Lawfare Daily: ‘Threat Multiplier,’ Climate, and the Military with Sherri Goodman

Published by The Lawfare Institute
in Cooperation With
On today’s episode, Sherri Goodman, the Secretary General of the International Military Council on Climate & Security and the first Deputy Undersecretary of Defense (Environmental Security) joins Lawfare Managing Editor Tyler McBrien to talk about Sherri’s new book, “Threat Multiplier: Climate, Military Leadership, and the Fight for Global Security.”
They discuss Sherri’s career in climate security, beginning at the Senate Armed Services Committee before “climate security” entered the lexicon. From there, they trace Sherri’s career educating a generation of military leaders about the nexus between climate change and national security and coining the phrase “threat multiplier,” helping to usher in a paradigm shift at the Pentagon. Sherri addresses skeptics wary of a perceived tradeoff between military readiness and greening the military, as well as others who warn against “securitizing” climate change. Finally, they look ahead, as Sherri lays out her four main pillars of climate action (mitigation and adaptation) and institutional reform (awareness and alliance building).
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Click the button below to view a transcript of this podcast. Please note that the transcript was auto-generated and may contain errors.
Transcript
TKTK
[Introduction]
Sherri Goodman: A
destabilized climate, destabilized earth and natural systems would add
instability to other threats we face. And, and, you know, national security is
often all about stability. How do we achieve stability in a certain situation?
Also, of course, without compromising our democratic values.
Tyler McBrien: It's
the Lawfare Podcast. I'm Tyler McBrien, managing editor of Lawfare
with Sherri Goodman, the Secretary General of the International Military
Council on Climate and Security, and the first Deputy Undersecretary of Defense
for Environmental Security.
Sherri Goodman: Yes,
you have to have military readiness. Absolutely, it's fundamental. But how you
achieve that readiness, you have to think about what are all the components
that go into it. And it's often the case that environmental stewardship and
climate security can be a piece of enabling that readiness.
Tyler McBrien: Today
we're talking about Sherry's new book, “Threat Multiplier. Climate, Military Leadership,
and the Fight For Global Security.”
[Main Podcast]
So Sherri, many of our listeners will be familiar with you and
your work as a pioneer in the, in the field of climate security, but many may
be surprised to learn that you didn't start your career in environmental
issues, nor did you even start it at the Pentagon. So you start the book at the
Senate. So I want to start there. Could you just sketch out a bit of, you know,
your, your early career with the Senate and how it transitioned into the issue
that we're going to talk about today, of climate?
Sherri Goodman: Well,
thank you, Tyler. And it's a pleasure to be with you and the audience, listener
audience today.
I started in the Senate Armed Services Committee in 1987 as a
professional staff member working for the chairman of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, Senator Sam Nunn. I was also one of the first female professional
staff members on that committee. I was assigned the Department of Energy's
nuclear weapons complex as my portfolio. I had worked on nuclear weapons and
arms control prior to that both in my graduate studies and earlier at a defense
consulting firm. And it was the height of the Cold War and I was overseeing
nuclear weapons research development tests and production like the storied
National Labs: Sandia, Los Alamos, and Livermore, as well as the weapons
reactors and nuclear processing plants where throughout the Cold War we
produced plutonium, tritium, and uranium for use in, for the fissile materials
for use in nuclear weapons.
Tyler McBrien: Yeah.
And as you say in your book, your career went from weapons to waste. So I
think, you know, there's a, there's an obvious connection there to
environmental protection in terms of cleaning up some of the waste, you know,
caused by, by the military and in the name of national security. So can you
just lay out the popular discourse at the time in the late eighties and early
nineties with regard to environmental protection and climate change? Is climate
change even an anachronistic term to use there in terms of the late 80s, early
90s? Can you take us back to those years? You know, what was the national
conversation like then?
Sherri Goodman: Well,
first just to scene set, you know, with, with listeners, when I went to law
school and public policy school in the mid-1980s, there weren't even any
courses on environmental law or environment and public policy. Maybe there were
natural resource courses, but there weren't courses for national security nerds
about environment or climate change. That connection had not yet been
established.
And so I, I studied what was then sort of the, you know,
considered to be the exciting parts of national security studies, which was
nuclear weapons, arms control, how to manage a relationship with the Soviet
Union transatlantic relations, NATO. Those were all sort of the exciting, you
know, subjects where you thought you could sort of walk America, walk the world
back from the brink of nuclear annihilation. So, you know, in my earliest years,
right after college, working for SAIC, which was then called Science
Applications International, we used to manage projects about how many targets
you would need to hold at risk with various nuclear weapons from massive old
spreadsheets that were printouts. You know, think back to the early runs of
the, with the little perforated pages on the side, you get these printouts of
longitude, latitude, coordinates, and you'd be looking at, you know, was, did,
could you hold this target at risk in the Warsaw Pact?
