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<h1><img src="../../2004book/logo.GIF" height="87" width="284">
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<h1>Global Responses to the 21<SUP>st</SUP> Century Challenges</h1>
<h2>His Excellency Linas Linkevicius<br>
  Minister of Defense of Lithuania</h2>
<p ALIGN="left">Today we live in a very dangerous world, where we have to expect the unexpected.
   The enemy we face is a far more unpredictable one than we have ever had.
   His cause is not ideology or politics, but hatred and destruction, and
   he will not hesitate a moment to obtain weapons of mass destruction. I
   would like to raise a few ideas about how the global community should respond
   to these challenges of the twenty-first century.&nbsp;</p>
  <h3>THE NEED TO TAKE ACTION</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT"> A good security concept must outline clear goals, evaluate threats, and
 indicate means for eradicating those threats. But do we really need a new
 concept? We already have clear goals: combating terrorism and the proliferation
 of WMD, preventing ethnic bloodshed, and strengthening democracy across
 the globe. We know where the threats come from: rogue regimes, failing
 states, religious hatred, frozen conflicts, and so on. We also know what
 we have to do to deal with these problems. What we need now is action,
 not reflection, not new concepts, not food-for-thought papers. The Madrid
 bombings were another wake-up call to European leaders. But while the tragedy
 of September 11 led to the defeat of the Taliban regime in Afghanistan,
 will we remember March 11 as the day terrorism defeated Europe? We all
 know what happened when Europe ignored the threat of Fascism back in the
 1930&#146;s, and we must not make the same mistake again.&nbsp;</p>
<p ALIGN="LEFT"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17"> &nbsp;We do not lack resources&#151;we lack efficiency. We have developed a lot of
 good concepts, for example, the EU&#146;s Headline Goal for 2010, but the first
 one has not yet been properly implemented. It is good to have ambitious
 plans, but good planning must take into account the reasonable allocation
 of assets. On the one hand, small countries such as Lithuania seek to pool
 resources in order to avoid unnecessary duplication. On the other hand,
 we cannot keep tearing ourselves apart and devoting all of our people,
 time, and money to analyzing an ever-growing number of new initiatives.
 Perhaps we should consider declaring a moratorium on the creation of new
 concepts until we manage to </FONT>implement existing ones.&nbsp;</p>
<p ALIGN="LEFT"> We cannot fight real threats with paper concepts. What we lack is the political
 will to take radical steps that may be ahead of their time. The UN peacekeepers
 were unable to stop genocide in Srebrenica, but what was right in that
 situation&#151;to abide by existing international law or to defend innocent
 people at any cost? NATO intervened in Kosovo without a clear UN resolution
 and saved many lives, but this year we commemorate the tenth anniversary
 of the genocide in Rwanda, where 800,000 people were murdered in 100 days.
 Are we ready to prevent that from happening again? We must finally admit
 that while we live in the twenty-first <SUP>st</SUP>century we still do not have a
 reliable, legal international crisis-management mechanism for responsive
 decision-making procedures and capabilities. We have many international
 organizations, but in most cases these organizations can act only when
 it is too late.&nbsp;</p>
<h3>REVAMPING INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONS FOR BETTER COOPERATION</h3>
<p>We must rethink the overall framework of international institutions. The
   UN does not provide global security the way it is expected to&#151;the Security
   Council, which has the supreme authority to preserve international security,
   vetoes peacekeeping initiatives more often than it endorses them. But reforming
   the UN would not be sufficient: only the combined efforts of nation-states
   and several institutions&#151;the UN, NATO, the OSCE, and the EU&#151;can bring peace,
   security, and well-being to the world. Only by working together can the
   UN, NATO, and the EU bring the Middle East Peace Plan back to life. The
   Greater Middle East Initiative must grow beyond dialogue to a wide network
   of relationships and partnerships among different institutions and states. <FONT COLOR="#1f1a17"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17">&nbsp;</FONT>
  </FONT><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17"> </FONT> </p>
<h3> DEVELOPING PEACE PLANS</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT">
Europe is not yet whole, free, and at peace. We must admit to ourselves
 that the isolating strategy being used on Belarus has failed and must be
 adjusted. We cannot expect positive changes within a country by isolating
 it from the outside world. Combined efforts by the UN, NATO, and the EU
 paid off in the Balkans, and these organizations could take a similar approach
 to the South Caucasus, another troubled region close to EU borders. We
 must draft an extensive peace plan for this region before it is too late.
