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<title>CSDR 24th International Workshop on Global Security, Michele Alliot-Marie,
Franz-Josef Jung, General Henri Bentegeat, General James L. Jones, General
George Joulwan, Borys Tarasyuk, Jean de Ponton d'Am&eacute;court, General Rainer
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          <p><span class="style293">international workshop series<br>
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      <p align="center" class="style17"><strong>Table of Contents<br>
      24th International Workshop - </strong><strong>Paris '07</strong></p>
      <p align="center" class="style17"><span class="style18"><span class="style219"> </span>

	<span class="style219"><a href="/2007book/weissinger07.htm">Preface- Dr. Roger<br>
	Weissinger-Baylon<br>
	Workshop Chairman<br>
	</a></span><span class="style219"><a href="/2007book/ranquet07.htm">Foreword - Ing General<br>
	Robert Ranquet<br>
	</a></span>
	<span class="style219"><a href="/2007book/joulwan07.htm">Opening Dinner Debate - <br>
	General George Joulwan<br>
	Former SACEUR<br>
	</a></span></span><br>
	Global security challenges:  <br>
        Is there hope for <br>
        Afghanistan or Iraq?<br>
      </p>
	  
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/bentegeat07.htm">General Henri Bentegeat<br>
        President of EU Military Committee</a>
	  <a href="/2007book/georgelin07">Gen Jean-Louis Georgelin C<strong>hef d&rsquo;&eacute;tat</strong>-<strong>major</strong> des arm&eacute;es - France</a><a href="/2007book/amecourt07.htm">Mr. Jean de Ponton d'Amecourt - French Dir of Strategic Affairs</a><a href="/2007book/schuwirth07.htm">General Rainer Schuwirth <br>
        Chief of Staff, SHAPE</a><a href="/2007book/ramms07.htm">General Egon Ramms <br>
      Commander, Allied Joint Force Cmd, Brunssum</a>
      <a href="/2007book/akram07.htm">
        Amb Munir Akram<br>
        Pakistan's Amb to UN</a><a href="/2007book/zhan07.htm">
        Major Gen ZHAN Maohai<br>
        Vice Chair of China IISS</a><br>
        Energy &amp; Climate Change<br>     
      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/jones07.htm">General James Jones<br>
        Former Supreme Allied Commander Europe</a><a href="/2007book/ashton07.htm">Mr. John Ashton<br>
        UK Special Repr for Climate Change</a><br>
        Security in the Balkans &amp; Black Sea region<br>
      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/baramidze07.htm">Georgian Vice Prime Minister Giorgi Baramidze</a>      
        <a href="/2007book/tarasyuk07.htm">Ukrainian Foreign Minister Borys Tarasyuk</a> 
      <a href="/2007book/mediu07.htm">Albanian Defense Minister Fatmir Mediu</a><a href="/2007book/bliznakov07.htm">Bulgarian Defense Minister Veselin Bliznakov</a><a href="/2007book/bezhuashvili07.htm">Georgian Foreign Min Gela Bezhuashvili</a><a href="/2007book/ildem07.htm">Ambassador <strong> Tacan Ildem</strong><br>
Turkish Amb to NATO</a><a href="/2007book/buzhinsky07.htm">
        Lt Gen Evgeniy Buzhinsky<br>
        Russian Ministry of Defense</a><br>
        Time for new strategies?<br>
        NATO after the Riga Summit<br>
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/eldon07.htm">Amb Stewart Eldon<br>
        UK Ambassador to NATO</a>
        <a href="/2007book/orgaz07.htm">Amb Pablo Benavides Orgaz<br>
        Spanish Amb to NATO</a>
        <a href="/2007book/stefanini07.htm">Amb Stefano Stefanini <br>
        Italian Amb to NATO</a><a href="/2007book/dipaola07.htm">Adm Giampaolo Di Paola<br>
        Italian Chief of Defense<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/gagor07.htm">Gen Franciszek Gagor Polish Chief of Defense</a><br>
        How can the EU, NATO, the OSCE, and UN reform?<br>      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/brichambaut07.htm">Amb Marc Perrin de Brichambaut<br>
        OSCE Secretary General </a><a href="/2007book/lintonen07.htm">Amb Kirsti Lintonen Finnish Amb to UN</a>
        <a href="/2007book/brodi07.htm">Amb Gabor Brodi<br>
        Hungarian Amb to UN</a><a href="/2007book/rinkevics07.htm">State Sec Edgars Rinkevics - Latvian MOD</a><a href="/2007book/linkevicius07.htm">Amb Linas Linkevicius<br>
        Lithuanian Amb to NATO<br>
        </a>
        <a href="/2007book/chizhov07.htm">Amb Vladimir Chizhov<br>
        Russian Amb to the EU<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/monteforte07.htm">Vice Adm Ferdinando Sanfelice di Monteforte<br>
        Italian Mil Repr to NATO</a><br>
        Dealing with middle east:<br>Views from North Africa
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/yousfi07.htm">Amb Youcef Yousfi<br>
        Algerian Amb to UN and former Foreign Minister</a><a href="/2007book/karem07.htm">Amb Mahmoud Karem<br>
      Egyptian Amb to EU and Repr to Med Dialogue</a><a href="/2007book/alem07.htm">Amb Menouar Alem<br>
        Moroccan Amb to EU and Repr to Med Dialogue<br>
        </a>
      
      <p align="center" class="style17">WMD and cyber threats
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/pfirter07.htm">Amb Rogelio Pfirter<br>
        Director-General, OPCW</a>
        <a href="/2007book/hopkins07.htm">Dr. Arthur T. Hopkins<br>
        Assist to U.S. Sec of Defense -  Nuclear &amp; Chemical &amp; Biological</a><a href="/2007book/aaviksoo07.htm">Estonian Defense Minister<br>
        Jaak Aaviksoo</a><a href="/2007book/grimes07.htm">Hon John Grimes<br>
        US Assistant Secretary of Defense - NII<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/lentz07.htm">Mr. Robert Lentz<br>