Okay, that's now outdated science, but that was nuclear weapons
planning in the earlier days of the Cold War. And, and then I had written my, actually
my college senior thesis on the neutron bomb, a case study in alliance politics
where I examined the failed decision in the Carter administration to try to
deploy a low yield tactical nuclear weapon in Europe and why the Germans in
particular, but also the Brits and most of the NATO members, did not want to
have a weapon that killed people but left buildings standing, as they said.
So that was nuclear deterrence theory. They wanted to hold the
capitals of Moscow and Washington at risk and not Bonn at the time, which was
the German capital and Paris.
So from there it seemed logical to continue working on, on
nuclear weapons. And when I got the portfolio to oversee the nuclear weapons
complex. These plants at first were chugging along, but within about a year,
they all began to fail for environment safety and health lapses. Because at the
same time, and this is sort of the thesis of my book, which is the convergence
of environment and climate security with traditional national security over the
last several decades, because environmental awareness and environmental laws brought
new critiques to the operation of these plants. As well as the end of the Cold
War meant we didn't need as much to produce as much, if the Secretary of Energy
had said we're awash in plutonium, and within a year all the reactors and
processing plants shut down for these environment safety and health lapses.
And so then we were converting those vast facilities from a
production operation to an actual cleanup and environment safety and health
management operation, which continues in many places today. Like Hanford is a
vast cleanup site. Rocky Flats in, outside of Denver, a plant I visited just
before the FBI conducted criminal investigation and shut it down where they
told me, ma'am, are you of childbearing age? And when I answered yes, because I
was in my 20s at the time, they said, well, maybe you shouldn't go in that
glove box building over there where they were using the glove box operation to manipulate
and manage plutonium pits that would go into nuclear warheads. So those types
of operations ended awareness of the need to both protect, particularly protect
the safety of workers at facilities, but also to manage the waste associated
with the nuclear weapons complex really led to a whole new era.
And it was at the same time that the enforcement of
environmental laws passed mostly in the 70s and the early 80s, like the Clean
Air Act, Clean Water Act, Superfund, and other hazardous waste laws really came
into a force in force around federal facilities. And so that created a whole
new set of what we might call in the national security work, requirements to
address those environmental considerations and become better stewards of the
environment.
Tyler McBrien: Yeah,
I really enjoyed the early chapters. It's such an interesting time for the
world, but especially for U.S. foreign policy. It was also really interesting
reading the, it was just a small bit of you witnessing one, probably one of the
last underground nuclear tests the country, you know, had and this falling out
of love with nuclear energy.
But I want to, I want to now kind of transition from your work
in the, in the Senate to the Pentagon. So, in ‘93, I believe you were appointed
Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Environmental Security. You have some
great passages in there about what it was like going into the military kind of
environment after, after the Senate, especially as a woman in a, in a very male
dominated field, I think it's safe to say, especially at the time. So just talk
a bit about that, that transition from, from the Senate into the Pentagon at
that point in your career.
Sherri Goodman: Well,
thank you. Yes, in 1993, I was appointed the first Deputy Undersecretary of
Defense for Environmental Security, which was like the Chief Environmental Officer
at the Pentagon. And it was the beginning of the Clinton administration and
there was an intent to elevate attention to environment safety and occupational
health throughout the Department of Defense and really throughout the
administration, Al Gore was the vice president at the time. I mean, he was in
many ways sort of the environmental, early environmental conscience of the
administration.
And again, I was in a small group of women at the, at the
Pentagon, but we were, it was a very exciting time. It was very exciting
because we were very aware of the opportunities, the opportunities to sort of
reset American national security policy to address the challenges that we faced
sort of coming out of the end of the, of the Cold War. I mean, there were a lot
of complex challenges, both in transatlantic NATO relations with the emergence
changes going on in Russia and really throughout the world at that time.
And so it was, it was also an exciting time to really bring the
outside in, sort of create new partnerships across the Department of Defense
with communities, particularly we were closing a lot of military bases in those
days. It was the end of the Cold War. There was excess infrastructure and
Congress had managed to pass a very important set of bipartisan legislation
called BRACC, Base Realignment and Closure Commission, which mandated across
four different time periods from 1990, 1988 through 1995, four different rounds
of base closure that would be selected by an independent commission where the
president had the choice either to approve or disapprove the entire slate. You
couldn't cherry pick. And the whole purpose of the design of the legislation
was to take some of the local politics out because members of Congress and, and
including the administration would always be reluctant to put any one
particular base on a list or to take it off because nobody wants to lose jobs
in their district.
So when President Clinton was faced with the 1993 round of base
closures early in his administration with a lot of closures in California,
which had been a very important state to his election, this was a very hard
decision for him. And I say in my book, we could sort of hear, you know, the
echoes reverberating from the White House back to the Pentagon, like, why are
you making us do this? But, you know, we didn't have a choice. This was an
independent commission. So, I was tasked early on in the administration to
develop an affirmative plan that would help the president be able better to
communicate and convey to communities affected by closures what the
administration was going to do for them.
