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National Defence College. Department of Strategic and Defence Studies. Regional Conflicts & Natural Resources Looking for Reasons, Rationale and Solutions. Director Colonel, Lic.Pol.Sci Juha Pyykönen. Sustainable Global Technologies HUT, 16 Oct 2006. National Defence College
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National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Regional Conflicts & Natural Resources Looking for Reasons, Rationale and Solutions DirectorColonel, Lic.Pol.Sci Juha Pyykönen Sustainable Global Technologies HUT, 16 Oct 2006
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Regional Conflicts & Natural Resources • Part I • Short introduction to a theoretical approach • Case Study: Oil & Middle East • Part II • Explaining past, current and future conflicts through their root reasons
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Regional Conflicts & Natural Resources • Part I • Theoretical approach is based on Strategic Studies • state actors and their security goals to be met through necessary means • a state is sovereign (nobody above to govern, anarchy=lack of governance) • most important is sovereignty and independence of a state • common distrust (=security dilemma) resulting to arms race, competition • key definitions: (limits indicate number of deaths per year [25], total [1000]) • a conflict: umbrella for all situations where contradicting interests are dealt with organized violence or a threat of it, includes a crisis • a crisis: situation with high level of threat and risk together with large destruction • a war: an organized and politically directed violence between sovereign states • tools for conflict/crisis/war management: numerous civilian and military activities in order to control and de-escalate in proportion to the level of a conflict/crisis/war
GRAND STRATEGY of a state National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies POLITICAL REALISMMAJOR FACTORS of a Grand Strategy Resources Geopolitical Political Military
GEOGRAPHICAL factors • Location • Size and Shape • Internal structure • Terrain, waterways, obstacles • Climate • Soil, vegetation • Natural Resources • RESOURCE factors • Natural resources • Population • Economics (structure, productivity, quality) • Transport, Communication (SLOC) • Academic research • Technical development • Costs National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies D I S T A N C E S • POLITICAL factors • Political system, level of integration • Political interests and goals • Political situation (internal, global) • Political history • Conception of the world • International agreements, commitments • Common opinion • MILITARY factors • Military leadership • Threat scenarios • Military strategy • Military power and organisation • Technology • Experiences, common tradition • National cohesion
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies • Conflicts have changed since the Cold War • Main reasons for the change • International system is more flexible (multi-/unipolar) • Concept of security is much broader • Closer linkage between political and economic • Characteristics • “Nukes” lost its linkage to Low Intensity Conflicts • No states as parties to conflict, but non-state • “Victory” as final goal less important, but compromises • Need for new tools for conflict/crisis management
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Conflicts since WW II (1945-) 1 Annual number of civilian and inter-state conflicts
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Conflicts since WW II (1945-) 2 Armed conflicts 1990-2000 (Wallensteen-Sollenberg 2001)
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Conflict Pyramid/Ladder/Cycle
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies • Part II • Explaining past, current and future conflicts • through their root reasons • 1st Example: Population and Civil Conflict • (Cincotta R. – Engelman, R. – Anastasion, D.: The Security Demographic. Population and Civil Conflicts after the Cold War, Population Action International, 2003) • 3 stress factors add to the risk of a civil conflict • “Young Adults” • “Urbanization” • “Availability of water and cropland” • In addition, losing 10% of work force in every 5 years
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies • Part II • Explaining past, current and future conflicts through their root reasons • 2 nd Example: Governance and Civil Conflict • (World Bank) • Freedom of Opinion, Responsibility: political, societal, human rights • 2) Political instability and violence, incl. terrorism • 3) Good Governance: governance and quality of public services • 4) Level of Administration in Economy: hindrances of economy • 5) Rule of Law: Police, Independent Jurisdiction, Crime etc. • 6) Level of Corruption
