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Chapter X. Engage the Opportunities and Confront the Challenges of Globalization

 Section Engage the Opportunities and Confront the Challenges of Globalization

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        In recent years, the world has witnessed the growing importance of a set of opportunities

        and challenges that were addressed indirectly in National Security Strategy 2002:  the

        national security implications of globalization.  

         

        Globalization presents many opportunities.  Much of the world's prosperity and improved

        living standards in recent years derive from the expansion of global trade, investment,

        information, and technology.  The United States has been a leader in promoting these

        developments, and we believe they have improved significantly the quality of life of the

        American people and people the world over.  Other nations have embraced these

        opportunities and have likewise benefited.  Globalization has also helped the advance of

        democracy by extending the marketplace of ideas and the ideals of liberty.  

         

        These new flows of trade, investment, information, and technology are transforming

        national security.  Globalization has exposed us to new challenges and changed the way

        old challenges touch our interests and values, while also greatly enhancing our capacity

        to respond.  Examples include:

             

        ·  Public health challenges like pandemics (HIV/AIDS, avian influenza) that

             recognize no borders.  The risks to social order are so great that traditional public

             health approaches may be inadequate, necessitating new strategies and responses.

                                                                 

        ·  Illicit trade, whether in drugs, human beings, or sex, that exploits the modern era's

             greater ease of transport and exchange.  Such traffic corrodes social order; bolsters

             crime and corruption; undermines effective governance; facilitates the illicit transfer

             of WMD and advanced conventional weapons technology; and compromises

             traditional security and law enforcement.

             

        ·  Environmental destruction, whether caused by human behavior or cataclysmic

             mega-disasters such as floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, or tsunamis.  Problems of

             this scope may overwhelm the capacity of local authorities to respond, and may even

             overtax national militaries, requiring a larger international response.  

                                                                 

        These challenges are not traditional national security concerns, such as the conflict of

        arms or ideologies.  But if left unaddressed they can threaten national security.  We have

        learned that:

             

        ·  Preparing for and managing these challenges requires the full exercise of national

             power, up to and including traditional security instruments.  For example, the U.S.

             military provided critical logistical support in the response to the Southeast Asian

             tsunami and the South Asian earthquake until U.N. and civilian humanitarian

             responders could relieve the military of these vital duties.

         

        ·  Technology can help, but the key to rapid and effective response lies in achieving

             unity of effort across a range of agencies.  For example, our response to the Katrina

 

                                                                                           National Security Strategy  47


 

                   and Rita hurricanes underscored the need for communications systems that remain

                   operational and integrated during times of crisis.  Even more vital, however, is

                   improved coordination within the Federal government, with state and local partners,

                   and with the private sector.

               

             ·  Existing international institutions have a role to play, but in many cases coalitions of

                   the willing may be able to respond more quickly and creatively, at least in the short

                   term.  For example, U.S. leadership in mobilizing the Regional Core Group to

                   respond to the tsunami of 2004 galvanized the follow-on international response.

             

             ·  The response and the new partnerships it creates can sometimes serve as a catalyst for

                   changing existing political conditions to address other problems.  For example, the

                   response to the tsunami in Southeast Asia and the earthquake in Pakistan developed

                   new lines of communication and cooperation at a local level, which opened the door

                   to progress in reconciling long-standing regional conflicts in Aceh and the Kashmir.  

             

             Effective democracies are better able to deal with these challenges than are repressive or

             poorly governed states.  Pandemics require robust and fully transparent public health

             systems, which weak governments and those that fear freedom are unable or unwilling to

             provide.  Yet these challenges require effective democracies to come together in

             innovative ways.  

             

             The United States must lead the effort to reform existing institutions and create new ones

             ­ including forging new partnerships between governmental and nongovernmental actors,

             and with transnational and international organizations.

             

             To confront illicit trade, for example, the Administration launched the Proliferation

             Security Initiative and the APEC Secure Trade in the APEC Region Initiative, both of

             which focus on tangible steps governments can take to combat illegal trade.  

             

             To combat the cultivation and trafficking of narcotics, the Administration devotes over

             $1 billion annually to comprehensive counternarcotics efforts, working with

             governments, particularly in Latin America and Asia, to eradicate crops, destroy

             production facilities, interdict shipments, and support developing alternative livelihoods.  

             

             To confront the threat of a possible pandemic, the Administration took the lead in

             creating the International Partnership on Avian and Pandemic Influenza, a new global

             partnership of states committed to effective surveillance and preparedness that will help

             to detect and respond quickly to any outbreaks of the disease.


National Security Strategy 48

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