www.ozy.com [OZY]() Sponsored by Sep 18, 2021 TODAY Rarely a day passes when we donât hear of catastrophic floods or devastating fires somewhere. Sadly, our newsfeed is often also dominated by acts of extremism or terrorism. Itâs tempting to treat these as two distinct threats: one caused by climate change, the other by radical ideologies. But thereâs growing evidence to suggest that the two are inextricably linked. And as I argue in this weekâs Global Dispatch, itâs time for the worldâs spooks to join the fight against climate change if they want to stop terrorists. Charu Sudan Kasturi, Senior Editor The Talibanâs Hidden Ally When President Joe Biden and 40 other world leaders gathered for a virtual summit on climate change organized by the U.S. in April, the list of speakers had an unlikely name on it: Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines. âFor the intelligence community, climate change is both a near-term and a long-term threat that will define the next generation,â she said, addressing the group. Itâs extremely rare for Americaâs top spy to speak to a giant gathering of foreign leaders â especially one including the countryâs biggest strategic rivals. Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin were in Hainesâ audience. Yet the moment captured a growing acknowledgment by intelligence agencies the world over that climate change is no longer a subject related primarily to science and economics. Today, itâs increasingly a national security threat thatâs already impacting how countries deal with the issues of mass migration, extremism and deadly terrorism. This week, the United Nations warned that a million Afghan children could die of hunger as the war-torn South Asian nation faces a crippling food shortage. This comes weeks after the Taliban grabbed control of most of the country, including the capital, Kabul. The U.N. has managed to secure pledges of donations worth more than $1 billion for Afghanistan, but itâs unclear just how far that will go in preventing starvation deaths in a country where poverty levels are projected to shoot up from an already desperate 72% to 97% by mid-2022. What is clear is that this growing humanitarian crisis helped catalyze the Talibanâs return to power in Afghanistan. In evaluating the stunning collapse of the countryâs democratically elected government last month, analysts have focused on that regimeâs corruption â as well as on Americaâs failure to secure commitments from the Taliban before agreeing to withdraw and the lack of a fight put up by NATO-trained Afghan soldiers. But the Talibanâs rapid resurgence in recent years, culminating in this moment, has also been aided by historic extreme weather events â floods and droughts â that have devastated the livelihoods of Afghanistanâs farmers. More than 60% of Afghans depend on agriculture for income. With that no longer a reliable source, theyâve been more vulnerable to the entreaties of a militant group willing to pay them a steady income to take up arms against a discredited regime â one that let them down. This too has been a factor in the Talibanâs dramatic drive to power that forced America, the worldâs most powerful nation, to beat a chaotic retreat from the country. 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Also in Africaâs most populous nation, a growing scramble for limited resources between farmers and herders has in recent years spiraled into a [deadly ethnic conflict]( between the Fulani and Hausa communities. Meanwhile, according to the Global Terrorism Index released by the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP), Burkina Faso, Mozambique, Congo, Mali, Niger, Cameroon and Ethiopia are all among the nations that have seen an increase in terrorism. Common to all of them, the IEP points out, is the fact that they face âvarious ecological threats.â Chad, another country on the front line of the fight against terrorism, is among the nations most vulnerable to climate change. [Lake Chad has shrunk by 90%]( since the 1960s. Across the continent in Somalia, droughts have forced the displacement of 1.3 million people since last year. Itâs little surprise that the country is a [hotbed of extremism](. At least seven people were killed in a suicide car bombing in the capital Mogadishu on Tuesday. The al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab terror group has claimed responsibility. And in Iraq, water shortages fueled the Islamic State groupâs recruitment. War on Terror = War on Climate Change All of this tells us that the next iteration of the war on terror needs to invest heavily in combating climate change if it is to be successful. For the moment at least, the U.S. and most of its allies donât have the appetite for sustained military battles overseas. Thatâs understandable after the devastating â and often frustrating â wars of the past two decades. Like America in Afghanistan and Iraq, France is withdrawing troops from the Sahel region of Africa. But thereâs another unlikely way they could help the vulnerable governments of West and Central Africa, Iraq and other countries in fighting terror: by strengthening their hands against climate change through financial support and the transfer of clean energy technology. Indeed, thatâs something the West is already expected to do under the Paris climate change agreement. Now, though, itâs clear that Washington and its allies must see this not just as a moral commitment but one that is directly tied to their own sense of national security. The alternative is terrifying. Climate change is crippling the resistance of countries and societies to combat terrorist groups. Military might can rout a specific group â the Islamic State group has lost its territory in Syria and Iraq, for instance â but others will sprout up. Theyâll have different names, flags and allegiances, but they will all feed off the desperation of hungry communities destroyed by global warming and left to fend for themselves by the rest of the world. As Afghanistan has shown us, democracy means only so much when your stomachâs empty. More on OZY
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