Sunteți pe pagina 1din 4

Syria, Yemen, Libya - one factor unites these failed

states, and it isn't religion


Jack Goldstone is an expert on revolutions at the Woodrow Wilson Center and
George Mason University and a global fellow at PS21. This article was first published
on www.reuters.com.
As world leaders gather in Paris this week to address climate change, they will labor
under the shadow of recent attacks by Islamic State. Yet as they think about climate
issues, they should remember that the connection between climate change and Islamic
State - and more broadly, between climate change and political instability - is not just a
coincidence. It may instead be the key reality of the 21st century.
The rise of IS was a direct result of the failure of the Syrian regime, as it was beset by
urban uprisings in 2011. Yet those uprisings did not come out of nowhere, and were not
merely inspired by protests in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt. Syria was an increasingly
prosperous country in the 1990s, with its various ethnic and religious groups working
together in cities.
Yet between 2006 and 2009, Syria was crippled by its worst drought in modern history.
A recent article in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences showed that this
drought was not natural. Rather, hotter temperatures and the weakening of winds that
bring moisture from the Mediterranean were likely the region's reflection of rising
greenhouse gas emissions, according to computer simulations.
Combined with poor water management and government neglect of farm conditions, the
drought caused a collapse of farming in northeastern Syria. Seventy-five percent of
farmers suffered total crop failure, and 80 percent of livestock died. Around 1.5 million
farming families migrated to cities to look for work and food, joining millions of refugees
from Palestine and Iraq. The added burden these refugees placed on Syria's cities, and
the distress of the farmers who lost their lands due to the drought, helped fuel the spread
of rebellion against the Assad regime.

To be sure, climate change is never the single most important cause of conflict; it is what
academics call a "structural threat." Governments that can respond to such threats because they have popular and elite support, have resources to respond to challenges,
are willing to deploy those resources to distribute food and aid to the needy, and have
diversified economies that can produce jobs - are not going to be shaken because of
global warming. If we lived in a world where all regions were led by such governments,
then climate change might be an economic burden and force changes in our lifestyle, but
it would not bring the threat of state breakdown and civil war.
Unfortunately, Central America, most of Africa, the Middle East, and much of South Asia
are dominated by precisely the wrong kind of governments. These regions have too many
fragile states where large segments of the elite or populace distrust the government
because of ethnic, religious, or economic exclusion; where governments have limited
economic resources to respond to humanitarian crises; where governments are
disinclined to respond to problems among marginalized groups or regions of their
country; and where the economies are too dependent on agriculture or mining, and so
cannot provide work for people if they are forced to move.
In such countries - or worse, in clusters of such countries - a spike in food prices, a
severe drought or a ravaging flood can provide a harsh test of government. And where
one government fails, the ensuing conflicts can spread to other fragile states and inflame
an entire region.
Today the world is seeing an epidemic of failed states: Libya, Syria, Iraq, Yemen,
Afghanistan, Nigeria, the Central African Republic, Somalia and Mali have all lost
control of parts of their territory. In every case, the weakening of state authority has
created space for militants, and particularly for IS, to recruit followers and conduct
operations. The conflicts have also sent massive waves of refugees to a Europe that is
unprepared to handle them.
Think now of a world in which the population under age 24 in Africa has increased by
500 million people, and the populations of Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Palestine, and
Yemen have increased by over 100 million people. That is the UN's projection for 2050.
Add to this mix a combination of severe droughts, devastating floods, crop failures, and
massive migrations that create collisions and heightened competition among ethnic and
religious groups struggling for land, resources and incomes. Then think of how the

governments of these regions could and would respond to such crises, and whether
Europe and other safe havens could absorb even a tiny fraction of the resulting refugees.
If such a world exists one day, the current crisis in Syria and the actions of IS terrorists
may be multiplied many fold.
World leaders in Paris should therefore focus on their opportunity to remove one of the
key drivers of potential state breakdowns and terrorism in the future, by adopting
vigorous measures to halt global warming.
It is already too late for modest measures to address global warming. As the study of
Syria's drought shows, the weather pattern changes, depriving fragile regions of
adequate rainfall, are already underway. Preventing further disasters will require more
than just holding the line at today's levels of carbon emissions in China, the United
States and Europe. Africa's current carbon footprint is tiny, as its population is so lacking
in access to energy that each African produces less than one-seventh as much carbon
dioxide as each Chinese. Yet by 2050, if Africa were to emit as much carbon per capita as
China does today, Africa's carbon emissions would be as much as China and the United
States combined produce today.
In other words, if Africa advances just to Chinese levels of fossil fuel consumption by
2050, then even if today's major emitters manage to stop all of their own emissions
growth, total global emissions will still grow by 40 percent by mid-century, blowing past
the carbon budget required to keep total temperature rise within the two-degree limit
recommended by the International Panel on Climate Change to avoid severe climate
deterioration.
To accommodate necessary growth in energy use in Africa - vital to making the countries
of Africa more resilient and better able to provide jobs and security to their growing
populations - the world must move quickly on two fronts. The major emitters must first
find ways to quickly reduce their carbon output from today's levels. And they must
develop low-carbon pathways for economic growth so the rest of the world can develop
without creating new structural threats for political crises.
These goals can be met. If the United States, Europe and China all reduced their carbon
emissions by 20 percent, other developing countries could increase their carbon

emissions by almost one-third without an increase in world carbon output. That should
be the goal for the next 10 years.
Beyond that date, it is critical to find ways by which all countries can escape dependence
on fossil fuels for their economies, and reduce global emissions while still promoting
global economic growth.
Terrorism thrives among weak and failed states, and among displaced people. If we are
to reduce both in the future, we need to make sure that our climate does not further
deteriorate. If we fail to prevent continued global warming, the rise in political
temperature may far outstrip the warming of the weather outside.
Project for Study of the 21st Century is a non-national, nongovernmental, nonpartisan
organization. All views expressed are the authors own.

S-ar putea să vă placă și