        US Dep Asst Sec for NII<br>
         </a><a href="/2007book/wolf07.htm">Lt General Ulrich Wolf<br>
         Dir of NATO CIS Service Agency<br>
         </a>
         <a href="/2007book/bloechl07.htm">Mr. Tim Bloechl<br>
        Microsoft Exec Director</a>      
      
      <p align="center" class="style17">How industry can help address the global challenges<p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/lahoud07.htm">Mr. Marwan Lahoud<br>
        Chief Operating Office EADS</a><a href="/2007book/schneider07.htm">Mr. Kent Schneider<br>
President, Defense Group<br>
Northrop Grumman IT<br>
</a><a href="/2007book/auroy07.htm">Mr. Patrick Auroy<br>
Deputy Director,<br>
French DGA
        <br>
</a><a href="/2007book/volkman07.htm">Mr. Alfred Volkman<br>
        Dir, Defense Cooperation<br>
        US Dept of Defense<br>
        </a>
        <a href="/2007book/linnenkamp07.htm">Dr. Hilmar Linnenkamp<br>
        Dep CEO, EDA</a>
        <a href="/2007book/lind07.htm">Mr. Jan-Olof Lind<br>
        Swedish National Armaments Director</a>
        <a href="/2007book/buckley07.htm">Dr. Edgar Buckley<br>
        Thales Senior Vice President</a>
        <a href="/2007book/trice07">Dr. Robert Trice<br>
        Lockheed Martin <br>
        Senior Vice President<br>   
        </a><a href="/2007book/bertolone07.htm">Ing. Giovanni Bertolone<br>
        CEO, Alenia Aeronautica</a>
      
      <p align="center" class="style17">The way ahead &amp; why current approaches don't work      
      
      <p align="center" class="style17"><a href="/2007book/martinusz07.htm">Amb Zoltan Martinusz<br>
        Hungarian Amb to NATO<br>
        </a><a href="/2007book/ducaru07.htm">Amb Dumitru Sorin Ducaru<br>
        Romanian Amb to NATO</a><a href="/2007book/kujat07.htm">        General Harald Kujat<br>
        Former Chair of NATO Military Committee</a>
    </div>
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          <td  bgcolor="#006699" height="18" colspan="5"><div align="center" class="style285" style="font-weight: bold; color: #FFFFFF">Paris '07 Workshop</div></td>
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      <p align="center"><span class="style26">Welcome to the <em><br>
        24th International Workshop on Global Security</em> and <br>
        Overview of the Workshop Presentations</span><br>
      </p>
      <div align="center">
      <table width="646" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
          <tr>
            <td width="357"><p><strong><img src="2007images/DSC_0892 Roger speaking at dinner Invalides DAY II.JPG" alt="Dr. Roger Weissinger-Baylon, Workshop Chairman" width="351" height="227" border="0" align="baseline"></strong></p></td>
            <td width="5">&nbsp;</td>
            <td width="283"><div align="center">
                <p class="style26">Dr. Roger Weissinger-Baylon<br>
                  Workshop Chairman<br>
                  and Founder<br>
                </p>
                </div></td>
          </tr>
          <tr>
            <td height="36" colspan="2"><div align="left">Dr. Weissinger- Baylon introducing French Director of Strategic Affairs Jean d'Amecourt in the Salon of Honor at the Hotel National des Invalides, built by King Louis XIV in the XVIIth century.</div></td>
            <td><div align="center"></div></td>
            <td width="1"><div align="center" class="style27">
                <div>
                  <p class="style26"><br>
                  </p>
                </div>
            </div></td>
          </tr>
        </table>
      </div>
      <p>Welcome to the web site of the Center for Strategic Decision Research, which has presented the &quot;International Workshops on Global Security&quot;  for the last 24 years.&nbsp; We are delighted that this year's workshop was held in Paris, France, for the second time, at the invitation of the French Defense Minister.&nbsp; In 2005, French Minister of Defense Michele Alliot-Marie welcomed the Workshop to France for the first time as our keynote speaker and Patron.&nbsp; In 2007, France's newly appointed Defense Minister Herve Morin offered the workshop his Patronage and the very gracious and effective support of this ministry.&nbsp; General Henri Bentegeat, the President of the EU Military Committee and former Chief of General Staff of the French Armed Forces, gave the Workshop's opening address and Mr. Jean de Ponton d'Amecourt welcomed the workshop participants to a dinner at the prestigious Hotel des Invalides, which was built by Louis XIV and now houses Napoleon's tomb.</p>
      <p>We invite you to consult the more than 50 Workshop speeches, which address many of the most important security issues of our time including the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as new threats to global security, such as global warming, competition for energy resources, cyber-security, and other challenges.</p>
<p>I would like to take this opportunity to thank the principal sponsors of the Workshop--the French Defense Ministry, the US Department of Defense, EADS, Microsoft, and Northrop Grumman.&nbsp; Their support, as well as that of Lockheed Martin, Alenia Aeronautica, MITRE, Thales, and MBDA MIssile Systems, was vital and the Workshop could not have beeen presented without their efforts.</p>
<p align="center" class="style26"><strong>Overview</strong></p>
<p align="center" class="style26">Setting the Ship in the Right Direction</p>
