Jonah Stuart Brundage - Critique of Global Security Manifesto and MatrixThe Global Security Matrix and Manifesto provide an excellent model for understanding what constitutes global security in the world today. The Manifesto’s professed goal of carrying the current dialogue on international politics beyond its myopic focus on terrorism is highly commendable. More generally, by presenting global security as the realm of a heterogeneous set of actors and threats, but also revealing the considerable overlap and common ground between its constituent components, the GSM makes a compelling case for scholars and practitioners of international relations to broaden their conceptions of security. Nonetheless, despite its professed claim to the diverse nature of security threats, the focus of the GSM remains (with the exception perhaps of the environment and pandemics threats) primarily on the threat of violent conflict, a conception that needs to be broadened further. Although the Manifesto defines human security (3.2) as both freedom from fear (safety) and freedom from want (well-being), the GSM seems to give issues of want short shrift. Poverty, for example, certainly leads to violent conflict but, more fundamentally, it also kills people directly, through malnutrition, famine, and disease. Although these more direct effects of poverty are significantly addressed in the Manifesto under the heading of Resource Conflict (4.3), when it comes to the descriptions found in the Matrix itself, the category of Resource Conflict—as its title would suggest—puts primary emphasis not on the damage caused by the inequitable distribution of resources (i.e., poverty), but rather, that caused by the violent conflicts over their distribution. I would thus propose placing the emphasis of the resource section more on the structural violence of scarcity and inequitable distribution, to complement the emphasis on the explicit violence of conflict that is a corollary to these issues. Several other actors and threats described in the Manifesto and depicted in the GSM also exhibit potentially problematic ambiguities. The category defined as networks, for example, may be too broad and heterogeneous to adequately assess the threats posed to its security. Nevertheless, the approach of leaving these categories relatively ambiguous is certainly preferable to its alternative—creating a matrix of narrowly-defined, non-overlapping categories. It may render the ranking of threats more difficult, but this becomes less of a concern if we view the process of ranking not as the end goal of the Matrix but rather as one means of furthering dialogue on global security. If we conceive of the ranking component of the GSM as a functional approach to furthering our qualitative—not quantitative—understanding of threats, then ambiguity of and fluidity between categories become not a detriment but a necessity. In conclusion, the Global Security Matrix and Manifesto provide a highly accurate but certainly not all-encompassing picture of global security threats in the world today. Most importantly, they help to incite a dialogue to broaden our understanding of international relations, a dialogue that may one day render all-encompassing models useless and place an emphasis on an international relations that views and respects the world as a multi-faceted and heterogeneous place. Posted by Jonah Stuart Brundage on October 10, 2006 04:39 AM | Permalink |
Chris Keys' Manifesto Critique -- Originally 9/30 under Allison WrightI think that, overall, the Manifesto does a solid job of explaining the various aspects of Global Security that Dr. Der Derian would like to analyze. I do feel, however, that certain aspects are lacking. Firstly, I am still somewhat confused by the term "networks." While a potentially important category, I feel that that its nebulous nature hurts any attempt to accurately assess how threats affect this category. It seems as though networks are either too disparate or too subject to overlap with other categories to judge according to the matrix's terms. Similarly, I believe that writing (accurately) that WMDs are one of terrorism's greatest potential weapons and then separating the two categories is, like networks, either hurtful or duplicative in assessing the threats posed by terrorism and WMDs. If only traditional, state-sponsored WMDs are meant by WMDs, then this would help alleviate this situation but it seems difficult to accurately analyze the threat of terrorism without the threat of WMDs. Like Allison, I believe that the last area of overlap could be in Resource Conflict, which is mainly dangerous when it manifests itself in other areas. However, certain actors (such as humans) are affected by resource conflict regardless of warfare, so it seems necessary for it to remain as is. Finally, I would like to applaud several aspects of the Manifesto. The updated definition of warfare to include more actors makes it a much more relevant category. Additionally, the inclusion of the environment is an all too often overlooked part of worldwide threats. Overall, the Manifesto does a very solid job of explaining and assessing the various aspects that threaten today's world. Posted by Christopher Keys on October 9, 2006 06:52 PM | Permalink |
