24 January 2001
Gannon Says Context for U.S. Security Issues to Broaden
Environmental and other non-traditional security issues can have as
much influence on security planning as threats from long-range
ballistic missiles; nuclear, biological and chemical weapons;
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD); and terrorism, a
U.S. intelligence expert says.
Issues of demographics, infectious diseases, natural resources and the
environment, and economic development, when taken together, can
contribute to stability or instability in a region and provide a
broader context for future threats to national security, John C.
Gannon, chairman of the U.S. National Intelligence Council, told a
U.S. Army War College audience January 24.
Based on a newly unclassified intelligence study "Global Trends 2015,"
Gannon said the United States will likely face three types of security
threat:
- Asymmetric threats in which adversaries avoid direct engagements
with U.S. forces, but devise strategies, tactics and weapons to
counter U.S. strengths and exploit weaknesses.
- Strategic threats from weapons of mass destruction, including
nuclear missiles, in which a number of countries have the capability
to strike the United States.
- Regional military threats generated from a few countries that
maintain large military forces using Cold War and post-Cold War
technology, strategy and tactics.
"The risk of war among developed countries will be low," Gannon said.
However, he added that "internal conflicts stemming from religious,
ethnic, economic or political disputes will remain at current levels
or even increase in number."
Gannon said one implication for the United States and the world in
this changing security environment is that "national policies will
matter. To prosper in the global economy of 2015, governments will
have to invest more in technology, in public education, and in broader
participation in government to include increasingly influential
non-state actors."
In addition, he said the United States will have to monitor primitive
as well as precision-guided weapons others may develop. And, he said
the international community will increasingly be called on to deal
with such transnational issues as financial volatility, legal and
illegal migration, scarce natural resources, humanitarian crises,
terrorism and weapons proliferation.
Finally, Gannon said, governments will have to deal with a
transnational agenda and an interconnected world. That will require
greater communications and collaboration between national security and
domestic policy agencies.
Following is the text of Gannon's remarks as prepared for delivery.
(Note: In the text, "billion" means 1,000 million.)
Central Intelligence Agency
Washington, D.C.
January 24, 2001
Remarks By John C. Gannon Chairman, National Intelligence Council
United States Army War College
Carlisle, PA
"Challenges to U.S. National Security"
(as prepared for delivery)
I am especially pleased to be here among military colleagues to talk
about future challenges to U.S. National Security. Not only is there
professional interest in foreign affairs here at the Army War College,
but there also is a deep personal commitment to the future of our
great country. I look forward to your comments and questions, which,
for me, will be the highlight of my visit.
As you know, the National Intelligence Council (NIC), which I chair,
has just published an unclassified study called Global Trends 2015 (GT
2015), which identifies seven drivers that we argue will shape the
world 15 years from now:
-- demographics,
-- natural resources and environment,
-- science and technology,
-- the global economy,
-- national and international governance,
-- future conflict, and
-- the role of the United States.
Global Trends 2015 should be viewed as a work-in-progress, a flexible
framework for thinking about the future. As Yogi Berra once said,
"It's a mistake to make predictions, especially about the future!"
Today, I want to discuss the study from the perspective of a military
officer, which I once was, and get your reaction. Of course, it's
obvious that the U.S. military should be concerned about threats from
long-range ballistic missiles; nuclear, chemical, biological, and
radiological warfare; proliferation of weapons of mass destruction;
and terrorism. But why should a military officer care about
demographics, infectious diseases, natural resources and the
environment, economic development, and governance? My short answer is
because these issues, especially when taken together, will contribute
either to stability or instability in a given community or region and
will this provide the broader context for national security in the
years ahead. I'll get into more details on these issues later.
But first, let me say a few words about the nature of future conflict
based on our discussions inside and outside the Intelligence
Community.
The study projects that the United States will maintain a strong
technological edge in IT-driven "battlefield awareness" and in
precision-guided weaponry in 2015. The U.S. will face three types of
threats from adversaries:
- Asymmetric threats in which state and non-state adversaries avoid
direct engagements with the U.S. military but devise strategies,
tactics, and weapons-some improved by "sidewise" technology-to
minimize U.S. strengths and exploit perceived weaknesses. We need to
understand more about technological capabilities, therefore, and about
the motivations and intentions of those who would use them against us.
- Strategic WMD threats, including nuclear missile threats, in which
(barring significant political or economic changes), Russia, China,
most likely North Korea, probably Iran, and possibly Iraq have the
capability to strike the United States and the potential for
unconventional delivery of WMD by both states or non-state actors also
will grow.
- Regional military threats in which a few countries maintain large
military forces with a mix of Cold War and post-Cold War concepts and
technologies. Virtually all the trends we discuss in GT 2015 are
relevant to regional stability and conflict.