<p>Since  dangers to global security are spreading, the need is urgent for countries and  international organizations to find more effective political and military  strategies and better ways of working together. Former Supreme Allied  Commander, Europe General George Joulwan<a href="#_ftn1" name="_ftnref1" title=""> </a> calls for a new direction in order to achieve the better world we all seek:</p>
<p>&ldquo;I  am not very optimistic and that concerns me. I do not want to be negative, but  I have to be realistic as a soldier who has spent most of his life trying to  deter or prevent war&hellip;Where are we now? What can we do to set the ship in the  right direction? And what can we do to create the  conditions that we need to bring about a better world for our children  and grandchildren?&rdquo; </p>
<p align="center" class="style26">The Growing Dangers in a Multipolar World</p>
<p>Some  of the great challenges underlying these concerns are outlined by Italy&rsquo;s Chief  of Defense Admiral Giampaolo Di Paola (who has since been elected as the next  Chairman of the NATO Military Committee) and by the NATO Military Committee&rsquo;s  past Chairman, General Harald Kujat. According to Admiral Di Paola, the list of  security challenges now also includes &ldquo;&hellip;energy, terrorism, globalization, the  revolution in information technology, scarcity of resources, the relationship  between western heritage and culture and the emerging Muslim world, and  relationships with emerging powers such as China, India, east Asia, Mexico, and  Brazil.&rdquo; </p>
<p>General  Kujat offers a broad description of these grave dangers and of their  complexities, including hot conflicts, frozen conflicts, traditional security  risks that have already been present for a long time, and new, emerging risks  that may not even be fully understood, such as cyber-attacks, energy, and  climate change: <br>
  <br>
  &ldquo;The world is more  complex than ever before: there are areas of hot conflicts, including Iraq and  Afghanistan; there are frozen conflicts in Moldova, Transnistria, and the  Caucasus; there are old security risks, including the proliferation of  ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction, unsuccessful arms control,  drug trafficking, illegal immigration, poverty, hunger, ethnic and religious  conflicts, and international terrorism; and there are new security risks,  including cyber-attacks, the use of energy as a strategic asset, and the  unknown consequences of climate change.&rdquo; <br>
  <br>
  Not only are challenges to global  security increasing, but the structure of international political, military,  economic, and other influences is shifting as well. Remarkably, the world is no  longer unipolar, but multipolar. In the unipolar world, the U.S. was the  dominant player&mdash;and not only in the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts but even in  NATO, the U.N., and other international organizations. Largely due to  difficulties in Iraq, however, U.S. international influence is less dominant.  At the same time, the influence of China, India, and Russia (which has  benefited immensely from the surge in oil prices) is growing. </p>
<p>According to General Kujat&rsquo;s analysis, it  seems that:<br>
  <br>
  &ldquo;&hellip;the multipolar  world is becoming more diverse. New world powers are becoming more and more  influential. China, India, and Russia&rsquo;s economic and military power is growing,  which means more self-confidence and perhaps more nationalism. At the same time  U.S. influence in world affairs is declining, a consequence of the prolonged  Iraq conflict. In addition, and above all, globalization is producing  advantages and risks and winners and losers, and creating new antagonisms.&rdquo;<br>
  <br>
  In his opening workshop address, General Henri  Bentegeat, Chairman of the EU Military Committee and former Chief of the French  General Staff, offers a similar observation concerning the extraordinary shifts  in power and influence within just a few years: <br>
  <br>
  &ldquo;Five years ago, it  was believed and acknowledged that the great strategic balances of the past had  become permanently obsolete. There was only one very large political, economic,  and military power&mdash;the United States of America&hellip;Since that time, however&hellip;Russia  and China have reaffirmed in various ways their intent to be involved in the  most sensitive issues. Militarily, Japan&rsquo;s rising importance and India&rsquo;s  emergence have confirmed that these two countries have gradually evolved and  now hold a leading international role.&rdquo;<br>
  <br>
  Until a year ago, General James Jones was  NATO&rsquo;s Supreme Allied Commander, Europe.&nbsp;  He too believes that it is vital to study and understand the  implications of the multipolar era: &ldquo;The evolution of the world from the  bipolar 20th century to the very brief unipolar period to&hellip;a  long-term multipolar world is a fact of life we have to deal with and whose  implications we have to analyze very carefully.&rdquo; In his view, &ldquo;Multipolarity is  having a profound impact on the very institutions, both national and  international, that are charged with maintaining and preserving our concept of  what we think of as security&mdash;that impact might make some of us wish for the  good old days of the 20th century, when life seemed to be a little  simpler, a little more ordered, a little bit more predictable, and a little clearer.&rdquo;  General Jones also remarks that &ldquo;the new characteristics are also more  asymmetric, and they include, in my view, a broader range of issues.&rdquo;<br>