A Critique on the Global Security ManifestoThe Global Security Manifesto (GSM) explains varying factors with supplementary examples that threaten to penetrate or weaken the defense systems of the world. Personally, I was pleased to see that the document sufficiently addresses the notion that, “security, by its very nature, is a metaphysical as well as physical challenge.” While there are certain missing variables in the manifesto as a whole that I’ll explicate in the paragraphs to follow, it is clear that a great deal of work, research, and time was invested into drafting this document. First, this manifesto significantly looks at security from the vantage point of globalization. It does not explicitly address the phenomenon of reverse globalization that is by every means a real threat to security. As Herbert Oberhänsli and Oscar Vera Vevey state in their paper on globalization and its concerns and opportunities for people in the developing world, “…there is a real risk of reverse globalization; i.e., the excesses of the West as a reason to stop development in the South. In emerging economies there is a fear that environmental issues are being used by the North as a means to slow down the emergence of new competitors, or as former Mexican President Zedillo formulated it: "A peculiar alliance has recently come into life. Forces from the extreme left, the extreme right, environmentalist groups, trade unions of developed countries and some self-appointed representatives of civil society, are gathering around a common endeavor: to save the people of developing countries from ... development." This was reiterated by Clayton Deutsch, a director at the consulting firm McKinsey & Company. He stated McKinsey believes reverse globalization is one of the top ten problems facing the globe. Oberhänsli and Vevey’s report also states specific examples of this trend that has elevated in visibility since the 1980s. 1.4 speaks about the insecurity inherent in security. It states, “…in tightly networked matrices, auto-immune reactions which exceed the harm produced by the initial attack can result, further eroding the foundations of a democratic civil society.” This is reminiscent of an article from CNN that reports there have been more U.S. deaths in Iraq than there have been from the 9/11 terrorist attacks. 3.2 In the discussion on human security I believe it important to mention the 1948 United Nations Declaration of Human Rights. http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html 4.2 While failed states do carry disturbing global threats one must examine this issue with an extra level of analysis. A large number of states have failed or are struggling in light of colonialist actions that have placed them in a position of jeopardy. For instance Belgium’s involvement in Rwanda left perverse imprints in the country’s social fabric that directly led to genocide in 1994. It is important to recognize that TIMs may be caused by sovereign states. While it maybe easy to recognize that failed states pose a problem, assuming responsibility or assisting these countries to elevate themselves from desperate conditions is considerably more complicated and difficult. 4.3 Resource conflict can and will be a major obstacle for many states. However, one must distinguish between the problems of consumption, and over-consumption –the latter is one that the U.S. is facing today. In terms of oil, the price of gas significantly increased in the past two years yet SUV production also increased. These and more statistics point to a troubling trend. There’s more resource consumption per capita or per person than ever before. 4.4 deals with terrorism/ crime. It states, “terrorism has now come to dominate international security discourse, as the United States, the global hegemon, reconceptualized its international security strategy, and sought to fully distinguish terrorism from crime by declaring it an act of war (albeit with a loose interpretation of the international conventions concerning conduct in war) If this were truly the case then why is all the focus on one group; al Queada. What about groups like the LTTE? While I would like to elaborate on the points mentioned above I feel it important that I keep my critique concise. In conclusion, I enjoyed reading the GSM and believe it has great didactic potential. Posted by Rukesh Samarasekera on October 4, 2006 05:39 AM | Permalink |