And it was very much associated with jobs, sort of recreating
good jobs and also cleaning up at the military bases. And so we created a whole
set of programs, which in the Base Closure Commission were called sort of fast
track, base closure language, fast track cleanup. But your listeners and all
the lawyers know that usually there's not much about cleaning up that is fast
because you need a lot of approvals. And so efficacy always, you know, usually
trumps efficiency in these worlds, but we needed to, you know, we needed to
meet the needs of local communities.
So it was an interesting time to sort of bring all of that
together. We worked very closely and in partnership with the Environmental
Protection Agency and also state and local EPAs to design programs that would
work for communities, so you could address real needs, you could get
communities heard. We even created something we call Restoration Advisory
Boards. They were community advisory boards designed to bring communities in
and, and hear their concerns about the cleanup projects at various bases around
the country. And so we really kind of put our pedal to the metal to where to
cooperate. I even transferred some funding to the EPA so that they would have
enough staff to move at the pace that the administration wanted on these
cleanup programs and that enabled us to accelerate the return of property to
communities for reuse.
Tyler McBrien: This
is a great opportunity for me to ask a question I wanted to ask later, which is
actually about collaboration between the military and civilian either
government agencies or civic organizations. So you mentioned early on in the
book, this early collaboration you witnessed between the Air Force and the EPA
with regard to the ozone issue as a sort of a-ha moment.
And then even earlier than that, I think in the, you know, you,
you talked about the, the importance of Senate committees, you know, single
decision could, could then have reverberations across the entire military. You
talk about how, you know, there's a Wall Street Journal op ed that, you
know, drove some conversation. So could you just you know, give, give your,
your view on the importance of not just the military, but these collaborative
relationships that you've seen throughout your career?
Sherri Goodman: Yes,
of course. I mean, on the, on the community partnerships, I made a very
deliberate attempt when I came into office to bring into our conversation the
environmental critics of the Department of Defense and to reach out to them. And
I brought in some environmental NGOs and many of them said, well, we've never
been in the Pentagon before. Nobody's ever, ever invited us in, you know. And I
found that by reaching out to people, creating some trust, creating a
relationship, and also explaining what we were doing, because to many people on
the outside, the Department of Defense, the Pentagon seems like a big black
box, you know, it's hard to get in, it's hard to figure out how to talk to, if
you don't know people, how to get on their schedule.
And often just by building that trust, you know, that could
change what had been become an increasingly adversarial set of relationships
around environmental issues at the time. I mean, there were many environmental
organizations just suing the Department of Defense because they felt they had
the law on their side and they couldn't get heard. And this was the best way to
get in. But often, by creating those relationships, both with the NGOs and
particularly with the affected communities. So, you have to deal with, you
know, you have to sort of reach out to the effect, go to, you know, I spent a
lot of my time visiting military bases and then listening to communities, what
are the needs, and then trying to make sure we had a process within the
Department of Defense to be responsive to those needs.
Because the normal process in the Department of Defense that
builds a budget, develops a program, and executes it, develops it based on the
requirements as seen through the lens of the people in the Department of
Defense. And often that's very good, but for certain programs like environment,
you need to also consider the needs of people outside the defense line. Military
families today are sort of the same way. They're not necessarily employees of
the Department of Defense, but they're very much part of the defense, larger
defense community, and their needs need to be considered, so they need to have
their voices heard. So today they're like, you know, there's great
organizations like Blue Star Families that enable military family voices to be
heard and also aligned. So we did some of the same things, creating those kind
of groups that could be aligned and voices to be heard within the Department of
Defense, particularly around closing bases, around natural resources, around
cleanup, any of the issues where a voice is outside the Department of Defense.
And then also creating the relationships with Congress. I mean,
sometimes as your listeners know, the relationship between the executive and
the legislative branch can be testy and sometimes it can be smooth. And, you
know, I grew up in an era of bipartisanship on the Senate Armed Services
Committee. I mean, my boss, Senator Sam Nunn, worked very closely with his
Republican counterpart, who at the time was Senator John Warner, and then later
John McCain, and they all worked hand in glove on almost all issues. And where
they didn't agree, they identified those areas of disagreement, but the staffs worked
very closely together. And we tried to bring some of that into the Pentagon in
the 1990s. We did a lot of congressional outreach, and because myself and some
of the other senior leaders in the Department at the time all had had this
experience, congressional experience, we, it was a natural act for us.
We would never think not to pre-brief, not to give members of
Congress an opportunity to weigh in on our issues because I knew how, how
important even just a small phrase or word in the markup of some defense bill
could have on the Pentagon. It was very clear once you got into the Pentagon,
how much power the Armed Services, the Authorization and Defense Appropriations
Committees wielded. And so you needed to understand how to work with them. They
were so important to your work. We used to bring the members in on various
issues. You know, the Secretary of Defense would meet regularly with the Chairman
of the you know, of the big eight. We saw the Defense Authorization
Appropriations Committees and that, that's a very important part of how work
gets done.
