Archive for December 2012

GLOBAL SECURITY COLLABORATION



Imagine global security driven by collaboration -- among superpowers and governments, through each one’s private sector and the public.

This is the vision of James Stavridis, a highly accomplished U.S. Navy Admiral. Stavridis shares vivid moments from recent military history to explain why security of the future should be built with bridges of collaboration rather than trenches and walls.
·         Verdun was where a battle in France was fought just north of the present NATO headquarters in Belgium. At Verdun, in 1916, over a 300-day period, 700,000 people were killed, or about 2,000 a day.
·         In the Second World War,  2 million people were killed in 300 days during the Battle of Stalingrad. 
·         From the trench warfare of the First World War to the Maginot Line of the Second World War, and then into the Cold War, the Iron Curtain and the Berlin Wall, we continued to build walls and trenches.

What will 21st-century security look like? Navy Admiral James Stavridis suggests that dialogue and openness will be the game-changers. 
He argues that open-source security is about connecting the international, the interagency, intercorporate, the private-public, and lashing them together with strategic communication, largely in social networks.

He avers that our global commons is under attack in a variety of ways, and that the sources of these threats are within us and will not be solved by building walls.

Ocean liners have concertina wire along the sides to prevent pirates from boarding. Piracy is a very active threat today around the world. It's a $10-billion-a-year security threat in the global transport system. Last year, at this time, there were 20 vessels with 500 mariners, mostly Filipinos, held hostage. 

There is now the cyber security threat. At the moment, there are two young men incarcerated. They conducted a credit card fraud that netted them over 10 billion dollars. This is part of cybercrime wave, which is a $2-trillion-a-year glitch in the global economy. So the Internet, which is the fundamental piece of radical openness has huge potential for positive ends, but can likewise be misused or abused.

Another thing to worry about is the threat posed by trafficking, the movement of narcotics, opium, coming out of Afghanistan through Europe over to the United States - about cocaine coming from the Andean Ridge. We also need to stop the movement of illegal weapons and about human trafficking. 

Eighty to 90 percent of the world's poppy, opium and heroin, comes out of Afghanistan.  Of course, terrorism and al Qaeda are also staged from there, including a very strong insurgency embedded there. So this terrorism concern is also part of the global commons that must be addressed.

So, knowing that our 20th-century tools can no longer work, what should be done?
Security will not be delivered solely from the barrel of a gun. We will need the application of military force, but done in a more competent manner.

Open-source security is about international, interagency, intercorporate, private-public connection pulled together by this idea of strategic communication on the Internet.

There are two US Navy hospital ships called the Comfort and Mercy.  The Comfort operates throughout the Caribbean and the coast of South America conducting patient treatments. On a typical cruise, they will do 400,000 patient treatments. It is crewed not strictly by military but by a combination of humanitarian organizations: Operation Hope, Project Smile. Other organizations send volunteers. Interagency physicians and nurses are all part of this effort.

As an example of the impact this can have: there is this little boy, eight years old, who walked with his mother for two days to come to the eye clinic put on by the Comfort. When he was fitted with glasses over his extremely myopic eyes, he suddenly looked up and said,  "Mama, I see the world." Multiply this by 400,000 patient treatments, this private-public collaboration with security forces, and you begin to see the power of creating security in a very different way.

We can do open-source security partnership in disaster relief. US Air Force helicopters participated in disaster relief after the tsunami in 2004 which killed 250,000 people. In each of the following major disasters — the tsunami in 2004, 250,000 dead, the Kashmiri earthquake in Pakistan in 2005, 85,000 dead, the Haitian earthquake, about 300,000 dead, more recently the earthquake-tsunami combination which struck Japan and its nuclear industry — in all of these instances, there were partnerships between international actors, interagency, private-public working with security forces to respond to this kind of natural disaster. So these are examples of this idea of open-source security.

Meanwhile, Xinhua of China quoted Ruan Ruiwen, head of the Hainan Maritime Safety Administration, as saying that the Haixun 21’s departure for the South China Sea marked the beginning of Chinese sailing beyond coastal waters - a move that threatens the territorial boundaries of other countries.

“In the past, Hainan provincial maritime law enforcement entities could only cover coastal waters and never reached the high seas. The newly enlisted Haixun 21 ends the history of no large ocean-going patrol vessels in South China Sea,” Ruan said.

Xinhua also quoted Huang He, deputy head of the maritime bureau of China’s Ministry of Transport, as saying that the vessel “will monitor maritime traffic safety, investigate maritime accidents, detect pollution, carry out search and rescue work, and fulfill international conventions.”

In summary let me cite Wikipedia, which we appreciate and use all the time to look up facts. Wikipedia is not created by 12 brilliant people locked in a room writing articles. Wikipedia is made up of tens of thousands of people inputting information, and every day millions of people withdrawing that information. It's a perfect image for the fundamental point that no one of us is as smart as all of us thinking together. No one person, no one alliance, no one nation, no one of us is as smart as all of us thinking together. We should not forget the Arab Spring, and the power that brought it about. 

The vision statement of Wikipedia is very simple: a world in which every human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge.  By combining international, interagency, intercorporate, private-public, strategic communication, together, in this 21st century, we can create the sum of all security.

These concepts are on the table in full view of all competing world powers. What the world needs is honesty and transparency in open dialogue among decision-makers, sans national pride, biases and stubborn self interests. Hopefully, back channel talks are already in the works, defining national roles and even intercorporate boundaries and limitations. Otherwise, the first shot to trigger world holocaust can come from an ill-tempered militiaman guarding turtles in a small Pacific island.

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