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12/6/2015 4:08:41 AM
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Climate Change and National Security

The Department of Defense http://www.defense.gov/News-Article-View/Article/612710 [quote]Global climate change will aggravate problems such as poverty, social tensions, environmental degradation, ineffectual leadership and weak political institutions that threaten stability in a number of countries[/quote][quote]The report finds that climate change is a security risk, Pentagon officials said, because it degrades living conditions, human security and the ability of governments to meet the basic needs of their populations. Communities and states that already are fragile and have limited resources are significantly more vulnerable to disruption and far less likely to respond effectively and be resilient to new challenges, they added.[/quote] CIA and Department of Homeland Security http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dr20121112-ciacommissioned-climate-change-report-outlines-perils-for-u-s-national-security [quote] the accelerating pace of climate change will place severe strains on U.S. military and intelligence agencies in coming years; the reason, according the National Research Council, the U.S. top scientific research body: climate changes will trigger increasingly disruptive developments around the world; a 206-page National Research Council study, commissioned by the CIA and other U.S. intelligence services, concludes that states will fail, large populations subjected to famine, flood, or disease will migrate across international borders, and national and international agencies will not have the capacity or resources to cope with the resulting conflicts and crises[/quote] Study of climate change and the effect of the Syrian Drought. http://m.pnas.org/content/112/11/3241 [quote]There is evidence that the 2007−2010 drought contributed to the conflict in Syria. It was the worst drought in the instrumental record, causing widespread crop failure and a mass migration of farming families to urban centers. Century-long observed trends in precipitation, temperature, and sea-level pressure, supported by climate model results, strongly suggest that anthropogenic forcing has increased the probability of severe and persistent droughts in this region, and made the occurrence of a 3-year drought as severe as that of 2007−2010 2 to 3 times more likely than by natural variability alone. We conclude that human influences on the climate system are implicated in the current Syrian conflict.[/quote] This really shouldn't be a partisan issue. To continue to play this issue as a right/left argument is simply absurd, and is only indicative of ulterior motives.

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