Global Security Matrix and Manifesto CritiqueAfter reading the Global Security Manifesto I believe that it puts together a clear and coherent analysis of the threats facing our world today as individuals, states, systems, networks, and as a world as a whole. The Matrix and the Manifesto without a doubt lays out the various threats ranging from traditional warfare to modern terrorism so that both International Relations students and non- International Relations students can easily be reminded of the most of the obvious security threats. There are three areas though that I would like to more closely examine. First is Resources Conflict (4.3), second is Terrorism/Crime (4.4) and last is Environment (4.5). As someone mentioned in class last Tuesday, in section 4.3 for Resources Conflict, conflict caused by luxury goods is not fully addressed. Like the other student, I believe that goods that are not basic necessities (diamonds and drugs) can cause just as much conflict and strife as vital goods (water, food and oil). The diamond trade is just one example but one example that speaks for itself. Due to the world’s constant demand for precious stones, various states have had to endure civil war, hunger, displacement and overthrow of the government by tyrants like the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) who take over the diamond trade and who will do it at any cost. Conflict diamonds have led to the amputation of innocent children’s limbs in Sierra Leone have had their limbs amputated, up to 1,000 people dead every day in Angola (reported in 1993) and massacres in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In section 4.4 for Terrorism/Crime, the threat of nuclear weapons used by terrorists and cyber-terrorism are listed, however, the threat of chemical and biological weapons (CBWs) are not. CBWs are not relatively new and unknown experiences. For example, the native Americans were weakened by the common cold and during WWI and WWI infectious gasses was used. They have also been instances where people have used some sort of form of CBWs against civilian like the anthrax attacks on various journalists and US senators as well as the Japanese On Shinrikyo group that released nerve gas into the subway system. In the last paragraph of section 4.4 it says that attempts to use nuclear weapons and cyber-terrorism have “proved difficult”. CBWs, however, have been used and been successful giving it even more reason to be listed alongside nuclear weapons and cyber-terrorism as important terrorist threats. The last section I want to discuss is Environment under section 4.5. I believe that environment threats are not only caused by a government’s inability to handle the consequences of natural disasters but also consequences of their lack of pollution controls. What I mean by this is that our environment is greatly affected by the pollution that comes with a country’s rapid industrial growth. China for example is rapidly expanding and its economy is booming, however, what are the consequences of all the growth? The pollution in cities like Beijing and Shanghai is so bad to the point where its hard to find a clear day. This puts its citizens’ well-being at stake. Although I understand that not every little thing can be included in the Manifesto but I believe that the topics above are important enough to be considered. Posted by Brietta Tsang on October 1, 2006 12:01 PM | Permalink |
My Critique on the Global Security MatrixThe Global Security Manifesto sets out on a mission to bring together the various variables that constitute global security as a whole. This mission is a daunting one, however, the Global Security Manifesto, I believe, does a good job in bringing together at least the major variables and actors involved. The inclusion of the various types of threats and the various types of actors makes for a very comprehensible tool that will allow people in the very least to explore the subject and a good part of its many dimensions. Considering the word limitations to my post I will simply the address the points of critique I found the most relevant. Posted by Ivan Maldonado on October 1, 2006 11:26 AM | Permalink |
Critique of Global Security Matrix While the Global Security Manifesto gives us some substance by which we can begin to look at the individual components of security threats, the categories themselves seem almost a telling sign about how one can not divide such things into categories. It is only by necessity of analysis that threats are attempted to be contained into neat subdivisions, allowing for some spillover and blurring to occur, but still differentiated. Without this starting point it would almost be impossible to begin an analysis of the components and mix of components that make up the global security matrix. I believe that the Global Security Manifesto goes to lengths to explain how the divisions are hard to make, even more so as technology, and as different actors multiply on the global scene. Knowing this, it is easier to understand how the need to model global threats, and the reality of the issue may not match up so perfectly. Posted by Samantha Munro on October 1, 2006 09:26 AM | Permalink |