Interstate Conflict
The risk of war among developed countries will be low. The
international community will continue, however, to face conflicts
around the world, ranging from relatively frequent small-scale
internal upheavals to less frequent regional inter-state wars. The
potential for inter-state conflict will arise from rivalries in Asia,
ranging from India-Pakistan to China-Taiwan, as well as among the
antagonists in the Middle East. The potential lethality of interstate
conflicts will grow, driven by the availability of WMD, longer-range
missile delivery systems and other technologies.
Internal Conflicts
Internal conflicts stemming from religious, ethnic, economic or
political disputes will remain at current levels or even increase in
number. Such conflicts will occur most frequently in Sub-Saharan
Africa, the Caucasus and Central Asia, and parts of south and
southeast Asia, Central America and the Andean region.
Many internal conflicts, particularly those arising from communal
disputes, will continue to be vicious, long-lasting and difficult to
terminate-leaving bitter legacies in their wake.
- They frequently will spawn internal displacements, refugee flows,
and humanitarian emergencies, destabilizing certain regions.
- If left to fester, internal conflicts will trigger spillover into
inter-state conflicts.
The United Nations and several regional organizations will continue to
be called upon to manage some internal conflicts and provide
humanitarian assistance. Of course, the United States-with its heavy
lift capacity -- will play a key role in responding to humanitarian
emergencies.
Terrorism
Meanwhile, states with poor governance; ethnic, cultural, or religious
tensions; weak economies; and porous borders will be prime breeding
grounds for terrorism. In such states, domestic groups will challenge
the entrenched government, and transnational networks seeking safe
havens.
Broader Trends
Now, let me talk about broader global trends that will shape the world
of 2015. The world in 2015 will be populated by some 7.2 billion
people, up from 6.1 billion in the year 2000.
More than 95 percent of the increase in world population will be found
in developing countries:
- India's population will grow from 900 million to more than 1.2
billion by 2015; Pakistan's probably will swell from 140 million now
to about 195 million.
- Some countries in Africa with high rates of AIDS will experience
reduced population growth or even declining populations despite
relatively high birthrates. In South Africa, for example, the
population is projected to drop from 43.4 million in 2000 to 38.7
million in 2015.
Russia and many post-Communist countries of Eastern Europe also will
have declining populations.
Movement of People
By 2015, more than half of the world's population will be urban. The
number of people living in mega-cities-those containing more than 10
million people-will double to more than 400 million.
- On one hand, urbanization will provide many countries the
opportunity to tap the information revolution and other technological
advances.
- But the explosive growth of cities in developing countries will
test the capacity of governments to stimulate the investment required
to generate jobs and to provide the services, infrastructure, and
social supports for stable environments.
Health
Looking at global health, the gap between developed and developing
countries-particularly the least developed countries-will persist and
widen.
In developed countries, major inroads against a variety of diseases
will be achieved by 2015 as a result of generous health spending and
major medical advances.
- And the revolution in biotechnology holds the promise of even more
dramatic improvements in health for people living in developed
countries
- Noninfectious diseases will pose greater challenges to health in
developed countries than will infectious diseases.
Developing countries, by contrast, are likely to experience a surge in
both infectious and noninfectious diseases and in general will have
inadequate health care capacities and spending.
- Tuberculosis, malaria, hepatitis, and particularly AIDS will
continue to increase rapidly. AIDS and TB together are likely to
account for the majority of deaths in most developing countries.
- AIDS will be a major problem not only in Africa but also in India,
Southeast Asia, several countries formerly part of the Soviet Union,
and possibly China.
- AIDS will reduce economic growth by up to 1 percent of GDP per year
and consume more than 50 percent of health budgets in the hardest-hit
countries.
- AIDS and related diseases such as TB will have a destructive impact
on families and society. In some African countries, average life spans
will be reduced by as much as 30 to 40 years, generating more than 40
million orphans and contributing to poverty, crime, and instability.
- AIDS, other diseases, and health problems will hurt prospects for
transition to democratic regimes as they undermine civil society,
hamper the evolution of sound political and economic institutions, and
intensify the struggle for power and resources.
Natural Resources and Environment Food
When you consider the projected increase in global population and the
challenges to global health, you might ask, will there be enough food
and water for the world's population? Global Trends 2015 does not
project a Malthusian nightmare-or a Utopian dream.
Rather, we judge that world food grain production and stocks -- driven
by advances in agricultural technologies -- will be adequate to meet
the needs of a growing world population. Despite the overall adequacy
of food, problems of distribution and availability will remain.
- The number of chronically malnourished people in conflict-ridden
Sub-Saharan Africa will increase by more than 20 percent over the next
15 years.