  <br>
  According to Russia&rsquo;s Ambassador to the  EU, Vladimir Chizov, it is a fact of the new multipolar world that countries  and international organizations can succeed only by working together, since &ldquo;no  single existing organization, neither the United Nations nor NATO nor the  European Union nor the OSCE, is now capable of dealing with the new security  agenda alone.&rdquo; <br>
  <br>
  While  the factors underlying this shift of influence are complex, General Bentegeat  suggests that there are at least two important consequences: <br>
  <br>
  <strong>1.<em> Military action has reached its limits.</em></strong> It now seems that &ldquo;military action has reached its limits<a href="#_ftn2" name="_ftnref2" title=""> </a> and new approaches are required.&rdquo; From a political perspective, the limits on  military action are clearly shown by the reluctance of governments and  parliaments to provide the budgets that military leaders are seeking. From a military  viewpoint, the limits of military action are demonstrated, according to General  Bentegeat, by the &ldquo;dramatic shortage today in the number of deployable ground  forces, in particular, with helicopters and strategic<a href="#_ftn3" name="_ftnref3" title=""> </a> and tactical air transport.&rdquo; </p>
<p><strong>2<em>. Crisis stabilization is impossible without reconstruction</em>.</strong> The  limits of military efforts can also be seen in the difficulties encountered in  mounting reconstruction efforts, especially in Iraq and Afghanistan. As General  Bentegeat also remarked, &ldquo;We have all become aware of the fact that it is  impossible to stabilize a crisis area without a reconstruction effort.  Attempting to eradicate violence without a global approach to the crisis as  well as a clear understanding of its origins and roots would be illusory.&rdquo; </p>
<p>As  General Jean-Louis Georgelin,<a href="#_ftn4" name="_ftnref4" title=""> </a> the present Chief of the French General Staff, points out, <br>
    <br>
      &ldquo;The best  thought-out strategies are sometimes unable to resolve local crises&mdash;crises  which in turn may have a large impact on an entire region of the world.&rdquo; For  this reason, he suggests that &ldquo;we must reflect on the profound significance of  military action and, consequently, on the role of our armies. First, we must  examine the threats we are facing, then the way we deal with them, and finally  infer practical consequences for the tools at our disposal.&rdquo;</p>
<p align="center" class="style26">Why New Strategies Are Necessary</p>
<p>Consequently,  the present global security challenge is a dual one&mdash;responding to a broad range  of threats while dealing with a rapidly evolving structure of political,  military, and economic influence in an increasingly multipolar world. In this  context, it is not surprising if international organizations such as NATO have  difficulty responding effectively to the challenges. While many are happy with  the progress<a href="#_ftn5" name="_ftnref5" title=""> </a> made at the Riga Summit, Admiral Di Paola is not encouraged by recent progress.  He notes that:</p>
<p>&ldquo;&hellip;nothing remarkable has come from the Riga Summit, just as nothing  remarkable has come from the Prague and Istanbul summits. Somehow we are  floating over the water but with no clear sense of direction.&rdquo; </p>
<p>Admiral  Di Paola believes that the U.S. and Europe need a &ldquo;shared vision&rdquo; in order to  deal with such a broad scope of dangers. Consequently, he calls for &ldquo;a new  covenant, a new strategic concept between Europe and the United States,&rdquo; and a  new mission for NATO: &ldquo;If we do not have a new mission and if we do not have a  new covenant between Europe and the United States, we will not have a shared  future.&rdquo; </p>
<p align="center" class="style26">The Challenges</p>
<p>The  re-examination of threats and strategies, which Admiral Di Paola, General  Georgelin, General Jones, and others are seeking, must deal with difficult challenges.  The threats arise, for example, within areas such as the Middle East or  Afghanistan that are geographically remote from the traditional areas of  operation of many countries. Alternatively, such challenges as energy, global  warming, and cyber-attacks are fundamentally different in nature from the  dangers that NATO and other international security organizations are accustomed  to dealing with.<br>
  <br>
      <strong><em>WMD  proliferation. </em></strong>WMD proliferation  probably remains the gravest challenge, since WMDs might be acquired by a rogue  state or else fall into the hands of extremists. If so, these dangerous weapons  could be used against military or civilian populations with horrible  consequences. The recent instabilities in Pakistan are extremely dangerous: the  country already possesses nuclear weapons. Moreover, some government officials  or their allies are unfriendly to the U.S. and other western countries&mdash;or  sympathetic to extremists.<br>
      <br>