Tyler McBrien:
Reading your book, there were so many trends that you traced so well, and one
of them that I think trended unfortunately in the negative direction is
partisanship and the hyper politicization of an issue like environmental
protection and climate change, which, which affects everyone. But I want to, I
want to march through the chronology just a bit to 2006.
And if you need to back up to the Kyoto Protocols, we can do
that, because in 2006, I, I see this as sort of an inflection point in the
book, and it's where the title comes from. But you, you said that you, you were
realizing, I guess, in the late 90s and the early 00s that you needed to
address what was an elephant in the room in Kyoto, which was, you know, what
are the national security implications of, of climate change? So walk me
through that thinking and then the planning and execution of the report that
gave birth to now the famous phrase and the title of your book, “Threat
Multiplier.”
Sherri Goodman: Well,
thank you, Tyler. Yes, you know, the through line here is that, and we should
really go all the way back to the Montreal Protocol in many ways in 1987, when
an international treaty on managing and reducing ozone depleting substances was
signed. And that was really in many ways, the early predecessor, kind of an a-ha
moment for the military. And one of my close colleagues and Air Force officer,
Tom Morehouse was very central to that story. He was working at an Air Force
lab at the time. And an EPA official said, your chemicals are damaging, you
know, the ozone layer. And these are chemicals used in firefighting. So a very
important fundamental mission for the military.
And that set in motion, a whole way of rethinking about what
chemicals you needed to manage firefighting. And could you do it with chemicals
less damaging to the ozone light? And so Tom Morehouse and Steve Anderson of
EPA formed a fast partnership and they worked very closely together with Tom
even attending the 1987 Montreal Protocol negotiate, some of the negotiating
meetings. And that set the groundwork, I think for, for the military to begin
to understand better how its activities might have damaging global
environmental impact. Now we're moving away from sort of the local hazardous
waste cleanup, but more to things with, that have a global, you know,
atmospheric impact.
In Kyoto Protocol, was in, the Kyoto negotiations occurred, that
was COP3. People are going this year to COP29, okay. So COP3, 1997 was the
first, and I've been in office since 1993, but it was the first time that there
was an effort to develop an administration wide approach to greenhouse gas
emission reductions. But it was well before we understood what, what you just
said, I characterized, the elephant in the room, the national security
implications of climate change. We weren't yet thinking about that. We were,
we, it was presented to us more as, okay, what happens if we have to manage
emissions for military operations and installations. And then how does that
affect our energy use? So that's really one side of the equation. We didn't yet
understand what the national security implications of climate change would be.
So when we focused it, you know, on, in and on that way, and really before the
energy transition, you know, that led to one way of thinking, but it really
begged the question, what should our climate change strategy be?
So, you know, Kyoto Protocol never went into force because the
Byrd-Hagel Resolution, which was focused on not having the U.S. do anything
unless China did approximately the same thing, and China was a developing
country which wasn't subject to any emissions reductions. And that was passed
95 to zero in the U.S. Senate, led by Senators Ben Byrd and Chuck Hagel, who
later became Secretary of Defense, and then a climate champion when he was
Secretary of Defense. So many tables turned over the years on this subject, and
I'd say, you know, so it left me with the question, when I left office after
eight years, at the Department of Defense and then joined the Center for Naval
Analysis. Okay, well really, what are the national security implications of
climate change? Because all you national security nerds listening to this
podcast know that you always want to understand the geostrategic implications
of something that's going to have operational impact, okay.
So that's what we set out to do when we convened the first
group of generals and admirals to examine the national implications of climate
change. We under, wanted to understand first from scientists, what does it mean
that the climate is changing? You know, what is, and we, at that time, we
called it predicted climate change because we weren't yet experiencing, for
example, every summer being hotter than the summer before and, you know, green,
the Greenland ice sheet melting at such a rapid rate. We experience that today,
every day. But back in, in 2006, we weren't there yet, but we could see the
trend lines. The trend lines were clear.
And so after a year of study with national security and
intelligence professionals in the UK and the U.S., we wanted to explain the
national security implications of climate change in a geostrategic sense, how
it would affect us around the world, in addition to how we would manage our
energy. And so that's where the phrase threat multiplier came from as a way to
convey that a destabilized climate, destabilized earth and natural systems
would add instability to other threats we face and, and, you know, national
security is often all about stability. How do we achieve stability in a certain
situation, also, of course, without compromising our democratic values? But
those, there's that natural tension there.
So when you also now have weather and earth systems just
destabilized and you can't rely on the past to predict the future, you know,
you're, you've entered sort of a whole new world. So that's, we characterize
climate change as a threat multiplier for instability in fragile regions of the
world and that would affect even stable regions. And we've seen all of that,
unfortunately, come true today and even more as the risks of climate change
have accelerated.