- And international donors will become more reluctant to provide
relief when they believe their aid will become embroiled in military
conflict.
By 2015, nearly half the world's population-more than 3 billion
people-will live in countries that are "water-stressed"-having less
than 1,700 cubic meters of water per capita per year-mostly in Africa,
the Middle East, South Asia, and northern China.
- Turkey is building new dams and irrigation projects on the Tigris
and Euphrates Rivers, which will affect water flows into Syria and
Iraq -- two countries that will experience considerable population
growth.
- Egypt is proceeding with a major diversion of water from the Nile,
which flows from Ethiopia and Sudan, both of which will want to draw
more water from the Nile for their own development by 2015.
Water-sharing arrangements are likely to become more contentious.
Water shortages occurring in combination with other sources of
tension-such as in the Middle East-will be the most worrisome. As some
countries press against the limits of available water between now and
2015, the possibility of conflict will increase.
Energy
On world energy supplies, the NIC paper projects that the global
economy will continue to become more energy efficient through 2015.
Asia will drive the expansion in energy demand, replacing North
America as the leading energy consumption region and accounting for
more than half of the world's total increase in demand.
- China, and to a lesser extent India, will see especially dramatic
increases in energy consumption.
- By 2015, only one-tenth of Persian Gulf oil will be directed to
Western markets; three-quarters will go to Asia.
Meeting the increase in demand for energy will pose neither a major
supply challenge nor lead to substantial price increases in real
terms. Estimates of the total amount of oil in the world have steadily
increased as technological progress in extracting oil from remote
sources has led to more efficient production.
- Recent estimates indicate that 80 percent of the world's available
oil still remains in the ground, as does 95 percent of the world's
natural gas.
The Global Economy
At the same time, the global economy is well positioned to achieve
dynamic growth through 2015. Based on consultations with a number of
outside experts, the NIC study projects that global economic growth
will return to the high levels reached in the 1960s and early 1970s,
the final years of the post-World War II "long boom. " Dynamism will
be strongest among so-called "emerging markets" -- especially in the
two Asian giants, China and India-but will be broadly based worldwide,
including in both industrialized and many developing countries. The
rising tide of the global economy will create many economic winners,
but it will not lift all boats. The information revolution will make
the persistence of poverty more visible, and regional differences will
remain large.
Unequal Growth Prospects and Distribution
The countries and regions most at risk of falling behind economically
are those with endemic internal and regional conflicts and those that
fail to diversify their economies. The economies of most states in
Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East and some in Latin America will
continue to suffer. A large segment of the Eurasian landmass extending
from Central Asia through the Caucasus to parts of southeastern Europe
faces dim economic prospects. Within countries, the gap in the
standard of living also will increase. Even in rapidly growing
countries, large regions will be left behind.
Environment
While the outlook for the global economy is encouraging, contemporary
environmental problems will persist and in many instances expand over
the next 15 years. With increasingly intensive land use, significant
degradation of arable land will continue-and we will lose more
tropical forests. Greenhouse gas emissions will increase
substantially.
- Environmental issues will become mainstream issues in several
countries, particularly in the developed world. The consensus on the
need to deal with environmental issues will strengthen; but progress
in dealing with them will be uneven.
National and International Governance
Looking at the world in 2015, the state will remain the single most
important actor in political, economic, and security affairs -- but
will confront fundamental tests of effective governance. The first
will be to benefit from, while coping with, several facets of
globalization. The second will be to deal with increasingly vocal and
organized publics.
- The elements of globalization -- greater and freer flow of
information, capital, goods, services, people, and the diffusion of
power to non-state actors of all kinds -- will challenge the authority
of virtually all governments. At the same time, globalization will
create demands for increased international cooperation on
transnational issues.
- States with slow economic growth, and where executive power is
concentrated in the political elite, will be inclined to discriminate
against communal minorities. Such conditions will foment ethnic
tensions in Sub-Saharan Africa, Central and South Asia, and parts of
the Middle East, often in rapidly growing urban areas. Certain
powerful states -- such as Russia, China, Brazil and India -- also are
likely to repress politicized communal minorities.
Non-state Actors
States will deal increasingly with private-sector organizations --
both for-profit and nonprofit. These non-state actors increasingly
will gain resources and power over the next 15 years as a result of
the ongoing liberalization of global finance and trade, as well as the
opportunities afforded by information technology.
Over the next 15 years, transnational criminal organizations will
become increasingly adept at exploiting the global diffusion of
sophisticated information, financial, and transportation networks.