      As the Special Assistant to the U.S. Secretary of  Defense, Dr. Arthur T. Hopkins is responsible for preventing such WMD  proliferation. He believes that the most effective means of doing so is to act  &ldquo;upfront, early in the process, when nonproliferation measures such as  treaties, agreements, and other cooperative measures can actually unite nations  in dialogue about their common goals for global threat reduction.&rdquo; Yet, as Dr.  Hopkins points out, such &ldquo;nonproliferation measures have limits&rdquo; and their  effectiveness is uncertain. Fortunately, there are success stories that fall  exactly in line with the &ldquo;upfront, early on&rdquo; nonproliferation measures he  advocates: One of them is Ambassador Rogelio Pfirter&rsquo;s Organization for the  Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). As the OPCW Director-General, Ambassador  Pfirter believes that &ldquo;. . . a world that is completely free from chemical  weapons appears today not as an improbability but as an achievable goal.&rdquo; He  notes that the OPCW, by seeking to eliminate weapons in possessor states, has  succeeded over the last decade in destroying over &ldquo;71,000 metric tons of  chemical warfare agents and 9,000,000 munitions.&rdquo;<br>
      <br>
      <strong><em>Cyber-security. </em></strong>With  broadened access to computer systems and huge increases in their capabilities,  the risks arising from the information environment are growing rapidly. U.S.  Assistant Secretary of Defense John Grimes notes that the &ldquo;threats we face can  come from anyone,from  harmless teenagers to criminal organizations, non-state  actors, and nation-states that are intentionally infiltrating and corrupting  our systems.&rdquo; Perhaps the most dramatic illustration of the dangers is the  cyber-attack against Estonian institutions early in 2007. Estonian Defense Minister  Jaak Aaviksoo describes the situation: <br>
      <br>
&ldquo;Estonia recently  was hit by a politically motivated cyber-campaign that targeted government,  industry, and private sites using a wide array of offensive techniques. Though  it is difficult to identify the persons, groups, or organizations behind the  attacks, we do know that most of the attacks were carried out not only by  amateurs with primitive methods, but also by highly skilled cyber-attack  specialists with significant resources. The attacks were not only protests  against the Estonian government, but also large-scale, well-coordinated, and  targeted actions that took place at the same time as political, economic, and  media events. In our minds, what took place was cyber-warfare and  cyber-terrorism.&rdquo;<br>
<br>
NATO&rsquo;s Lieutenant General Ulrich Wolf points out that the potential  dangers are even greater: &ldquo;The  threat of cyber-war is real and it&hellip;could be waged against all of us.&rdquo; In a  possible robot attack &ldquo;. . . thousands of computers are connected to overload a  targeted storage device with messages and with the aim to shut down its  services. The systems used are hijacked by the attacker. . . An estimated 50  million machines around the world have been compromised in this way.&rdquo;  Microsoft&rsquo;s Tim Bloechl observes that &ldquo;. . . we do not have adequate laws,  regulations, and policies in place to deal with cyber-attacks. Clearly, this  needs to be improved both nationally and internationally so that  cyber-criminals cannot take free advantage of the vulnerabilities of the  Internet.&rdquo;<br>
  <br>
  <strong><em>Energy and security.</em></strong> Of the issues facing policy makers, energy  security is among the most important. In a recent round table at Stanford  University, the former Commander of the U.S. Central Command, General John  Abizaid, described the Iraq War as being &ldquo;about oil and we cannot really deny  that,&rdquo; and argued for the necessity of reducing instabilities in the region  (including Israeli-Palestinian tensions) and cutting back our dependency on  Middle East oil.<br>
  <br>
  General James Jones describes  energy security as &ldquo;a global, national, and local issue&rdquo; that he sees as  &ldquo;critical to the economic stability of our markets&rdquo; with &ldquo;impact on security  but also on our environment.&rdquo; According to General Jones:<br>
  <br>
&ldquo;Energy  and the energy infrastructure will be true challenges as the global appetite  for energy dramatically increases and our infrastructures do not keep pace, which  is predicted&hellip;The next 20 years will see a dramatic rise in demand for  electricity, natural gas, and transportation fuels in a world that we can only  begin to understand, and they will also see a corresponding impact on the  environment and the global climate.&rdquo;<br>
<br>
General Jones also warns  that nearly 80% of the world&rsquo;s oil reserves are already nationally owned. In  this context, he suggested that it would be unwise for &ldquo;international  organizations to stand idly by as the Gulf region slides towards chaos.&rdquo; He asks,  &ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it time to take proactive action to mitigate the effects of a potential  crisis in that region?&rdquo;<br>
Global warming. Climate change, other  environmental issues, and energy are closely linked. According to General  Jones, in fact, &ldquo;You cannot have  a serious discussion on energy-related issues without having an  environmentalist at the table.&rdquo; The U.K. Foreign Office&rsquo;s Special  Representative for Climate Change, John Ashton, describes climate  change as &ldquo;a threat multiplier&rdquo; that can &ldquo;destabilize and amplify&rdquo; other  factors. Darfur is an example: Over recent decades, a 50% rainfall reduction  (which is consistent with climate change models) seems to have made the crisis  more severe. For such reasons, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni says that  climate change is a form of aggression by developed countries against poor  nations. Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd&rsquo;s recent promise to join the  Kyoto accords offers some hope, however, since all the developed countries  (except the United States) have now committed to join the treaty. <br>
