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2011: The Year Of Global Insecurity

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  • 2011: The Year Of Global Insecurity

    2011: THE YEAR OF GLOBAL INSECURITY
    By Max Brandt

    Georgia Today
    http://www.georgiatoday.ge/article_details.php?id=10123
    May 17 2012
    Georgia

    The year 2011 revealed two worrying trends in global security. First
    of all, the world saw a year filled with wars and violent conflict.

    Second, a selective rise in global military expenditures (especially in
    crisis regions) seems to have laid the groundwork for future conflicts.

    In 2011, the Germanã~@~@Heidelberg Institute for International Conflict
    Researchã~@~@identified more violent conflicts than in all other years
    since it began keeping record in 1945. Among these conflicts were 20
    full-scale wars in 2011, while records revealed only six full-scale
    wars and 18 limited wars in 2010. Taking into account cases with the
    use of less violence and those without violent methods, the researchers
    observed a total number of 388 conflicts in total last year.

    The high number of newly emerging and escalating conflicts can mainly
    be attributed to the shockwave emanating from the Arab Spring in the
    Middle East and Northern Africa. The fall of authoritarian regimes
    in many cases goes hand in hand with armed conflict: not only the
    anti-regime struggle itself, but also the subsequent political
    instabilities and disputes that result over the sharing of power
    after the regime has fallen. The developments one can observe now
    are comparable to the political disorders that occurred after the
    collapse of the Soviet Union, which led to several violent uprisings
    and wars in the 1990s.

    >From the Drug War being fought between the Mexican government and the
    lethal drug cartels in Central America, the struggles for national
    power in Cote dÒ'Ivoire, to the confrontations between states, like
    the border clashes between Thailand and Cambodia- the reasons behind
    todayÒ's many violent crises vary widely.

    A closer look at Europe shows that the Caucasus remains the continent's
    hot spot with regard to conflicts and political crises.

    Besides the internal power-struggles that exist, it is the separatist
    regimes in South-Ossetia, Abkhazia and the situation between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh which produces the sporadic
    violence. As noted by various experts, the situation between Yerevan
    and Baku has reached a critical level in the last year and the risk
    of it becoming more and more explosive is high.

    Worse yet is the situation in the Russian North Caucasus, where
    nearly every political dispute is embedded in heavy violence, while
    the situation in Ingushetia is even classified by the researchers
    from Heidelberg as a limited war.

    To the south the picture of the neighborhood is no better. The
    escalation of the internal conflict between Turkish government forces
    and Kurdish insurgents in the course of 2011 has been identified as
    a full-scale war.

    A report published by the Stockholm International Peace Research
    Institute (SIPRI) shows the trends of global armament on an annual
    basis. For the first time in many years, 2011 marked a period where
    military expenditures grew slowly. The fact is explained by the cuts in
    defense budgets by powers who have traditionally contributed to global
    arms-spending before. The large NATO powers: the US, Great Britain,
    France and Germany, have been cutting back their budgets as a measure
    of tackling national debts. The same is true for the countries of
    southern Europe, who are also facing serious financial instabilities.

    Besides these cuts, Washington is still responsible for more than
    40% of the worldÒ's military expenditures, with a breathtaking
    overall budget of $711 billion. However, the shortcomings due to the
    unwillingness to invest in defense-capabilities are much more visible
    in Europe. A vivid example was the decision by Italy to withdraw its
    aircraft-carrier from an ongoing mission in NATO's Libya intervention.

    The reason was simply that the government in Rome wanted to save money
    due to its domestic financial chaos. The case is of course just the
    tip of the iceberg and might provide insight on European defense in
    times of decreasing military budgets.

    It should be noted that the capabilities we are talking about are
    not necessarily offensive-systems and arms, but also personnel and
    communication. So from a peace-oriented point of view, the cuts are
    alarming since the EU and NATO limit their peacekeeping options.

    That this is not driven by the will to contribute to global
    disarmament is shown by the fact that many European states keep their
    top-positions as exporters of military goods into other regions of the
    world. In Germany for example, to talk about the de-militarization of
    international politics as an asset to disarmament holds considerable
    political cache from a public relations perspective, yet at the same
    time, Germany takes third place in the ranking of the worldÒ's biggest
    global arms suppliers.

    As a reaction to the decrease in military expenditures, NATO and the
    EU are discussing measures of further cooperation intensively. The
    so-called policy of pooling and sharing equipment will be discussed at
    the NATO Summit in Chicago, and ideas like the Smart Defense concept
    should finally make a breakthrough towards an effective cooperative
    agreement- not only on the ground, but also in acquisition.

    While the West is saving, increased spending can be seen in the East.

    China added an extra of 6.7% to its defense-budget, which is the
    second largest in the world standing at $143 billion. The country
    especially seeks to further modernize its equipment for its more than
    two million soldiers.

    In total budgetary numbers, China is followed by Russia, taking
    third place in global arms spending at around $72 billion. Moscow
    increased its budget in 2011 by 9.3%. The newly re-elected Vladimir
    Putin already announced that further investments in the country's huge,
    but partly outdated forces will be made during his presidency.

    The military expenditures in other crisis regions have also been
    growing; this is true in the case of Africa (Algeria) and the Middle
    East. This is not only worrying due to the high risk of war in these
    regions, but also because less consolidated statehoods tend to produce
    a higher risk that weapons might fall into the hands of irregular
    forces and terrorists.

    The Southern Caucasus as EuropeÒ's most volatile crisis region also
    shows a trend towards steady armament. Georgia passed a bill outlining
    its defense-spending budget for 2011 by $460 million, while already
    forecasting increases up to roughly $740 by 2014.

    Out of the three countries in South Caucasus Azerbaijan, shows clearly
    the highest military budget, which reached $ 3.1 billion in 2011 -
    an increase of more than 56%. Thus, Baku matched its informal goal
    to outstrip the complete state budget of its neighbor Armenia. The
    government in Yerevan on the other side spent roughly $400 million
    for its armed forces.

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