{"id":23808,"date":"2015-12-14T11:02:53","date_gmt":"2015-12-14T00:02:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=23808"},"modified":"2015-12-08T15:19:25","modified_gmt":"2015-12-08T04:19:25","slug":"climate-change-and-the-shifting-strategic-landscape-in-the-pacific","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/climate-change-and-the-shifting-strategic-landscape-in-the-pacific\/","title":{"rendered":"Climate change and the shifting strategic landscape in the Pacific"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n As islands in the world’s biggest ocean, those sovereign nations are constantly under threat from the waves via erosion, super-cyclones, and the infiltration of salt water into underground freshwater tables.<\/p>\n There\u2019s no doubt that climate change poses serious challenges for hundreds of millions across the world, and to the international system itself. But for most other countries and regions, climate change doesn\u2019t alter strategic calculations in the way it does for the nations of the South Pacific.<\/p>\n As regional states become more desperate for security and the livelihood of their peoples, their governments may be forced to make agreements that have wider strategic implications. In that way, the growing climate-induced insecurity of the South Pacific may ripple out and affect the balance of global prosperity and security.<\/p>\n As the UNFCCC’s 21st Conference of Parties<\/a> (COP21) wraps up at the end of this week and attempts are made to achieve unprecedented global commitments to meet the impacts of a warming global climate, Pacific Island nation is at the frontline of this epic battle\u2014both physically and politically.<\/p>\n But even if ambitious targets like cutting global emissions to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees are agreed at COP21 and subsequently implemented, the worst effects of climate change may not be immediately curbed; they merely offset challenges to the safety and security of the people of the region.<\/p>\n In the meantime, the region must look to its defences, be they military, economic or political. And with that, the game opens for new, more complicated partnerships which will further complicate an already complex region. In turn, such a pivotal region affects the future for global security, and so a new dynamic may develop that will upend idealised relationships.<\/p>\n Previously, the Pacific had been thought of as a strategic backwater for regional and global powers like Australia and the US. But the new challenges have compelled the region to look for more solvent, ‘freer’ opportunities from abroad.<\/p>\n Perhaps the most notable new partners in the region are China, and more recently, India. The US Rebalance, welcomed by most countries in the region, has so far failed to make a mark on the current trajectory of events in the region.<\/p>\n The way the Pacific looks and assesses threats is important for effective response to security threats in and of the region.<\/p>\n Islands are key components of maritime security architecture, and their appearance and disappearance cause complications for diplomacy, international law and the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. Recently, the US Navy conducted Freedom of Navigation operations in the South China Sea, just across from the Kiribati archipelago.<\/p>\n In the South Pacific, the critical issue is the disappearance of islands. The country of Kiribati bought land in Fiji as a standby refuge in the event that inundation renders its islands uninhabitable. Given China’s ever-warming relations with Fiji<\/a>, this may give China an inroad to relations<\/a> with two countries<\/a> in one go. Kiribati’s location is ideal for satellite launch and monitoring positions. China used to have a listening post there, until Kiribati switched to recognising Taiwan. China may be keen to resurrect the post, and Beijing’s friends in Fiji may influence Kiribati to allow that to happen in exchange for helping Kiribati in its time of climate crisis.<\/p>\n
\n<\/strong>What were once considered \u2018non-traditional threats\u2019 to continental regions of Eurasia and the Americas are now central security challenges for the Pacific island nations. The South Pacific is a region under siege as climate change and other non-traditional security threats like spurred migration, piracy intensify.<\/p>\n