  <br>
  <strong><em>The relationship with Russia.</em></strong> While serving as SACEUR, General Joulwan found that the relationship with Russia was genuinely promising, but he currently  sees &ldquo;a lessening of that relationship.&rdquo; He now asks, &ldquo;How can we revive it?&hellip;Will  it always be adversarial? I don&rsquo;t think it needs to be.&rdquo; France&rsquo;s Deputy Director  for Strategic Affairs, General Robert Ranquet, thinks that the key to  understanding the Russians is to put oneself in their shoes. In the case of the  proposed missile defense &ldquo;third site&rdquo; in Poland and the Czech Republic, he  suggests, &ldquo;Just think how the French people would react if Russia were going to  have a missile base in, let&rsquo;s say, Luxembourg. How would we feel?&rdquo; In the  purely personal view of Jaromir Novotny, the Czech Ambassador to Japan, Russia  feels stronger because of its growing oil wealth. The country consequently  feels able to reaffirm its &ldquo;near abroad&rdquo; by putting pressure on the Baltic  States (with Estonia as the most dramatic recent example). At the same time, Russia  is pressuring &ldquo;Ukraine, where the Orange Revolution was lost&rdquo; as well as  Georgia and Kosovo, where it seeks to veto the area&rsquo;s long-sought independence  from Serbia. According to General Kujat, the Russians know that the small  number of missiles in Poland will not threaten them, so he considers that the  real issue is the following:<br>
  <br>
&ldquo;The  U.S. ignored the status of the other nuclear strategic superpower. Russia is no  longer a world power. It does not have worldwide power projection capability  but it is a nuclear strategic superpower. When you deploy missiles at the front  door of the other nuclear strategic superpower, you ignore the status of that  power.&rdquo;<br>
<br>
General Joulwan believes that, on the  basis of shared interests in Afghanistan and Iraq, we should try to &ldquo;reach out  to the Russians and work together.&rdquo; <a href="#_ftn6" name="_ftnref6" title=""> </a> <br>
<br>
  <strong><em>Security  in the Black Sea and the Balkans</em>.</strong>  According to Georgia&rsquo;s Vice Prime Minister Gela Bezhuashvili, the unresolved  territorial conflicts are among the gravest security problems in the Black Sea  region:<br>
  <br>
&ldquo;They undermine economic  cooperation. They breed suspicion and tensions. . . And they considerably  undermine the statehood of most of the conflict-afflicted countries. . .[which]  renders secessionist entities in these states virtual black holes, plagued by  lawlessness and smuggling.&rdquo; Ukraine&rsquo;s recent Foreign Minister, Borys Tarasyuk,  offers a broader view of the region&rsquo;s challenges. In addition to the frozen  conflicts mentioned by Minister Bezhuashvili (Transdnistra, Abkazia, South  Ossetia, and Nagorno-Karabakh), Minister Tarasyuk lists the following other  dangers:<br>
  <br>
&ldquo;The foreign military presence in the countries of the  region; energy security, which is a challenge not only to the region but to the  entire Euro-Atlantic community; regional borders that are being challenged or  are in the process of settlement; and of course the various ethnic factors.&rdquo; <br>
<br>
While recognizing the need to  resolve such conflicts, Bulgarian Defense Minister Dr. Vesselin Bliznakov  cautions that, <br>
<br>
&ldquo;The military alone cannot be successful. We must  build confidence in the local populations. Without their help, our missions will  not be fully accomplished. Moreover, we need to persuade neighboring countries  to work for regional security. It is rather difficult to create an island of  security in a single state, be it Iraq or Afghanistan.&rdquo; For the case of Kosovo,  Albanian Defense Minister Fatmir Mediu calls particular attention to the  striving by many Kosovars for independence from Serbia.&nbsp; He says that Albania supports &ldquo;&hellip; an  independent Kosovo that respects and guarantees the rights of all its citizens  and its ethnic and cultural groups provides the most suitable and sustainable  solution to this challenge.&rdquo; <br>
<br>
  Lieutenant General Evgeniy  Buzhinsky of the Russian Defense Ministry points out that security in the Black  Sea and Middle East are linked, since vital energy supplies transit through the  Black Sea:<br>
  <br>
&quot;Should there be a  worst-case scenario in the Middle East, the Black Sea region could make an  essential contribution to European energy security. At the same time, its  energy potential is a challenge...its infrastructure is highly attractive to  terrorists of various kinds and cannot absolutely be protected against current  threats.&quot;<br>
  <br>
  <strong><em>Afghanistan and Iraq.</em></strong> At  the present time, Afghanistan is NATO&rsquo;s most important mission; General Egon  Ramms is NATO&rsquo;s operational-level commander for the region. Despite much  progress in recent months, he reports that insurgents there have employed  increased violence, terrorism  against civilians, suicide attacks, and IEDs. This has created a dilemma for  ISAF:<br>
  <br>