The other really important piece of this that is enduring to
today is characterizing climate change, basically as a risk management issue. Okay.
It's not, it's not a, it's not a question of belief systems. It's not a
question of politics. I mean, you know, military leaders, military warfighters
plan against all range of threats and they assess the risk. And then they
decide what level of risk they're going to assume in any particular operation
or even with any budget request. You know, how much risk can I assume by only
buying, you know, X number of submarines instead of Y. And, because, you know,
you'd always like an infinite amount of everything and you can't have it. So
you have to decide what, what risk you're going to accept.
And so we, in the Cold War, we talked about the risk of a
Soviet nuclear attack as being a low probability, but very high consequence
event for which it was worth investing billions of Americans GDP to defend. And
in the climate era, we have climate now a very high probability and in many
cases, high consequence event. So then the question is what, what investments,
you know, what kind of investments do we make to protect ourselves from it? And
as General Sullivan, the former Army Chief of Staff, who was the first chairman
of the CNA military advisory board said, you know, we don't wait for 100
percent certainty because if you wait for 100 percent certainty, you know,
something bad is going to happen on the battlefield. You've got to plan against
those risks.
Tyler McBrien: Yeah,
I'm so glad you brought up the quote by General Sullivan because it did seem
like such an a-ha moment where this convergence of military thinking and
climate security thinking, where, as, as you said, when he said that, I think
you wrote it, it almost was like tablets falling from the sky. It was so on the
nose because militaries make decisions in the fog of war all the time. They
never have certainty. And if, if they wait, as General Sullivan said, bad
things will happen. So, you know, when you heard that and then you saw the
ripple effect of the report and you saw the gradual uptake of the term threat
multiplier, you know, what was going through your head? Did you feel that there
was some sort of sea change happening within the military and it's thinking you
know, with regard to climate change? Were you hopeful at that point? Walk us
through, you know, the, the after effects of the report.
Sherri Goodman: Well,
yes, it did get a lot of uptake for a report, because many reports just become
you know, bookstops, or they sit on the shelf. You know, doorstops, as they
say, or they sit on the shelf. But the timing for the release of this report in
April of 2007 was just prior to the first UN Security Council discussion on
climate and security. And so it's framing was even used by the British foreign
minister during that.
And then it also occurred right before the markup of the
defense authorization bill in the Senate Armed Services Committee that year. And
so in the bipartisan amendment led by John Warner and Hillary Clinton at the
time, they put the first recommendation of our report, which was to require the
president's National Security Strategy and DOD's National Defense Strategy and
the then what we call the Quadrennial Defense Review, all to assess the
national security implications of climate change in those annual documents. And
that's how you begin to mainstream something, a new concept. You know, in the
Department of Defense and in the intelligence, we also call for an intelligence
assessment to be conducted and that, that occurred. And then, so that's how you
begin to mainstream something at, you know, in the national security community.
You have to get it sort of embedded in the doctrine and the documents that are
prepared annually. It's not enough to just be carping on the outside. You know,
you have to get the institution to begin to embrace it in its own terms.
And so that's what happened. The institutions of the Department
of Defense then began to examine it on their own, produce their own studies and
analysis, their own reports. And you can, you know, you can trace over the
years how climate change as a national security threat and threat multiplier
have been included and expanded from climate to include water, then energy, now
food and health security. So you can see the, you know, the growing assessments
that have been done across these documents and others. And then from the
strategic, then down to the operational, ultimately tactical level.
Tyler McBrien: Before
we move on, I have to ask whether you were surprised with how well the, the
phrase threat multiplier caught on. I mean, I was, I just did a quick, I've,
I'm well, I'm very familiar with the term and I just quickly Googled it before
we, we sat down and it's used commonly by the UN. It's used all over the place.
So I don't know, were you, were you surprised at, at this uptake? And the, you
know, just how broadly it's used today.
Sherri Goodman: Yes,
frankly, I was, I was surprised. I, you know, and I used to joke like I should
have trademarked it so I could get like a quarter for every use, but you know,
it's a privilege and an honor. But also it's I'm glad that it's helped convey a
concept and, and help move people because, you know, communications is, is so
important and people have to be able to understand how to think about, you
know, think about something.
You know, I think there was some hope at the time that it could
end the politicization of the subject of climate change. And unfortunately that
part did not happen, you know, but maybe that was too much of an ambition for
this. But it really has helped, I think the not only the national security
community, but many others, both in foreign policy and elsewhere, really
rethink this. And in a way that also creates, you know, community and
partnership, even now around the world, where we think about, you know, the
need to address the serve so many important things with our allies and partners
globally. This is a piece of it.
