By John
Rossomando
Monday, June 21,
2021
Political messaging for Biden’s donors and
supporters should not be put before military readiness.
The Biden administration’s focus on climate change at the Defense Department is a case of misplaced
priorities rooted in myths. The president, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, and
the Joint Chiefs of Staff all have put climate change on par with China and
Russia as threats. Austin said in January that climate change would factor into
most of the Defense Department’s military planning, including the next
iteration of the National Defense Strategy. The Pentagon will examine its
“carbon footprint,” Austin said.
President Biden has made climate change,
not Chinese and Russian aggression, his top priority. The Defense Department
is proposing to dedicate $617 million to “fight” climate change in the
president’s 2022 budget proposal to Congress. President Biden explains:
When I
went over to the tank in the Pentagon when I was first was elected vice
president with President Obama, the military sat us down and let us know what
the greatest threats facing America were, the greatest physical threats. This
is not a joke. You know what the Joint Chiefs told us the greatest physical
threat facing America was? Global warming. There will be significant population
movements, fights over land, millions of people leaving places because they’re
literally sinking below the sea in Indonesia, because of the fights over what
is arable land anymore.
Thus far, there’s little empirical
evidence to support the notion that fossil-fuel emissions contribute to
migration, terrorism, or other military threats to the U.S., its interests, or
those of its allies. Emphasizing climate change either deliberately or
incidentally ignores other reasons for mass migration, including political
corruption, poor governance, and poor farming and irrigation methods. It’s an
example of how a propaganda narrative can override provable facts.
Stories about Africa often feed the climate-change narrative. In Africa, poor farming methods and
irrigation in the Sahel — the area of the continent stretching from Mauritania
in the west to Sudan in the east — bear a larger blame for desertification and
the exploitation of the region’s water crisis by ISIS and al-Qaeda. This has
contributed to the flow of refugees.
This process of rapid local climate change
and desertification has been discussed at least since the 1970s, when prevailing
science warned of a coming ice age. The
United Nations held a 1977 conference that attributed ongoing droughts and
desertification in the Sahel region to catastrophic mismanagement of water
resources and destructive farming methods. Not much has changed on the ground
since then. A 2015 Nigerian-government report funded by the European Union
found that the drying up of Lake Chad was due to poor governance of the ways water from the lake was being used to irrigate crops
in Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, and Chad.
“The control of the use of water in the
Lake Chad basin in Nigeria is inadequate and weak,” the report said. “Assessment of the environmental impacts of governmental policies and
programs of water resource management in the Lake Chad basin is insufficient.”
Nevertheless, the World Economic Forum pushes the narrative that global warming is responsible for the rapid evaporation of
Lake Chad over the past 60 years.
An article in the British journal Nature also blames global climate change and suggests that it has contributed to
terrorism:
Even though
the current conflict was triggered by violence linked to the armed groups known
as Boko Haram, the crisis has deep roots in longstanding challenges. Widespread
inequality and decades of political marginalization have instilled and
entrenched [a] sense of exclusion in the region. But several observations
demonstrated that these challenges are further exacerbated by climate change.
Climate change is widely accepted to be a “threat multiplier” which exacerbates
existing risks and worsen[s] already fragile situations, making it harder to
promote peace, adaptation and sustainable development.
U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) also ignores
the connection between poor governance and the Sahel’s environmental
catastrophe and blames global climate change. “Climate change, food shortages,
poverty, ungoverned spaces, historic grievances, and other factors make the
continent also home to 14 of the world’s 20 most fragile countries,” AFRICOM
commander General Stephen Townsend told Congress in April.
Food shortages, poor governance, and
tribal grievances encourage jihadist activity; global climate change does not.
ISIS and al-Qaeda thrive in areas of poor governance, and apparently so do environmental
catastrophes for which no government claims responsibility.
Irrigation issues and teaching proper
farming techniques would clearly be better addressed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture and USAID, not the U.S. Department of Defense. Similarly, the Indonesian
Institute of Sciences attributes erosion of coastal land in that country more to local factors than
to global warming and rising sea levels.
Political narratives drive the agenda, not
a critical examination of the empirically testable facts. The same goes for the
barely noticeable impact of implementing the Paris Climate Agreement, which
would reduce global temperatures by two-tenths of a degree Celsius.
In the Arctic, the Defense Department
ought to be prioritizing access denial against Russia and China by deploying intermediate-range
ballistic missiles and cruise missiles, building icebreakers, and deploying
other assets to defend American interests instead of fussing over the kind of
fuel being used by combat vehicles.
A Defense Department press release about
President Biden’s 2022 defense budget stressed the importance of electric vehicles in the military’s response to
global warming. However, a study conducted by the office of the U.S. Army’s
deputy assistant secretary for research and technology could poke a hole in the
strategy. This report found that the goal of achieving zero emissions in Army
vehicles by 2035 is impractical on the battlefield, National
Defense magazine reported.
It found that all-electric vehicles are
not yet practical and recommended that the Army should stick with its old
standbys. “JP-8 [jet fuel], diesel and biodiesel will be the primary source of
battlefield energy and power for the foreseeable future,” John Luginsland, the
committee’s co-chair and senior scientist and the principal investigator at
Confluent Sciences (a research-and-development firm), told National Defense. “The combination of energy density
and power is unmatched.”
This focus on climate change will do
little to advance military readiness or stabilize places such as the Sahel,
where poor governance damages the environment. It will not deter jihadists from
continuing their reigns of terror. Nor will it do anything to check America’s
top adversaries.
Climate-change posturing has little or no
positive real-world impact and puts political messaging to Biden’s donors and
supporters before military readiness.
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