Pete Buttigieg wants to create “a Senior Climate Security role in the Secretary of Defense’s office responsible for managing climate security risks.” Elizabeth Warren insists “our military can help lead the fight in combating climate change.” And the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis tells us our primary goal should be to “Confront Climate Risks to America’s National Security and Restore America’s Leadership on the International Stage.” Everywhere we turn in liberal discourse, high-profile Democrats and center-left media are framing climate change as a “national security” risk requiring national security solutions.
Politically, it’s a clever enough frame. Like mocking Trump for being too nice to North Korea or latching on to anti-Trump Gold Star families, it’s a cheap and easy way Democrats can drape themselves in the flag while pushing an ostensibly liberal position: We know it’s a real threat because our military takes it seriously and they can be part of the solution - unlike those backwards Republicans we actually care what the generals are saying.
The primary problem with this is that the military speaks of climate change the way Davos discusses "inequality"––in scare quotes, as a threat to be managed and mitigated, not solved, and certainly not seen as a moral imperative to be addressed with issues of social justice and racism in mind. The Pentagon, by its own admission, views climate chaos as a risk factor among many, and its primary goal is to protect American capital and the U.S.-led global expansionist and extractivist economic order: two institutions fundamentally in need of overhaul if climate change is going to be reversed. Indeed turning to the US military to help solve climate crisis is like asking the police to solve institutional racism––at best they can suppress protestors and secure property in the event of mass unrest, but the thing that needs overthrowing is the thing they’re charged most with protecting.
One this second episode of our two-part series on climate chaos, we’ll explain why the DoD––and the military-industrial-complex more broadly––cannot be a partner in the battle against climate change because their prime objective is protecting its main drivers of mindless growth and war, why demilitarization and global cooperation are key to curbing emissions in time, and why creeping militarism, nationalist economic policy in green “tech” and other forms of liberal jingoism are subtly shifting mainstream liberal climate policy to the Right.
Our guest is Lorah Steichen of the National Priorities Project.
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Lorah Steichen is the Outreach Coordinator for the National Priorities Project at the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS), a project dedicated to fighting for a U.S. federal budget that prioritizes peace, economic security and shared prosperity. Prior to IPS, Lorah worked for the NAACP, where she supported NAACP branches organizing for environmental and climate justice through the lens of the Association’s historic civil rights mission.
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No Warming, No War: How Militarism Fuels the Climate Crisis—and Vice Versa
Lorah Steichen and Lindsay Koshgarian | April 2020 | National Priorities Project
Alternatives to Greening the Military
Lorah Steichen and Lindsay Koshgarian | April 2020 | National Priorities Project
Buttigieg and Centrist Dems Want a Military Response to Climate Change. That’s Dangerous.
Sarah Lazare | February 12, 2020 | In These Times
War Is an Enormous Threat to the Climate Movement
Sarah Lazare | February 10, 2020 | In These Times
“All hell breaking loose”: How the Pentagon is planning for climate change
Alex Ward | February 24, 2020 | Vox
Don’t Let China Win the Green Race
John Kerry and Ro Khanna | December 9, 2019 | The New York Times
Is It Imperialist to “Green” the Military?
Emily Tamkin | November 27, 2019 | The New Republic
Climate change is about how we treat each other
Eric Holthaus | September 30, 2019 | The Correspondent
Climate Change Is Not World War
Roy Scranton | September 18, 2019 | The New York Times
Why the Guardian is changing the language it uses about the environment
Damian Carrington | May 17, 2019 | The Guardian
Militaries go green, rethink operations in face of climate change
Linda Givetash | April 27, 2019 | NBC News
Climate Change. War. Poverty. How the U.S.-China Relationship Will Shape Humanity’s Path.
Calvin Cheung-Miaw and Max Elbaum | March 21, 2019 | In These Times
We Don’t Need a ‘War’ on Climate Change, We Need a Revolution
Eric S. Godoy and Aaron Jaffe | October 31, 2016 | The New York Times
Sara Stefanini | December 31, 2015 | Politico
Mike Prokosch | March 26, 2012 | Institute for Policy Studies
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For a full transcript of this episode, go here.
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