Tyler McBrien: Yeah,
absolutely. I want to talk about one of the, I think, main arguments in the
book, which you make, I think quite convincingly that the U.S. military made
this transition, I think in no small part thanks to a lot of the work that you
did from environmental laggard to sort of climate leader. But it's, it's a
complicated history. The military is at once, you know, one of the first
government agencies to actually recognize the threat of climate change. And yet
it's still the largest institutional emitter of, of carbon gas. How do you
think about this apparent, you know, contradiction, maybe? What is the case for
the military as a climate leader today?
Sherri Goodman:
Right. Well, good, good framing, Tyler. So, you know, there's, first of all,
there've been many people who have been involved in this and the leadership,
you know, of people like General Gordon Sullivan and General Anthony Zinni and
Admiral Prueher when he was commander of PACOM and then later Admiral Locklear
as commander of PACOM and many others has been so central to this because that's
how you move institutions. But there are many unheralded leaders at all levels
of command and office, and, and often many local, many even enlisted officials
who really shine in undertaking, you know, what goes beyond maybe their
assigned duty, because they want to protect the environment. Because they see
the military, as being able to lead by example in a larger sense. And they want
to be stewards of the natural resources that we've inherited and be able to
pass that along to their children.
So our military is all about protecting Americans. And if we're
going to protect America and our heritage, we want to protect all facets of our
heritage, including, you know, our natural heritage. You know, if you think
back, you know, to even of our, you know, famous you know, songs from sea to
shining sea. We, we care about our natural, we care about our natural resources
and they want, we want them to be preserved. Now the military also has had the
opportunity to operate in the U.S. in many places that, because they're not
subject to development, many of our military bases have become islands of
nature. So when you have many endangered species from bald eagles to endangered
desert tortoise to, you know, red cockaded woodpecker that are protected on
bases across the U.S. And those are areas of that are important to the military
and the families who live in around there. So stewardship has been a natural
part of that heritage.
Often these protections sometimes, you know, there's two steps
forward, one step back, and so it's not, it's not a linear role of progress.
But if you look at transitions, and you look at kind of social transitions
across American history, there, there's sort of two important trend lines here.
One, I would speak to the transition of racial integration in the military,
which when it happened then really marked a substantial turn, you know, after
the end of the Cold War under Truman. Again, integrating gender integration
also came, you know, women in combat didn't come so quickly. Gays in the
military often, you know, a step forward, maybe half, two and a half steps back
and then forward again. Okay. But also, so you've had that reflection of
progress in the U.S. trace throughout progress. It can be seen in military
progress.
And at the same time, if you look at energy use, what's really
interesting is, you know, energy use in the, in the military, you know, from
coal to steam to oil to nuclear and now beyond. So, you know, that also
reflects the transition in energy use in the U.S. And, and many points in the,
you know, in that journey people said, oh no, you can't do it, you know. But
where would we, you know, no one thinks we would have, you know, the most
powerful military in the world today, if we didn't have nuclear powered, you
know, aircraft carriers and nuclear submarines. And so, of course, the energy,
you know, we have to, we have to always be at the forefront of technology and
technological design and uptake of technology.
The interesting thing that has occurred in my lifetime on
technology, which is an important very piece of this story, technology
innovation, is that after the Cold War, we really thought about defense research
and development spending, defense R&D spending, as being beneficial not
only to our military, but also spinning out. Think of GPS and the internet, you
know, and the technologies that were invented in defense and then became, you
know, widely adopted in commercial society. But now that's flipped and now
often technologies invented in the commercial sector and spins in to defense
because the share of defense R&D in comparison to commercial R&D, like,
think of the big tech companies today, you know, has really, that balance has
shifted. And so when we think about that as applied to the energy transition,
what's really important is to be working in lockstep with the advances
occurring in commercial, you know, in the private sector, in energy technology.
So that those can be also taken advantage of as we look to make our forces
lighter and more agile and unleashed from, you know, the tether of fuel that we
experienced in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Tyler McBrien: Yeah,
and you're already getting at where I wanted to sort of end up, which is these
four pillars of climate action and reform that you lay out. But before we go
there I just wanted to address a few skeptics, you could say. So there's, the
first skeptic I would, I would put on the table here is one who you are well
familiar with throughout your career. This argument that, great, you know, we
should care about environmental protection, but it should be subservient to,
you know, hard national security concerns. In other words, in pursuit of
climate change action, are we sacrificing military readiness? You know, I think
you mentioned that this is a sort of a needle that you had to thread throughout
your time at the Pentagon, even for, you know, back, back from starting in the
nineties. So what do you say to a skeptic like that, either who's in the
military or in civilian life?
Sherri Goodman: Well,
I say you have to be able to walk and chew gum, you know, in the military. You
can't just choose one or the other, you know. You always have to manage against
the set of constraints, you know, whether the constraint is what weather you're
going to have the next day when you're planning your D-Day operation and, and
you've got to have optimal weather, or, you know, it's whether you're going to
be able to conduct your training operations and not kill off, you know, the
endangered red-cockaded woodpecker because you cut down the trees on the range
and that was there where they made their nest.