 Instead of isolating failing states we must reach out to them, and help
 them turn into states of success.&nbsp;</p>
<p ALIGN="LEFT"> In addition to diplomatic crisis-prevention efforts, we must also be ready
 to use military force preemptively. We cannot afford a strategy of reacting
 to threats of the kind we face today. Using conventional measures against
 non-conventional threats will not work&#151;we simply cannot deter ruthless
 fanatics with conventional forces. We must be one step ahead of our enemy
 if we are to succeed. This means having expeditionary forces carry out
 preemptive actions (we do need a world police force).<FONT COLOR="#1f1a17"></FONT></p>
<h3>CARRYING OUT PEACE-BUILDING OPERATIONS 
AT THE SAME TIME AS MILITARY OPERATIONS</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT">As a Minister of Defense, I must ask myself what the role of the military
 should be in ensuring human security and providing civil defense. The armed
 forces can remove Taliban-like regimes but can they win peace and establish
 a constitutional order? As we are learning in Iraq, to prevent post-conflict
 anarchy, civilian crisis management and peace-building efforts must take
 place at the same time as military operations. A good example is the situation
 in Afghanistan, where a NATO peacekeeping force provides security and order
 while provincial reconstruction teams work with local authorities to rebuild
 the country. <span class="style97"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17">&nbsp;</FONT>
  </FONT></span></p>
<h3>MOVING FROM NATIONAL SECURITY TO HUMAN SECURITY</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT"> We must change our mindset and remove the notion of national borders from
 our perception of security. Modern threats do not target borders&#151;they erase
 borders. Terrorists do not target territory or state sovereignty&#151;they target
 people. Therefore we must shift our focus from national security to human
 security, the security of each and every human being. Economic deprivation,
 water and food shortages, organized crime, corruption of state bureaucracy&#151;these
 are the old causes of what we call the new threats. As long as human life
 and welfare are at risk, new failed states, new Husseins, and new bin Ladens
 will emerge.&nbsp;</p>
<h3>USING COLLECTIVE ACTION</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT">
 <span class="style97">We need to find collective solutions to transnational threats. I am happy
 to see that NATO is dealing more often with security problems in a collective
 way, through air policing, the NATO Response Force (NRF), Allied Ground
 Surveillance (AGS), and multinational logistics, to name some of the most
 important allied projects. I would like to express sincere gratitude to
 Belgium, Denmark, the United Kingdom, and Norway for providing air force
 assets for the air-policing mission above the Baltic States. It is a great
 indication that the spirit of collectiveness within NATO is stronger than
 ever. </span>&nbsp;</p>
<h3> FURTHER STRENGTHENING NATO&#150;RUSSIA RELATIONS</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT"> NATO&#150;Russia relations present another good example of our ability to transform
 our thinking. The former enemies now sit at one table and make common decisions
 in some 20 working groups. Of course, there is always room for improvement
 in taking concrete steps forward. For example, a Russian peacekeeping brigade
 assigned to NATO operations would be a real breakthrough into the kind
 of cooperation that is needed in the twenty-first century. NATO and Russia
 could also consider launching a common training project in Kaliningrad.
 Lithuania is ready and willing to play an active role in further strengthening
 this partnership. <span class="style97"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17"><FONT COLOR="#1f1a17">&nbsp;</FONT>
  </FONT></span></p>
<h3>THINKING AND ACTING GLOBALLY
</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT"> I do believe that small countries such as Lithuania can make a difference
 in today&#146;s world. Threats to peace and security concern each and every
 nation&#151; size does not matter. Small states must start thinking and acting
 globally: if we make the right decisions and adapt our military to the
 new environment, we can narrow the capability gap between the U.S. and
 Europe. Usability of forces in international operations must become the
 buzzword in our defense planning. For example, one day Lithuania may find
 itself in a situation in which a substantial part of our armed forces is
 deployed in a region far away. Though some say that modern soldiers are
 no longer glorious heroes, defenders of the motherland, I ask you, what
 can be more heroic than to risk one&#146;s life fighting for the peace and welfare
 of another nation?&nbsp;</p>
<h3 ALIGN="left">CONCLUDING REMARKS</h3>
<p ALIGN="LEFT">  While we talk about the uncertainty of the global security environment,
 the tragedy of September 11 was in fact the end of the world as we knew
 it. Since then the world has changed, and our thinking regarding global
 security must change accordingly. But let me finish my remarks on an optimistic
 note: Saddam Hussein is a war prisoner, Colonel Quaddafi wants to disarm,
 India and Pakistan are holding peace talks, Iraq will soon have a democratic
 government, and, last but not least, Afghani children can play football
 again. I hope these are only the first signs of how the global security
 order will look like in the twenty-first century. But to get there we need
 to act and we need to act now. <FONT COLOR="#1f1a17"><FONT COLOR="#000000"></FONT><span class="style97"><FONT COLOR="#000000">&nbsp;</FONT></span></FONT></p>
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