Christopher Keys -- Critique of Manifesto, Explanation of Extremes(I think the Blog activation isn't automated, so this is Chris Keys posting on Allison Wright's account.) I think that, overall, the Manifesto does a solid job of explaining the various aspects of Global Security that Dr. Der Derian would like to analyze. I do feel, however, that certain aspects are lacking. Firstly, I am still somewhat confused by the term "networks." While a potentially important category, I feel that that its nebulous nature hurts any attempt to accurately assess how threats affect this category. It seems as though networks are either too disparate or too subject to overlap with other categories to judge according to the matrix's terms. Similarly, I believe that writing (accurately) that WMDs are one of terrorism's greatest potential weapons and then separating the two categories is, like networks, either hurtful or duplicative in assessing the threats posed by terrorism and WMDs. If only traditional, state-sponsored WMDs are meant by WMDs, then this would help alleviate this situation but it seems difficult to accurately analyze the threat of terrorism without the threat of WMDs. Like Allison, I believe that the last area of overlap could be in Resource Conflict, which is mainly dangerous when it manifests itself in other areas. However, certain actors (such as humans) are affected by resource conflict regardless of warfare, so it seems necessary for it to remain as is. Finally, I would like to applaud several aspects of the Manifesto. The updated definition of warfare to include more actors makes it a much more relevant category. Additionally, the inclusion of the environment is an all too often overlooked part of worldwide threats. Overall, the Manifesto does a very solid job of explaining and assessing the various aspects that threaten today's world. Posted by Allison Wright on September 30, 2006 09:32 PM | Permalink |
Critique of Global Security MatrixThe Global Security Manifesto presents a clear and complete analysis of the threats facing humans, states, networks, systems and the globe as a whole. The structure of the Matrix allows a participant to clearly follow the more traditional threats to security, such as warfare, to the more modern constructions of fear, such as information war. The Manifesto offers detailed explanations of each threat as well as explaining the actors in global society. The examples it introduces, also provide the participant with background knowledge, which will inevitably help them pursue their own conclusions as to which threats constitute the greatest danger. With this knowledge a participant will be better able to rank particular threats to security on a personal, state, system, network and global basis. Although I think the Matrix Manifesto is very straightforward, there may be certain areas of overlap. For instance, while I think resource conflict is a threat to security, this conflict usually manifests itself in warfare or terrorism, and therefore could be included in either one of these particular areas of the Matrix. This is true for infowar as well. Although these threats to international security are prominent in the current system, the primary threat, in my opinion, to individuals, states, systems, networks and the globe as a whole, is still warfare. States exist in a constant state of competition and while these other threats can motivate fighting among states, the primary threat to the international system is warfare. I think that it is important to include the Environment in the Global Security Matrix because its abuse is increasingly becoming a danger to the world as a whole. I think Resource conflict is very tied to the Environment. If humans did not abuse the environment, reource conflict would certainly be less of a concern in international relations. I am, however, not that clear on how Resource conflict affects particular actors of the Global Security Matrix, such as networks or systems, so perhaps it does warrant its own category in the Security grid. All together, though, I do think the Manifesto provides a descriptive analysis of the threats facing the world today. Posted by Allison Wright on September 30, 2006 08:03 PM | Permalink |
Critique of Global Security Matrix as well as explanation of RankingsThe Global Security Manifesto presents a clear and complete analysis of the threats facing humans, states, networks, systems and the globe as a whole. The structure of the Matrix allows a participant to clearly follow the more traditional threats to security, such as warfare, to the more modern constructions of fear, such as information war. The Manifesto offers detailed explanations of each threat as well as explaining the actors in global society. The examples it introduces, also provide the participant with background knowledge, which will inevitably help them pursue their own conclusions as to which threats constitute the greatest danger. With this knowledge a participant will be better able to rank particular threats to security on a personal, state, system, network and global basis. Although I think the Matrix Manifesto is very straightforward, there may be certain areas of overlap. For instance, while I think