&ldquo;Every time we use  kinetic military means, we run the risk of civilian casualties and collateral  damage and we make the task of winning over the support of the local population  more and more difficult. Deciding when and how to respond to asymmetric attacks  is one of the most challenging elements of this campaign and one that we are  learning about while we are conducting the mission.&rdquo; <br>
<br>
One of the serious challenges in  Afghanistan is drug trafficking. As General Jones points out, illegal drugs  tend to be one of &ldquo;the economic underpinnings of extremist movements in the  world.&rdquo; For this reason, some current and past military leaders, including the  recent defense minister of France, have sometimes suggested actually purchasing  the poppy crop from Afghan farmers. Such proposals, however, tend to be  rejected out of hand by political leaders in most countries, on the basis that  illegal conduct should not be rewarded.<br>
<br>
In order to prevail in Afghanistan,  General Ramms emphasizes the importance of &ldquo;sustaining the political consensus  behind NATO&rsquo;s ISAF mission,&rdquo; because the mission is too large to be handled by  just a few NATO member-countries. In any case, SHAPE Chief of Staff General  Schuwirth argues that investments are necessary to develop Afghanistan&rsquo;s own  capabilities, including police forces. This &ldquo;must be part of our success and  exit strategy if we do not want to stay there forever and if we do not want to  develop a culture of dependency or even perceived continuous occupation.&rdquo; In  any case, Italy&rsquo;s NATO Ambassador Stefano Stefanini says that the conflict in  Afghanistan should be considered &ldquo;a work in progress.&rdquo; While it will be  difficult, success is possible provided that &ldquo;the achievements we strive for  are realistic.&rdquo; <br>
<br>
Italy&rsquo;s Military Representative to NATO,  Vice Admiral Ferdinando Sanfelice di Monteforte, sees additional problems,  however: <br>
<br>
&ldquo;NATO, a survivor of  the Cold War success, is in fact bogged down in a war of attrition in  Afghanistan.&nbsp;Reconstruction efforts are only now being coordinated, after  too many years, while stabilization and counter-insurgency operations are being  carried out in the same battle space. Thus, the two efforts are hindering each  other.&rdquo; <br>
<br>
In any consideration of strategies for  dealing with Afghanistan, it is important to consider that they are all  intimately related. As Ambassador Munir Akram, Pakistan&rsquo;s Permanent  Representative to the U.N., points out, &ldquo;The final challenge is that all seven  major flashpoints in the Middle East&mdash;Palestine, Israel, Lebanon, Iraq, Syria,  Iran, and Afghanistan&mdash;are linked. They are linked first by the involvement in  and the interest of the principal powers, the United States and the other major  powers. Second, they are linked by the fact that each contains a very large  element of asymmetric warfare and terrorism. Third, they are linked because the  strategic fight, not only the balance of power, is over the oil resources in  the region.&rdquo;<br>
<br>
As to Iraq, the immediate future is not  promising. Of special concern is a proposed agreement with the Iraqi government  that calls for the presence of U.S. troops in the country for decades to come.  In return for this supposed security assistance, U.S. oil and other firms will  be encouraged to invest in the country. While there will be efforts to put the  agreement in a positive light, most Iraqis will see the agreement as nothing  less than a plan for permanent occupation of the country in order to take out  the country&rsquo;s oil and other sources of wealth.<br>
<br>
  <strong><em>Israel and Palestine. </em></strong>The  conflict between Israel and Palestine is a festering wound, and there cannot be  stable peace in the region until it heals. For this reason, the Annapolis  conference is vitally important, even though President Bush is unwilling to put  necessary pressure on either Israel or Palestine to achieve an agreement.&nbsp; The president&rsquo;s call for a two-state solution  is certainly a most positive step, as is Israeli Prime Minister Olmert&rsquo;s  declaration of willingness to make sacrifices in order to obtain peace. Above  all, the opposition of Hamas and Iranian President Ahmadinejad could be a sign  that a true chance for peace does exist&mdash;otherwise, why would they protest so  fiercely against the Annapolis conference?&nbsp; <br>
  <br>
  The Annapolis meeting may be almost the last chance for peace over  the next few years, because the Israel-Palestine conflict casts such a dark  shadow over the entire region. According to Ambassador Youcef Yousfi, Algeria&rsquo;s  Ambassador to the U.N. and a former foreign minister, &ldquo;The daily acts of  violence in the Middle East and the inability of the international community to  settle the Israel-Palestine conflict also adversely affects the security and  stability of the Mediterranean and undermine&hellip;our dream to make the  Mediterranean an area of peace and prosperity.&rdquo; <br>
  <br>