Criminal organizations and networks based in North America, Western
Europe, China, Colombia, Israel, Japan, Mexico, Nigeria, and Russia
will expand the scale and scope of their activities. They will form
loose alliances with one another, with smaller criminal entrepreneurs,
and with insurgent movements for specific operations. They will
corrupt leaders of unstable, economically fragile or failing states,
insinuate themselves into troubled banks and businesses, and cooperate
with insurgent political movements to control substantial geographic
areas.
Their income will come from narcotics trafficking; alien smuggling;
trafficking in women and children; smuggling toxic materials,
hazardous wastes, illicit arms, military technologies, and other
contra-band; financial fraud; and racketeering.
Science and Technology
Looking at the world of 2015 as a whole, the continuing diffusion of
information technology and new applications in the biotechnology field
will be of particular global significance.
Information Technology (IT)
The rapid diffusion of information technology will lead to many new
devices and services. Local-to-global net access holds the prospect of
universal wireless connectivity via hand-held devices and large
numbers of low-cost, low-altitude satellites. Satellite systems and
services will develop in ways that increase performance and reduce
costs.
Biotechnology
By 2015, the biotechnology revolution will be in full swing with major
achievements in combating disease, increasing food production,
reducing pollution, and enhancing the quality of life. Many of these
developments, especially in the medical field, will remain costly and
will be available mainly in the West and to wealthy segments of other
societies. Some biotechnologies will continue to be controversial for
moral and religious reasons. Among the most significant developments
by 2015 are:
- Genomic profiling -- by decoding the genetic basis for
pathology-will enable the medical community to move beyond the
description of diseases to more effective mechanisms for diagnosis and
treatment.
- Biomedical engineering, exploiting advances in biotechnology and
"smart" materials, will produce new surgical procedures and systems,
including better organic and artificial replacement parts for human
beings, and the use of unspecialized human cells (stem cells) to
augment or replace brain or body functions and structures. It also
will spur development of implants for eyes and ears, as well as
bypasses of spinal and other nerve damage.
- Therapy and drug developments will cure some enduring diseases and
counter trends in antibiotic resistance. Deeper understanding of how
particular diseases affect people with specific genetic
characteristics will facilitate the development and prescription of
custom drugs.
- Genetic modification -- despite continuing technological and
cultural barriers-will improve the engineering of organisms to
increase food production and quality, broaden the scale of
bio-manufacturing, and provide cures for certain genetic diseases.
Other Technologies
Breakthroughs in materials technology will generate widely available
products that are smart, multifunctional, environmentally compatible,
more survivable, and customizable. These products not only will
contribute to the growing information and biotechnology revolutions
but also will benefit manufacturing, logistics, and personal
lifestyles.
Discoveries in nanotechnology will lead to unprecedented understanding
and control over the fundamental building blocks of all physical
things. Developments in this emerging field are likely to change the
way almost everything-from vaccines to computers to automobile tires
to objects not yet imagined-is designed and made.
Implications
So, what are the implications for the United States and the world?
Looking at all of these trends together, I see at least four related
conclusions:
- First, national policies will matter. To prosper in the global
economy of 2015, governments will have to invest more in technology,
in public education, and in broader participation in government to
include increasingly influential non-state actors. The extent to which
governments around the world are doing these things today gives some
indication of where they will be in 2015.
- Second, we will have to watch primitive as well as precision-guided
weapons. The United States and other developed countries will be
challenged in 2015 to lead the fast-paced technological revolution
while, at the same time, maintaining military, diplomatic, and
intelligence capabilities to deal with traditional problems and
threats from low-technology countries and groups. The United States,
as a global power, will have little choice but to engage leading
actors and confront problems on both sides of the widening economic
and digital divides in the world of 2015, when globalization's
benefits will be far from global.
- Third, the international community increasingly will be called upon
to deal with growing transnational problems. These include economic
and financial volatility; to legal and illegal migration; to
competition for scarce natural resources such as water; to
humanitarian, refugee, and environmental crises; to terrorism,
narco-trafficking, and weapons proliferation; and to both regional
conflicts and cyber threats. And when international cooperation -- or
international governance -- comes up short, the United States and
other developed countries will have to broker solutions among a wide
array of international players-including governments at all levels,
multinational corporations, and nonprofit organizations.
- Fourth, and last, to deal with a transnational agenda and an
interconnected world in 2015, governments will have to develop greater
communication and collaboration between national security and domestic
policy agencies, which, again, is why it is so appropriate for me to
be here today. Interagency cooperation will be essential to
understanding transnational threats, including regional conflict, and
to developing interdisciplinary strategies to counter them.
Consequence management of a BW attack, for example, would require
close coordination among a host of U.S. Government agencies, foreign
governments, U.S. state and municipal governments, the military, the
medical community, and the media.
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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