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WASHINGTON, Oct. 26, 2007 – In his first public speech as chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Navy Adm. Michael G. Mullen last night
identified pressing questions the United States faces as it attempts to
counter emerging threats while maintaining a position of leadership.
Speaking to an audience at the Center for a New American Security here,
Mullen said the United States today is confronted by threats from
transnational terrorism and the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction. The country also must preserve the “freedom of action” to
contend with regional instability, deter aggressive action by
potentially hostile state actors, help manage the growing competition
for natural resources, and mitigate the effects of natural disasters
and pandemics, he said.
The
nation will need to maintain a posture that takes advantage of all the
opportunities for international cooperation and progress the globalized
world has to offer, he added.
“So tonight, I invite you to
consider some tough questions and help your military help me rigorously
analyze the major strategic challenges we face as we develop a dynamic
military strategy of cooperation for the 21st century,” Mullen said.
The questions the chairman posed are:
-- How can a violent
extremist movement that increasingly targets the integrated nature of
the largely globalized world be effectively eliminated in both the
short and the long term?
-- How can the development of weapons
of mass destruction by or the transfer of associated technologies to
aggressive regimes and radical extremists like al Qaeda be prevented?
--
How can regional instability stemming from accelerating global
integration, intense nationalist and religious movements, and the
spread of technology throughout the world be mitigated and localized?
--
How can the United States military remain sufficiently capable to deter
aggressive actions by nations like Iran, North Korea, and others who
seek to expand their military capability?
-- How can countries
like China and Russia be effectively engaged to ensure that their
growing regional influence translates to cooperative participation in
the global economic system?
-- How will global
industrialization, world population expansion, and migration affect the
consumption rates, the distribution, and the long term availability of
vital resources such as water and energy?
-- How will
competition for those resources affect global stability, and what role
will the military play in managing these risks?
-- How can the
local, regional, and potentially global effects of another tsunami like
the one that hit in the Indian Ocean Basin almost three years ago or
another earthquake like the one that devastated parts of Pakistan in
2005 or another Hurricane Katrina or even the California wildfires that
dominate the news today be mitigated?
-- What impact will a
massive natural disaster or a global pandemic have throughout the
world, and how can militaries work together to alleviate the shock to
the global system?
-- How can we do all that is required of us and still remain good stewards of our nation's resources?
Mullen
described such queries as “tough questions with no easy answers.” He
encouraged Americans to consider the questions and use them to
stimulate debate.
“I am eager to engage your diverse
intellectual resources and thoughtful debate,” he said, “and welcome
your contributions in identifying potential answers to these and other
critical questions.” |