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World Politics in a New Era

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World Politics in a New Era Contemporary Security Issues Proliferation The debate over proliferation The optimists Proliferation is beneficial in the international ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: World Politics in a New Era


1
World Politics in a New Era
  • Contemporary Security Issues

2
Proliferation
  • The debate over proliferation
  • The optimists
  • Proliferation is beneficial in the international
    arena
  • Any negative aspects of proliferation can be
    contained
  • No better form of deterrence than nuclear weapons
  • The pessimists
  • The likely hazards of proliferation far outweigh
    any potential deterrent capability
  • States cannot consistently recognize and act in
    accordance with what is in their best interests
  • The threat of using nuclear weapons is empty
  • Lack of arsenals necessary to create a condition
    of MAD

3
Proliferation
  • Command and control
  • Accidental use
  • Unauthorized use
  • Inadvertent use
  • Several factors undermine security procedures
    designed to prevent these types of usage
  • Organization and bureaucratic constraints
  • Lack of availability or prohibitive cost of
    technology
  • Deliberate deception of proliferating states

4
Proliferation
  • Current proliferation concerns
  • North Korea
  • Iran
  • Progress has been made in several areas
  • Many states repudiated their nuclear ambitions in
    the 1990s
  • India and Pakistan have stepped back from the
    brink of war
  • Iraq has ended its nuclear program
  • Libya renounced its WMD program

5
Terrorism
  • Difficulty in defining terrorism
  • Violence to make a point
  • The ultimate effectiveness is questionable
  • Ancient phenomenon
  • Contemporary terrorism around the world
  • No region is immune
  • Improvements in transportation, communications,
    and modern weapons
  • Groups use similar tactics, but they have varying
    objectives and political orientations

6
Terrorism
  • State-sponsored terrorism
  • Enforcement terror
  • Sponsoring non-state actors to carry out acts of
    violence abroad
  • State sponsored terrorism has been seen
    throughout history
  • Cuba, Iran, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria

7
Terrorism
  • Nationalist separatists
  • Political objectives of national liberation or
    self-determination
  • Tend to have clear ethnic, cultural, or religious
    overtones
  • Elements that support nationalist causes by
    peaceful means
  • Threatens the integrity and security of
    multinational states
  • Rekindling old animosities

8
Terrorism
  • Ideological terrorism
  • Influenced by revolutionary doctrines
  • Express anti-imperialist sentiments through
    violence
  • Waning since the end of the Cold War
  • Examples Action Direct in France and Sendero
    Luminoso in Peru
  • Possible new wave of ideological terrorism

9
Terrorism
  • Religious terrorism
  • Prime ideological generator of international
    terrorism
  • Examples Al Qaeda, Hamas, Hezbollah, and Aum
    Shinrikyo (Japan)
  • Violence as morally justified and spiritually
    sanctified
  • Particularly difficult to halt due to the fervent
    commitment of its believers

10
Terrorism
  • Terrorism and weapons of mass destruction
  • Serious source of concern
  • Fear is reduced due to several factors
  • WMDs are difficult to acquire and use
  • Limited or banned by international treaties
  • Regarded as inhumane
  • The terrorists could destroy any public sympathy
    for their cause
  • The actual use of WMDs by terrorists has been
    very limited
  • Stepped-up efforts to combat these forms of
    terrorism

11
Terrorism
  • Combating international terrorism
  • Difficult to coordinate
  • Two categories
  • Antiterrorism
  • Counterterrorism
  • Coordination at the bilateral, regional, and
    international levels
  • All states have an interest in combating
    terrorism, whether they know it or not
  • Conflicts can easily spread across national
    boundaries
  • States must abandon the support of terrorism

12
Organized Crime
  • What is organized crime?
  • There is no universally accepted definition of
    organized crime
  • But there is a widely accepted set of
    characteristics
  • Organized crime is a significant threat to
    international security
  • Tens of thousands of organized crime groups
    worldwide

13
Organized Crime
  • Transnational organized crime activities
  • Extortion
  • Protection
  • Gambling
  • Loan sharking
  • Counterfeiting
  • Trafficking in persons and organs
  • Money laundering

14
Organized Crime
  • The globalization of organized crime
  • Groups operate across borders and wreak havoc
    globally
  • Examples Japanese Yakuza, the Chinese Triads,
    Vietnamese BTK, and the Sicilian mafia
  • One of the strongest organized crime groups
    operating outside its country of origin is the
    Russian mob
  • Set up operations in more than fifty countries
  • The FBIs most formidable enemy
  • Adverse effect on efforts to combat the
    international drug problem

15
Organized Crime
  • Combating Organized Crime
  • Domestic legislation to assist law enforcement
    agencies
  • Examples Japan, Canada, and the United States
  • International cooperation bilaterally and
    multilaterally
  • International institutions have made
    contributions to the battle against organized
    crime
  • Efforts to combat proliferation, terrorism, and
    organized crime are complicated
  • There is a lack of resources
  • No universal acceptance of the means to combat
    the problems
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