resource conflict is a threat to security, this conflict usually manifests itself in warfare or terrorism, and therefore could be included in either one of these particular areas of the Matrix. This is true for infowar as well. Although these threats to international security are prominent in the current system, the primary threat, in my opinion, to individuals, states, systems, networks and the globe as a whole, is still warfare. States exist in a constant state of competition and while these other threats can motivate fighting among states, the primary threat to the international system is warfare. I think that it is important to include the Environment in the Global Security Matrix because its abuse is increasingly becoming a danger to the world as a whole. I think Resource conflict is very tied to the Environment. If humans did not abuse the environment, reource conflict would certainly be less of a concern in international relations. I am, however, not that clear on how Resource conflict affects particular actors of the Global Security Matrix, such as networks or systems, so perhaps it does warrant its own category in the Security grid. All together, though, I do think the Manifesto provides a descriptive analysis of the threats facing the world today. Posted by Allison Wright on September 30, 2006 08:03 PM | Permalink |
Critique of the Global Security ManifestoSecurity is the guarantee of one's perceived rights, whether it is the right of an individual to seek 'life, liberty and happiness' or a state's right to seek territorial sovereignty. For an individual, first and foremost must exist the right to be free from violence and to have his or her promises and contracts honored. To a large extent, in a functioning state with its judiciary and administration, these rights are honored unconditionally as the state posesses a legal monopology on the employment of violence and a symbiotic relationship with the laws of the land. But as soon as the field broadens to analyse international security, there exists no singular unifying authority to perform or to mediate over the rights of actors in the matter of security. In this 'international anarchy', certain states over history have sought to establish themselves as the singular arbiter of global order - from Rome and China (both of which had encompassed their respective 'known worlds') to the more recent attempts by America to establish and mantain its global superpower status. But by establishing oneself as the supernational arbiter, suddenly one becomes a combined threat to the rest of the world. By establishing security for oneself, one invariably impedes upon that same sense for another. And without an established, respected and legitimate supra-national governing body, there can never be established, effectively, a global concensus on what international security of what should and neccessarily consist of. The security that threatens us today as individuals, states, systems, networks and globally range in terms of scale, intensity and time. To an individual in a wartorn part of the world, a roadside bomb blast represents a very real and immediate threat, which to a superpower in a distant corner of the globe barely makes a news story on its information networks. The immediate threats of today are usually a product of the threats of yesteryear, where unresolved issues have suddenly become pressing exigencies. And a threat not countered today swiftly and deliberately will continue to live on and fester to burden us over again. Terrorism as we know it today from the branding of Al-Qaeda was barely monitored a decade ago. The concept of 'Islamic terrorism' or 'a clash of civilisations' was barely noted - academics like Fukuyama were instead celebrating the 'end of history'. But present events have taught us otherwise. Instead of 9/11 and the successor terror strikes around the world being singular catablysmic events, they have spawned instability, fear and have in many large and subtle ways, altered our way of life from California to New South Wales. The West's often ham-fisted attempts to quell and extinguish subsequent threats have done little to alleviate and address the key concerns of terrorism too. Homeland Security's threat level indicator has barely ever reached a sense of comfort ever since it was established. Terrorism, bluntly, can be classified as the failure of states and their monopolies on violence. Osama bin-Laden's terror network was a result of a conflict between himself and the House of Saud. With the myriad of intra-state conflicts boiling all over the globe, one has to wonder where the next bin-Laden will arise. When states fail their citizen members, when questions arise over their legitimacy, where their failings are laid bear and their inability to adequeately and legitimately govern becomes a source of constentation, that is where resentment and hatred is bred. States at risk are more than just safe havens for terrorism, they breed terrorists and the hate and fear they peddle. Hence, the