  According to Ambassador Mahmoud Karem, &ldquo;Prolonging the conflict, avoiding the capture of  historic moments or windows of opportunities to grab peace is a matter of  serious concern for students of history as well as for leaders assiduously  working for the cause of nation building. The argument from Arab  citizens occasionally. . .[is] that Israel is working to prolong the conflict  in order to keep Israel undivided domestically, to weaken the Arab world, and  to push for an unavoidable clash between peoples and leaders, leading possibly  to the. . .decay of Arab unity and cohesion. Proponentsof  this view also argue that such delaying tactics may be used to usurp more land  and create a new fait accompli.&rdquo; Instead,  Morocco&rsquo;s Ambassador to the EU, Menouar Alem, says that &ldquo;the international  community as a whole must engage in a frank, honest, and sincere dialogue on  security issues.&rdquo; Speaking along the same lines, Major General Zhan Maohai,  Vice Chair of China&rsquo;s IISS, sees the need for Israel-Palestine talks based on  the principle of &ldquo;land for peace&rdquo; as established by U.N. resolutions.<br>
  <br>
  <strong><em>How can industry best contribute?</em></strong>&nbsp; The  U.S. Director for International Cooperation in the defense industry is Alfred  Volkman. Since globalization is a key influence on the international defense  industry, he argues that, &ldquo;We need to find ways to take maximum advantage of  its good qualities and to minimize the bad and eliminate the ugly.&rdquo;  Unfortunately, governments often react to the bad aspects of globalization by  resorting to protectionism&rdquo;&mdash;which means that &ldquo;...offsets are unlikely to go away in the near  future, but...nations need to find ways to limit the adverse effects of  offsets.&rdquo; France&rsquo;s Deputy Director for Armaments, Patrick Auroy, who also views  these issues from a government perspective, sees the need for more effective  cooperation between government and industry: <br>
  <br>
&ldquo;All stakeholders must develop federated approaches&mdash;security can no  longer rely upon the aggregation of fragmented, dispersed, non-coherent local  and specific solutions nor rely upon solutions devised in a reactive manner and  inherited from yesterday&rsquo;s practices.&rdquo;<br>
  <br>
  According to Marwan Lahoud, Chief Operating  Officer of EADS, an appropriate response to such challenges is to recognize  that,<br>
  <br>
  &ldquo;...a large part of our security is embedded in the security of our  partners. This situation requires strong cooperation among the industries  involved in the defense and security domains and will see significant  improvements in costs as well as schedule through global leveraging of shared information,  R&amp;D, and investment.&rdquo; <br>
  <br>
  Alenia Aeronautica&rsquo;s CEO, Ing. Giovanni Bertolone, suggests that such changes mean it is time to  view government-industry cooperation in an entirely new way: the extremely  complex rules that defense ministries have developed to deal with industry are  now outdated by the rapid pace of technological progress and changes in the  nature of the threats that must be addressed.&nbsp;  He believes that &ldquo;these procedures must be changed, because&hellip;it is no longer  possible to separate the world between customers and industries. &ldquo;Industry and  government must begin working together from the earliest stages in the planning  and conception of new systems.&nbsp; He also  suggests that &ldquo;...we need to speak more about flexibility and globalization  than about consolidation in certain areas&mdash;for example, we have to look at what  is happening in Russia, what is happening in Asia, and our collaboration with  India.&rdquo; <br>
    <br>
    According to Dr. Edgar Buckley of Thales, &ldquo;If  Europe intends to play a strong security role, it needs a strong European  defense industry supported by a strong defense technology base. And since the  U.S. needs Europe to contribute strongly to defense and security operations in  order to share the burden of maintaining global security and stability, I  believe that the U.S. also needs and should support a strong European DTIB.&rdquo; Lockheed Martin&rsquo;s Senior VP Dr. Robert Trice  says that one of the greatest of the changes in the defense industry is that  &ldquo;&hellip;we are more and more a software- and IT-driven industry&rdquo; which is especially  significant since &ldquo;IT is inherently already globalized.&rdquo; </p>
<p align="center" class="style26">The  Way Ahead</p>
<p>According to U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense  John Grimes, security is a matter of perception&mdash;which depends on where you sit.  Consequently, global security  &ldquo;can mean different things to different people.&rdquo; Drawing on Secretary Grimes&rsquo;  observation, Hungary&rsquo;s Ambassador to NATO Zoltan Martinusz asks in his wrap-up  remarks, &ldquo;Without a shared vision of security, how can we approach it?&rdquo; Let us  therefore heed Admiral Di Paola&rsquo;s call for a broad re-examination of the nature  of security, which will hopefully lead to a re-examination of the present  challenges, a new strategic concept, and a new transatlantic vision.&quot;<br>
  <br>
  As France&rsquo;s Director for  Strategic Affairs, Jean de Ponton d&rsquo;Am&eacute;court, reminds us, &ldquo;History is not  always a product of what we rationally seek, but also tends to exaggerate, to  the nth degree, the effects of unexpected events and unsought developments.&rdquo;  This certainly suggests that the search for new security strategies&mdash;no matter  how well directed or motivated it may be&mdash;is no guarantee of finding the right  way forward. Yet, we can be reasonably certain that, without such an effort, we  are likely to remain mired in our current difficulties.</p>
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