Climate change a national security ‘issue’: Pentagon

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WASHINGTON, Jan 19, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Many of the US military’s key
installations are facing increasing difficulties due to climate change, the
Pentagon said Friday in a report critics slammed as understating the scope of
the problem.

The 22-page document looked at 79 “priority” facilities around the US and
found many vulnerable to flooding and wildfires, as well as the impacts of
desertification, drought and melting permafrost.

“The effects of a changing climate are a national security issue with
potential impacts to Department of Defense missions, operational plans and
installations,” the document states.

The military “must be able to adapt current and future operations to
address the impacts of a variety of threats and conditions, including those
from weather and natural events.”

The report found about two-thirds of the 79 installations are or will be
vulnerable to recurrent flooding, and more than half are vulnerable to
current or future drought.

At Fort Greely, an Alaskan facility that is a key component of America’s
missile-defense system, melting permafrost will impact cold weather testing
and training.

But critics blasted the report for skimping on detail, noting it did not
mention several recent hurricanes that destroyed or damaged US military
facilities.

Hurricane Michael, for instance, last year wrecked Tyndall Air Force Base
in Florida. It will cost more than $5 billion to rebuild.

President Donald Trump has openly dismissed claims — backed by the vast
majority of important scientific bodies — that greenhouse gases caused by
human activity are responsible for a rapidly warming planet, triggering ever
more extreme weather.

He once claimed climate change is a Chinese hoax, and has rolled back
American environmental regulations aimed at curbing the problem.

“Under current leadership, the (Defense) Department is treating climate
change as a back burner issue,” said Senator Jack Reed, the top Democrat on
the Armed Services Committee.

The Pentagon under Barack Obama repeatedly warned that climate change
posed an immediate risk to national security, and former defense secretary
Jim Mattis warned it impacted political stability in areas of the world where
US troops operate.

The climate report was delivered to Congress on Thursday, but the Pentagon
only published it online Friday after reporters asked about it.

The Center for Climate and Security said the report did not provide all
the details required by Congress.