most pressing concern we need to address is the threat that failing states will continue to pose to not only themselves, but the greater international community around them. More deaths are attributed to malnutrition and disease in at-risk states then by warfare, violence and terrorism. In modern Western states, the standard of living that many of us hold to be essential on a daily basis, exceeds the wildest dreams and the net economic wealth of the world's most disadvantaged. To them, living until the next week is hardly even certain. It is in states like this where volunteers and recruits to powerful demagogues are found - those most easily swayed are the most hungry and the least educated. They see the images of Western excess and see, not wealth or liberty, but deep and unfair inequity. They find in religion not peace and charity, but righteous vengeance and the personification of nemesis. Hate is bred from hunger. The international community must recognise this and understand that the world we live in is wracked by such choices on a daily basis - that either all men are free or none at all. We have to establish basic rights to freedom and understand the normative conditions which we have to place in all as self-evident. Without building for our future, we merely imperil it. Posted by Aaron Wee on September 30, 2006 05:59 PM | Permalink |
Critique of the Global Security ManifestoI think that the manifesto captures in a precise and well thought out way the essence of international society at the beginning of the 21st century. The manifesto clearly shows how the current globalization expanded the numbers of actors in international society. The world can certainly no longer be understood only in terms of states. New players came on stage and complicated our perception of the threats to international security. Today, the states have to deal with private organizations such as NGOs, or economic actors (like transnational firms) for example. Those actors are quite new on the international level and clearly derive from the current globalization.. In conclusion, I found the manifesto, as well as the idea of creating a matrix of international threats very interesting and intellectually challenging. I think that, by allowing everyone of us to reflect about the current international threats as well as our own perception of those threats, the matrix can help us acquire a more lucid vision of the world. Posted by Emeline Lemoine on September 30, 2006 04:38 PM | Permalink |
RankingsMy critique of the manifesto proposes that cyber-terrorism is an excellent addition to the Global Security Matrix. In theory, the category makes much sense, but I wanted to conduct some research to further investigate this topic. A 2002 article written by Mark Ward for the BBC blames overzealous American officials for hyping up the idea of terrorists attacking their targets in cyberspace. The article points out that disrupting services we have all come to depend on via the Internet pales in comparison to bombings and other physical acts of terrorism. Ward quotes security expert Bruce Schneier: “Breaking pager networks and stopping e-mails is not an act of terror…If I cannot get my e-mail for a day, I am not terrorised. [sic]” A 2005 article in the Christian Science Monitor is much more specific and less pessimistic about the prospects of such attacks creating large-scale ramifications. The article mentions cyber assaults on power grids and chemical processing plants as possible tangible manifestations of this form of terrorism. The author, Nathaniel Hoopes, also presents the notion of a cyber attack that is coupled with a physical assault resulting in a debilitated response by officials during the subsequent emergency. My conclusion mirrors that of the Global Security Matrix’s manifesto in some ways. Although cyber-terrorism is currently regarded as a minor threat, it has the potential to cause immense damage to an economy and could be used to augment the impact of an attack if used properly. Movable Type ate my links, so here they are: Cyber-terrorism Failed States And on my first post: http://www.sierra-leone.org/panelreport.html (Sierra Leone) ~Josh Rosenthal Posted by Joshua Rosenthal on September 30, 2006 04:33 PM | Permalink |
Global Security Manifesto Critique, with additional commentsThe Global Security Matrix presents a clear, comprehensive, and an all-encompassing understanding of the variable definitions, concepts, and projections for threats facing the international system The main strength of the Manifesto lies in the specification and detailed explanation of the different types of threats, especially information war and the close inter-connection between organized transnational crime and asymmetric warfare. Despite several basic strengths, the Matrix suffers from a partial lack of objectivity in its use of historical examples to buttress present security challenges, and fails to adequately connect shifts of security policy to changes in understanding of current security threats.