Now, the military learned after, you know, getting an adverse
biological opinion at Fort Bragg early in the 1990s that oh, well, we don't
actually have to cut down those trees. We can make them realistic training
obstacles. And then the Marine Corps and the Army said, oh, we're saving a few
good species. That became a Marine Corps environmental campaign, playing off
their traditional motto. So, you know, you, we really rethought about what the
operational requirement was and what the needs were and then how to do both.
So, you know, what's often seen of as an either or can sometimes be a both and.
And that's, that's the important piece of this to understand
that it's not, yes, you have to have military readiness, absolutely is
fundamental. But how you achieve that readiness, you have to think about what
are all the components that go into it. And it's often the case that
environmental stewardship and climate security can be a piece of enabling that
readiness. In fact, today we often say climate readiness, you know, mission
readiness is climate readiness because you have to be able to operate in the
changing climate. You can't just say, well, it doesn't exist, but it does exist
because the ocean, the temperatures are hotter everywhere and the Arctic is
melting. You know, we have to be able to operate up there. So you can't, you
can't ignore it. You have to do, you have to do both.
Tyler McBrien: Yeah,
there was another line I really liked in the book. I can't remember who said
it, but they said it's about missions, not emissions. That is to say these
things are, you know, inextricably linked. So the other counter argument I
wanted to just address as well is, you know, maybe on, on the sort of climate
activist side of the, the spectrum that maybe we shouldn't be securitizing
quote unquote climate issues, or maybe the military is not the right
institution to address these problems. So I wanna just give you the chance to
address that. And I also wonder if you could bring in, you know, your sort of, a
theory of change that comes out in the book, which is the ability to create
change through, you know, well informed critiques from within the establishment
the sort of institutional reform rather than, you know, from outside of it. So
I, I know I put a lot out there, but yeah, I'm curious your thoughts on that.
Sherri Goodman: Yes.
Thank you very much. Yeah. You know, there is this whole sort of academic
school of thought on securitization. And that when applied to climate says
essentially, you know, that we're turning this into a sort of overly
militarized approach to climate by focusing on its security implications and
that the military, you know, isn't the solution. Well, I, I agree with that
latter point. The military is not the solution to global climate. emissions
reductions. It's not. It's a very small amount of global climate emissions
reductions.
So, but I reframe that consideration. First of all, I talk,
often talk about climatizing security instead of securitizing climate. And when
you think about what you need to have an effective foreign policy, you know,
today, you need, you know, You need diplomacy, development, and defense. You
need all three of those, okay? That's long been widely recognized, the three
D's. Sometimes today people even add a fourth D. You need disaster risk
management. So, but even if we just focus on those three D's, in climate. You
know, the climate challenge affects everybody, but the solution set should be
led by diplomacy and development around the world. The military has to lead by
example in getting its own house in order to the extent that it is a
substantial energy user. It's not a substantial part of global emissions, but
what it does can lead by example in certain segments. So I talk about
climatizing security because there are many ways that the military can lead by
example, both in the way it uses energy and transitions in energy.
And second, in working with allies and partners around the
world. That's incredibly important, and that sort of sets, you know, that's a
core component of our foreign policy. And we've seen this sort of in the, in
the war in Ukraine, the fact that we've had unity within NATO has been, is a
core component of that strategy. And, and also in the Indo Pacific, you know,
in the contest with China, the fact that we have developed a very strong
unified alliance approach between AUKUS and with a broad base of, of Asia
Pacific, Indo Pacific cooperation across many domains from trade, to health, to
foreign policy and to climate and security, particularly for small island
Pacific nations that are at existential risk and where Chinese influence could
be very attractive. So I think it's sort of all has to come together there and
that's all part of, in my view, leading by example and sort of climatizing
security in a positive way.
And to your point about how to make change from within, yes,
you know, in a broad sort of historic sense, you know, I came of age, you know,
in the 70s. So just after, you know, the 60s, an era where which was
characterized by people marching and protesting to get, make change from the
outside. But I have always tried to be a change maker more often from inside,
because I think you can make a difference. And I've seen that. I mean, I feel
like my, that's my life story. Threat multiplier has been about sort of
institutionalizing environment and climate awareness and action within our
national security institutions in a way that's enduring. But I'm not alone.
There are many people like me who are, have been doing, have been doing that
and will continue to do it because that is how you, and that's meant, that's
part of public service.