Best with all 6 indicators • Lähde: World Bank
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies • Part II • Explaining past, current and future conflicts through their root reasons • 3rd Example: Conflict Indicators • (World Bank) • 9 indicating factors in relation to the risk of a conflict • “Low Per Capita” • “Primary Commodity Exports” (Dependence on) • “Youth Unemployment” • “Militarization” (GNP on Defence) • “Ethnic Dominance” (Ethno-linquistic Group of Pop 45-90%) • “Political and Civil Rights” (Freedom House) • “Political Instability” • “Reoccurrence of Conflict” (in years)
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies • Part II • Explaining past, current and future conflicts through their root reasons • 4th Example: Reasons for Conflicts • Smith, D.: Atlas of war and peace, 2003) • 4 reasons for war • “Poverty” • “Human Rights” • “Political System” • “Ethnic Groupings”
Part II - Case Study: Oil and Geopolitics in the Greater Middle East DirectorColonel, Lic.Pol.Sci Juha Pyykönen
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies CONSUMPTION TRENDSFrom coal to oil and towards hydrogen ? Natural gas Oil Coal Renewable energy sources (hydropower, wind etc.) Medieval 1900 2050-
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Energy resources as a source for a conflict 1 (4) • Most significant source for conflicts with military dimension • Rationale: Industrial countries heavily dependant on energy • to be continued for 50-70 years • One who controls oil and gas, rules energy-dependent states ! • Surplus oil regions today: all are ‘less developed’ • Greater Middle East, Central Asia, North Africa • Nigeria, Russia, Norway, Mexico, Venezuela • Underproduction regions today: all ‘most developed countries’ • EU, India, China, Japan, Australia, USA • Sub-Saharan Africa, most of Latin America • Most significant gas deposits located with oil !
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Energy resources as a source for a conflict 2 (4) • Most significant producers in Greater Middle East & Central Asia • Characteristics of local “players” • Saudi Arabia: poor governance, terrorism, pro-American, internal problems • Iraq: oil and gas, poor governance, fundamentalism, internal divisions, internal post-war conflict, domestic terror • Iran: oil and gas, poor governance, fundamentalism, WMD • Israel & Palestine: turmoil, pro-American and ally • Afghanistan: pipelines, post-war conflict, drug production • Georgia: pipelines, Russian and US interests • Central Asia: oil and gas, Chinese & Russian & American interests • Caucasian: oil and gas, pipelines, Russian influence, Nagorno-Karabah
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Energy resources as a source for a conflict 3 (4) • Why USA has to gain control over the region? • Need for energy, but preferably abroad thus saving domestic resources • Islamic self-esteem and attitudes towards West increasingly hostile • Biological fuels as a strategic resource only if no oil and gas available • Alternative regions aren’t less challenging? • Venezuela: internal turmoil, risk of taxing • Nigeria: corruption, south-north conflict ongoing, bad governance • Libya: previously “ an evil”, now rehabilitated • Russia: dependency on a former enemy not acceptable • North Sea: modest resources, used by allies in Europe • Greater Middle East & Central Asia retain their significance for next few decades for all major states except Russia
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies Time-critical conclusions to an “eternal issue” • Short-term development • Key: Iraqi oil production, Iranian policies, internal situation in Saudi Arabia • USA continues to maintain control (through military means, if necessary) • EU to get used to US policy, or to become dependent on Russia’s energy • Long-term development • China must find optional energy resources (Russia, Iran, Sudan) • India should get her resources elsewhere (Iran) • Russia will invest heavily on energy production to gain influence, currency • Middle East producers looking for alternative to challenge US hegemony • Finally, oil and gas maintain their status as the strategic resource! • World revolves around oil for decades – crises appear in the future, too • However, enough oil and gas for next 50+ years.
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies CONCLUSION • A New Type of Conflict is A Reality: • Less military by nature • More Political, Economic, Societal, Environmental • Tools for Conflict/Crisis/War Management developed accordingly. • Enhanced cooperation is a necessity.
National Defence College Department of Strategic and Defence Studies QUESTIONS - COMMENTS - VIEWS DirectorLieutenant Colonel, Lic.Pol.Sci Juha Pyykönen