Title: The End of National Security ' ' ' As we know it
1The End of National Security. . . As we know it
John L. Petersen The Arlington Institute
2National Security
- The most fundamental responsibility of government
- Drives every thing else in one way or another
- More money spent for national security than any
other national function
3Our notion of security is fundamentally changing
4Alternative Futures
Two Front War
9/11
UNCERTAINTY
Iraq War
Mortgaging the Future
Learning
UNCERTAINTY
The Great Islamic War
No Learning
5This is increasingly a Transnational world
6Transnational Flows
- Increased Foreign Direct Investment
- Potential host countries are attempting to reduce
restrictions on entry and operation (in their
markets) to create an environment that is more
attractive to investors (example lower tax
levels) - Value and Ideas
- Increased interaction has led to an increased and
accelerated sharing of values and ideas - Pollution
- Refugees (potentially causing destabilization in
receiving country) Food Shipments (United Nations
Food Program, NGOs) - Arms
- Jobs (Outsourcing)
- Number of people in India performing computer
jobs for U.S. companies is likely to increase
from 177,000 in 2002 to 1.2 million in 2008 - Information (785,710,022 people use the Internet
worldwide)
7Transnational Security Flows and Feedbacks
Values and Ideas
Arms
Food
Jobs
Information
Refugees
Foreign Direct Investment
Pollution
8Most Transnational Flows have been facilitated by
increases in communications technology
9Transnational Standards Regulating Common Spaces
Convention on Biological Diversity (1993)
10Commons Preservation
Cooperation
Commons Regulations
Treaty Law
Commons Exploitation
Customary Law
Commons Usage
Friendly Neighbors
Neighborly Trade
11Transnational Problems
- Economic disparity (between groups and states)
- Regional youth bulges
- Food and water shortages
- Failing states, migration, and terrorism
- Disease mobility
12Transnational Security Problems
13Transnational Wild Cards
- Rapid Climate Change
- Energy Revolution
- Nuclear/Biological/Radiological Attack on a Major
City - Disease Outbreak
- Human Cloning
14Driving Forces Dramatically Increased
Capabilities
- Tools today are cheaper, more powerful, and more
accessible - Illicit Materials and WMD, Technological
Advancements - Nuclear Weapons/Materials, Chemical Weapons,
Dirty Bombs - Bio and Nanotechnology
- Modified humans
- Modified foods
15Capabilities Cont.
- Information and Communication Technology
- Internet changing society and the way information
is communicated. - More threats and opportunities as technology
becomes democratized
16Characteristics of the Emerging World
- Proliferation of communication, weapons, and
information technologies - Highly accelerated rate of change
- Global complexity weakening of
borders/boundaries, integrated markets,
climate change, and communications
Interdependency of individuals, groups, events,
and issues - Non-linear development and progression
- Pervasive marketplace competition of ideas,
political systems, beliefs, and cultures
17Fundamental Mismatch
- Current National Security Fundamentals
- National Security equals Defense
- Increasingly security is more than national
defense it is transnational defense - The movement is toward a larger, more inclusive
understanding of national security that begins to
value the larger system as well as the local
system
18Creating a new transnational security
- Core Value Change
- Cooperation increasingly equals security
- The New System Must
- Develop a shared vision of security
- Understand and adapt to increasing complexity
- Incorporate a more global notion of national
interests - Share intelligence
19Punctuated Equilibrium
Progress
Agriculture- 10,000
Homo Sapiens- 130,000 years
- Vertebrates
- 500 Million
- Years
Early Man 4.5 Million Years
Cities/Towns- 5,500
Information - ?
Industrialization- 500
Multiple Cell Life - 1 Billion Years
Single Cell Life - 3.5 Billion Years
Biological Evolution
Cultural Evolution
20Major Trends
21Increasing Interdependency And Complexity
?
?
Security as Usual
Crisis/ Wild Card
2000
2005
2010
2015
2020
Possible Timeframe
Source Adopted from H Tibbs, 1997
22John L. Petersen
- The Arlington Institute
- johnp_at_arlingtoninstitute.org
- www.arlingtoninstitute.org
23Transnational Security System
Shared Vision
Cooperation
Adapt to Complexity
New Core Values