And also, so I want to lift up and, and express the importance
of those who continue to serve in, in public office because it's a hard thing
to do. It's not always the easiest thing. And you can get criticized for no
reason. And you know, it's not the most highly compensated career. But it
really can make a difference in so many people's lives. And so there's many
great public servants from those in uniform to civilians. Throughout the
national security community and beyond who've dedicated their lives to, you
know, making, making the world, making our nation better. And I think to me,
you know, as someone, my parents are Holocaust refugees and came from Germany
early in their lives and in the late 1930s, they were among the fortunate few
to escape Hitler and, and Nazism. And, and I grew up believing that we always
had to give back and make the world better. And so this has been my way of
trying to do that.
Tyler McBrien: Yeah,
that really comes through in the book. I think if, you know, someone just
glances at the cover, they may think it's, it's an institutional story or it's
a personal history and that's it. But you really highlight so many people along
the way, these public servants in and out of the military. And I was really
struck by how many just individuals you profile in the book. This is sort of an
unexpected joy of the book.
But I, I want to end sort of where you end. You were beginning
to talk a bit about climatizing security or climate proofing security, and you
lay out four pillars at the end there. So I just wanted to give you the
opportunity to, to see, you know, your vision for the future of the military's,
you know, efforts to, to combat or curb climate change. What do you see as the,
as these important aspects of that strategy?
Sherri Goodman: Well,
thank you. Thank you, Tyler. And, you know, let me note among those, you know,
unheralded who have sort of made such a difference in this field is the Center
for Climate Insecurity, which I'm privileged to be a part of and from its early
leadership with Frank Femia and Caitlin Werrell, and now with Erin Sikorsky as
a director, of previously John Conger, who also served in the Department of
Defense in a position similar to the one I held. And, and there have been many
others, and they really, this is important work that they continue and do every
day.
So I'd say the you know, the, the four pillars for climate
action in, in, in national security are, first what I call sort of improving
our predictive capability and getting precision, precision climate prediction
so that we can close the gap between short term weather and what we have sort
of near to medium term climate right now. And sort of that, that is going to be
so fundamental. It's fundamental across every sector of the economy, you know,
from health to agriculture and from transportation to infrastructure, but it's
particularly important for all sorts of defense applications. And that is, is
coming rapidly with advanced technologies from AI to quantum computing, but
sort of advanced climate prediction services are going to be so, so important.
Second you know, we have to be resilient as a society because
so much of climate change is already baked in: the higher temperatures, the
retreating sea ice, the perennial, almost perennial wildfires we face now, and
the flooding and the extreme weather events. And so we have to become resilient
as a society. We have to become resilient particularly at our military
infrastructure. And that's an important way that the Department of Defense
leads by example, because many bases are becoming those resilient bases of the
future today. When Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida was hard hit by Hurricane
Michael about five years ago, now it- and, and had the hangers torn off the,
the F-35 ripped off in that very powerful hurricane, it's now rebuilding as a
climate resilient base of the future. So those are examples that then can serve
as models, both across the military. And parts of it, you know, also other
parts of, of how they develop, but with natural infrastructure, using digital
twins, all these advances can also be used in the civilian sector.
And then third, when we think about sort of mitigation, sort of
how do you reduce your emissions, that's really all about the energy
transition. And again, you know, the military learned the hard way in Iraq and
Afghanistan, that long fuel supply lines put soldiers at risk. When they were
trucking fuel to the front that they could be hit and were hit by improvised
explosive devices. So, we need to protect our force first and foremost. And we
have to operate today in what the Department of Defense calls contested
logistics environment, particularly we think about planning for aggression, you
know, potential aggression with China in the Pacific. We want to reduce the
vulnerability of those supply lines. And so there are many alternatives being
developed now that make the force lighter and more agile, require less
refueling, more efficiency, new fuel types. So all of that advanced energy from
renewables to advanced nuclear to hydrogen to just more efficiency in weapon
systems design, like the blended body wing aircraft design that could
potentially save up to 30 percent fuel just on existing fuel use. And then of
course there's efficiency in how you use today's fuel. So, all of that has to
come together to reduce emissions and then better, and, and, and then track and,
and report and be rigorous about it. Something that military is quite good at
doing.
And then lastly, I would say a re-imagining global cooperation,
sort of working with our allies and partners to ensure that, you know, on the
one side you have the call for doing climate sensitive development strategies
now. But we also are doing climate aware cooperation with our allies and
partners. We're using, let's say, war games around all our combatant commands
to understand how a changing climate could affect any particular scenario, conflict,
or contest in a region. You know, from the growing competition as the Arctic
changes, you know, the great greater use of that region to changes in the Indo
Pacific, Latin America, even across Africa. But also use it as in a positive
way to develop those improved both technologies and practices to share with our
allies and partners and learn from them so that we are all stronger together.
Tyler McBrien: I
think that framework or, or plan sounds like a perfect place to end this
conversation. It's an excellent book. It's called “Threat Multiplier: Climate,
Military Leadership and the Fight for Global Security.” Sherri, thank you so
much for taking the time to speak with me today.
Sherri Goodman: Thank
you, Tyler. It's been a pleasure.
Tyler McBrien: The Lawfare
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