Pentagon Report on Our Environment
Climate change may bring famine, war
From AFP
Here is an even more in depth article on Fortune about this:
Fortune Article.
Note that there are three pages total (see the links at the
bottom for pages 2 and 3).
A SECRET report prepared by the Pentagon warns that climate
change may lead to global catastrophe costing millions of lives
and is a far greater threat than terrorism.
The report was ordered by an influential US Pentagon advisor
but was covered up by "US defense chiefs" for four
months, until it was "obtained" by the British weekly
The Observer.
The leak promises to draw angry attention to US
environmental and military policies, following Washington's
rejection of the Kyoto Protocol on climate change and President
George W. Bush's skepticism about global warning - a stance
that has surprised scientists worldwide.
The Pentagon report, commissioned by Andrew Marshall,
predicts that "abrupt climate change could bring the
planet to the edge of anarchy as countries develop a nuclear
threat to defend and secure dwindling food, water and energy
supplies," The Observer reported.
The report, quoted in the paper, concluded: "Disruption
and conflict will be endemic features of life.... Once again,
warfare would define human life."
Its authors - Peter Schwartz, a CIA consultant and former
head of planning at Royal Dutch/Shell Group, and Doug Randall
of Global Business Network based in California - said climate
change should be considered "immediately" as a top
political and military issue.
It "should be elevated beyond a scientific debate to a
US national security concern", they were quoted as
saying.
Some examples given of probable scenarios in the dramatic
report include:
- Britain will have winters similar to those in current-day
Siberia as European temperatures drop off radically by
2020.
- By 2007 violent storms will make large parts of the
Netherlands uninhabitable and lead to a breach in the acqueduct
system in California that supplies all water to densely
populated southern California
- Europe and the United States become "virtual
fortresses" trying to keep out millions of migrants whose
homelands have been wiped out by rising sea levels or made
unfarmable by drought.
- Catastrophic shortages of potable water and energy will
lead to widespread war by 2020. Randall, one of the authors,
called his findings "depressing stuff" and warned
that it might even be too late to prevent future disasters.
"We don't know exactly where we are in the process.
It could start tomorrow and we would not know for another five
years," he told the paper.
Experts familiar with the report told the newspaper that the
threat to global stability "vastly eclipses that of
terrorism".
Taking environmental pollution and climate change into
account in political and military strategy is a new,
complicated and necessary challenge for leaders, Randall
said.
"It is a national security threat that is unique
because there is no enemy to point your guns at and we have no
control over the threat," he said.
Coming from the Pentagon, normally a bastion of conservative
politics, the report is expected to bring environmental issues
to the fore in the US presidential race.
Last week the Union of Concerned Scientists, an influential
and non-partisan group that includes 20 Nobel laureates,
accused the Bush administration of having deliberately
distorted scientific fact to serve its policy agenda and having
"misled the public".
Its 38-page report, which it said took over a year to
prepare and was not time to coincide with the campaign season,
details how Washington "systematically" skewed
government scientific studies, suppressed others, stacked
panels with political and unqualified appointees and often
refused to seek independent expertise on issues.
Critics of the report quoted by the New York Times denied
there was deliberate misrepresentation and called it
politically motivated.
The person behind the leaked Pentagon report, Andrew
Marsall, cannot be accused of the same partisan
politicking.
Marsall, 82, has been an advisor for the defense department
for decades, and was described by The Observer as the author of
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's plans for a major
transformation of the US military.
AFP
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