THE
THREE BIG THREATS THE U.S. & THE WORLD MUST FACE
JOHN
PEPPER
John
Pepper is a former CEO and chairman of Procter & Gamble and also served as chairman
of the Walt Disney Company.
Ian Kershaw’s magisterial new history of Europe from 1914-1949,
To Hell and Back, reminds us that during the 40-year period from 1914 to 1945,
Europe came close to self destruction in two world wars and an economic
depression that cost over 50 million lives.
Yet, defying centuries of internecine
warfare and history, Europe came together in the second half of the 20th
century to form organizational constructs (NATO, ECM, etc.) that make the
prospect of another war between the European nations inconceivable.Yes,
tensions still exist: economically and socially. And will continue to. But the
common interests were so clear and the bonds now so strong that war is not
conceivable.
Today, in the early years of the 21st
century, I believe our civilization faces a question not dissimilar to what was
faced in the 20th century: “Will we allow civilization and the world as we know
it and want it to be, to self-destruct?”
This may strike the reader as a needlessly
draconian question. I do not think it is.
What are the risks to our civilization as
we know it? I believe there are three.
One is the threat of fundamentalist driven terrorism
seeking to expand its reach across borders and annihilate “non-believers” via a
new caliphate.
The
second is the threat of nuclear
disaster. Let us not allow the half century which separates us from the
first hand ravage of the hydrogen bomb to disguise the annihilation to civilization which
will result from atomic warfare. To our knowledge, we are the only celestial
body with life as we know it. The possibility of our ending it is in our hands.
The first and second threats are related
for a doomsday scenario is having a nuclear device in the hands of terrorists.
The third threat, while less immediate is no less real: climate change
which would cripple life as we know it on earth.
It is clear that confronting and curtailing
these threats will require nations to work together as they have not before.
Without trying to identify an exhaustive list, these nations must include the
United States, Russia, China, Western Europe, Japan, Saudi Arabia and India.
There are those who will object to Russia and China being
included, attributing to these nations the intent to expand their geographic
reach. The evidence that this is their intent is frail, defies what their
leaders assert and what is in their own best interest.
Neither China or Russia are driven today by a mission
which seeks to convert other nations to a given ideology (unlike Germany under
the Nazis or ISIS today). Neither have a need for more land. Like the United
States and Western Europe, they are threatened by ISIS. Yes, their values,
their economic and judicial systems will not be identical to ours. Corruption
may exist at higher levels. And they will look for good relations with
neighboring countries just as we in the United States always have with
countries near our own.
But the commonalities of their interests –
preserving peace and safety for their citizens, being treated with respect – will be
far greater than the differences.
Just as world leaders following World War
II had the wisdom to bring together organizational coalitions to normalize
cooperation and the creation of stronger bonds so must the world leaders do
that today.
With regard to Russia, we had the
opportunity to create an organizational construct which would have bound its
interests those of the West post glasnost and perestroika in the early 1990’s.
We missed that opportunity. We have the
opportunity again, confronted by the greatest threats we have had since that of
Nazi Germany in the 20th century.
Today’s leaders will be judged by how well
they seize this opportunity. I believe the future of civilization as we know it
depends on it.
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