Title: Department of Strategic and Defence Studies
1National 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
2National 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
3National 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,
anarchylack 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
4National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
POLITICAL REALISMMAJOR FACTORS of a Grand
Strategy
Resources
Geopolitical
Political
Military
5- 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
6National 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
7National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
Conflicts since WW II (1945-) 1 Annual number of
civilian and inter-state conflicts
8National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
Conflicts since WW II (1945-) 2 Armed conflicts
1990-2000 (Wallensteen-Sollenberg 2001)
9National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
10National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
Conflict Pyramid/Ladder/Cycle
11National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
12National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
13National 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
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15National 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
16Best with all 6 indicators
17National 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)
18National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
19National 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
20Part II - Case Study Oil and Geopolitics in the
Greater Middle East
DirectorColonel, Lic.Pol.Sci Juha Pyykönen
21National 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-
22National 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 !
23National 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
24National 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 arent 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
25US strategic goals with Iraqi invasion
Major Goal more stability control to the region
Counter Terrorism
Domestic Politics
WHY?
WMD
Promote values
Replace Government
Secured access to oil, gas
Show case, an example for others
26National Defence College Department of Strategic
and Defence Studies
Energy resources as a source for a conflict 4 (4)
- Any results ? What happened to the major goal to
gain stability ? - Higher threat level, more violence for everybody,
deteriorated relationship - Prolonged war, no acceptable end-state foreseen
so far - Anti-Americanism expanding to Saudi Arabia, USA
had to leave it for neighbouring small states - Internal violence increased, heavy losses for all
parties - Recruiting new terrorists easier than earlier
- Cheaper oil more abundantly ?
- Higher price level for good ?
- Global and regional economy declining
- Less Iraqi oil available in the market
- Other implications Homeland Security, budgetary
deficits, protectionism..
27National 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 Russias 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.
28National 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.
29National Defence College
Department of Strategic and Defence Studies
QUESTIONS - COMMENTS - VIEWS
DirectorLieutenant Colonel, Lic.Pol.Sci Juha
Pyykönen