
Other
disastrous effects include loss of agriculture and electricity
production, changes in known infectious disease patterns and the rise
of new ones, and increases in respiratory and cardiovascular
diseases, it added.
Such
prolonged environmental crises, the report observed, could
increasingly lead the US armed forces to be involved in humanitarian
disaster relief efforts abroad.
“These
kinds of impacts in regions around the world could necessitate
greater [Department of Defense] involvement in the provision of
humanitarian assistance and other aid,” the report stated.
The
report’s analysis of the environmental causes of the crisis in
Syria were in contradiction of the political narrative of the Obama
administration and of almost all political leaders in both major US
political parties who have consistently blamed the civil war entirely
on the policies of President Bashar Assad.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.