Eco-Disarmament: Clinton-Gore’s Global Warming Crusade Threatens U.S. Military — As Well As The Nation’s Economy

(Washington, D.C.): A new front has
just been opened in what promises to
become one of the great political battles
of the late 20th Century: the
Luddite Clinton-Gore campaign to subject
the U.S. economy to potentially crippling
international regulation in the name of
reducing global warming — a threat that
remains, at best unproven, at worst
non-existent.

Ground Zero: The Pentagon

It seems the Administration is
thinking about issuing an Executive Order
directing federal agencies to start
reducing their emissions of so-called
“greenhouse gases” even before
it commits the Nation as a whole to doing
so as part of a treaty to be signed next
December in Kyoto, Japan. Now, there
is one federal agency whose greenhouse
gas emissions dwarf those of the rest of
the government: the Department of
Defense.
If the Clinton-Gore
team has its way, eco-disarmament will
now be added to the other jihads
(severe budget cuts, demoralizing social
experimentation, open-ended peacekeeping
missions, rash arms control initiatives,
etc.) that it has been waging with
devastating effect against the U.S.
military.

According to the 12 September edition
of the trade publication Inside EPA,
“White House sources say the order
could be issued as early as October, when
the Administration plans to host a
high-profile climate change
conference.” The purpose of such
taxpayer-underwritten extravaganzas, of
which this “summit” will be
just one element, is to propagandize the
public about the supposed danger posed by
global warming — and the need the
Administration consequently sees for
draconian steps to cut America’s
energy-consumption.

What Clinton-Gore’s
Initiative Would Mean for the National
Security

While it is unclear precisely what
would be required by the executive order,
worst-case planners in the Pentagon must
anticipate that Clinton-Gore will demand
actual reductions in the armed forces’
emissions. The following could be among
the repercussions of such a
enviro-diktat:

  • Military readiness will
    have to be subordinated to
    greenhouse gas impact.

    Operational deployments of
    gas-guzzling ground, sea and air
    units will have to be cut back.
    We must hope that those disposed
    to threaten U.S. interests will
    not mistake the diminished
    American forward presence and
    power projection capabilities
    that ensue as evidence of
    exploitable weakness and/or lack
    of resolve that invites attack.
  • Realistic training —
    already suffering from the
    cumulative effects of more than a
    decade of budget cuts — will
    assuredly be reduced still
    further.
    Even before the
    “big green de-machine”
    took on the U.S. military, there
    were horror stories about troops
    at installations like Fort Hood
    in Texas running uphill and down
    making noises like the tanks they
    were supposed to be driving. Who
    cares if such exercises sap esprit
    de corps
    and combat
    performance? The important thing
    is that the only gas they emit
    will be carbon dioxide from
    exhaling “grunts.”

Of course, there will be a
premium in the future on more
fuel-efficient military hardware.

For example, the thickness of a tank’s
armor, the size of its gun or the speed
with which it can maneuver will no longer
be the critical criterion. From now on
the Army will have to buy smaller,
lighter-weight machines in the interest
of reducing emissions. The increased
carnage on the Nation’s highways arising
from such an investment strategy will
pale by comparison with the toll likely
to be taken on the battlefields of the
future.

  • Perhaps none of this will
    matter very much though since it
    will probably be the case that
    the United States will not be
    able to afford to fight wars
    under the new Kyoto regime.

    After all, practically any
    contingency would require lots of
    fossil fuels to be burned up as
    the U.S. military prepares to go
    and gets to the theater of
    operations, to say nothing of any
    combat it actually engages in.
    The public may oppose practically
    any future action in defense of
    American interests overseas if,
    in addition to the potential loss
    of life and national treasure
    entailed, the conflict can be
    fought only by denying the Nation
    the opportunity to produce
    greenhouse emissions associated
    with economic growth.

  • Those who believe that wars might
    nonetheless have to be fought
    should take no comfort from an
    absurd scenario that could arise
    under the Kyoto treaty:
    Developing nations — if they
    are covered at all by the accord

    (a big “if”) — may be
    awarded some kind of pollution
    credit which they can barter or
    sell to dastardly developed
    nations who need to emit more
    than the permitted quantity of
    greenhouse gasses. In theory,
    then, if the United States finds
    itself obliged to fight say,
    China or North Korea or Iran, it
    could ask them (or their friends
    in the so-called
    “non-aligned movement”)
    to give us the enviro-chits
    America needs to go to war. Fat
    chance!

The New ‘Commissars’

It is hardly an exaggeration to
project that where all this will lead is
toward a system like that of the
communist political commissars assigned
to the old Red Army. In the future, an
environmental monitor might have to be
assigned to every unit of the U.S.
military to ensure compliance with
domestic or international pollution
limitations. Perhaps they will be
accompanied by international lawyers

charged with assuring adherence to the
myriad arms control obligations that will
increasingly constrain American, but not
enemy, operations.

The one possible up-side is that the
environmental and legal commissars would
almost certainly have to be conscripted;
few if any would volunteer to serve in
the dangerous conditions they will be
imposing on the U.S. armed forces. Such
assignments should have the twin benefits
of keeping them away from the negotiating
table and sensitizing them to the
deplorable practical effects of their
well-intentioned policies.

The Bottom Line

Of course, President Clinton
might yet choose to finesse all these
problems for the national security by
exempting the Defense Department from his
executive order and, for that matter,
from the Kyoto treaty.
A still
better approach, though, would be to
spare the Nation as a whole the severe
and unjustifiable costs associated with
what can only be called a
“scientifically challenged”
scheme for global climate control.

Frank Gaffney, Jr.
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