The leap made from historical security dilemma to post-911 is also troubling, as I see this leap and the focus on "eroding the foundations of a democratic civil society" underpinned by a veneer of political partisanship rather than objective analysis. Why did the argument not mention Dr. Aaron Friedburg's famous paper detailing the unique approach the United States took, as opposed to the USSR, to organize its political and economic resources during the Cold War? Whereas the Soviets were spending close to 25% of GDP on national defense, and shifted most industrial production by the GOSPLAN to heavy industry (thus becoming tantamount to a Garrison State), the United States maintained what Friedburg called a "Contract State". Instead of completely altering the basic political and economic foundations of the state, the US government was able to spend significantly less on defense, while producing higher quality product due to its close engagement with a limited number of arms producers. The absence of this clear distinction in the Matrix detracts from its breadth of historical scholarship. 3.4-I think a caveat would enhance the potency of this point. The paragraph shifts between the threat newly emerging forces pose to the universalization of western norms and the priority of system over state security. It is important to address here the arguments of such theorists as Fukuyama, Ikenberry, Krauthammer, and Huntington about this changing nature of the international system. Fukuyama's argument in the End of History and Huntington's attacks on Endism as being overly idealistic and practically flawed would create the kind of balance necessary for a reader to grasp just what this conflict between "western norms" and "new threats" means. Is the future one of the slow acceptance of western, liberal, democratic superiority by the rest of the globe? Or is it just a renewed effort to preserve an international system that actually has not changed at all (according to Ikenberry)? As for the subpoint regarding system over state security, it is important to distinguish here between aggressor states, which seek to either destabilize or remove the system for a specific set of interests, and coalitions formed to counter such threats. When Nicholas I moved to annex Moldavia and Walachia, throwing the possibility of an Anglo-French-Turkish alliance to contain Russian expansion to the wind, he was clearly not acting out an interest to maintain system security. Similarly, Bismarck brooded over a possible alliance between Russia and France, and shunned the colonialists in Berlin, only after having turned the European status quo upside down in 1866 and 1871. Transnational networks, individual leaders, and asymmetrical movements cannot be properly analyzed without clear distinctions and analysis of possible motives. 3.6-I cannot understand why an analysis that seeks to describe such a fundamental and oft spoken goal as security, and those which seek to advance and undermine it in international relations, would end the definitional portion of the study with quotations from two American presidents, both Republicans, and both serving in the last twenty years. Such a closing is reminiscent of the same sort of possible partisanship described in my earlier critique of point 1.4. All of this having been said, the description and level of work placed into defining and expanding upon classical interpretations of security challenges to the international system, with its vast array of multi-faceted actors, makes this manifesto and matrix timely in our present international relations discourse. In addition to the previous critique: I think it is becoming more and more imperative to note demographic shifts and cultural clashes in order to fully understand the array of threats facing global actors, particularly states. Direct acts of terrorism do not pose, short of a nuclear or massive bio-chemical incident, an existential threat to the physical and political development of the state. Nevertheless, cultural alterations brought about by vast migrations from across regions pose just such a problem, especially in its political sphere. A number of leading theorists and commentators, from administrators in London, Paris, and Berlin to Oriana Fallaci and fellow journalists, have pointed to very troubling changes afoot in Europe due to the inability of the continent to properly assimilate an increasingly volatile Muslim minority. In Sweden, this has led the state’s largest Muslim Association to pressure for passage of separate Shari’a law on three separate occasions, and led France to adopt restrictions on public religious expression. A surge of anti-Semitism on the continent has also been linked to this troubling development. The clash of values and ideologies is at the center of the puzzle of threats facing the international system. Such a clash, I believe, should take its place next to the threats already established in the Matrix. Posted by Boris Ryvkin on September 30, 2006 04:30 PM | Permalink |
A Critique of the Global Security Matrix and ManifestoI do not think that you will find very many people who will argue with the concept of the Global Security Matrix. Any time a scholar can take a large number of complex concepts and clearly reduce them to a visual representation, it makes information more presentable, which is undoubtedly a good thing. For my part, I found this project to be the most inclusive and understandable piece of work I have seen on global security. If we do find anything wrong, then the project has served, at the very least, to get us thinking of this topic. The issues that arise from the GSM are those of content. Do the categories make sense? Are the methods of ranking as readily apparent as their graphical representations? Does this project over simplify? Because I only have 500 words to write here, I picked two categories to examine. Posted by Joshua Rosenthal on September 30, 2006 04:05 PM | Permalink |