Duty Now For The Future


Could Arctic conflict go hot?
October 28, 2009, 4:28 am
Filed under: Arctic, Resource Wars, War | Tags: , , , , ,

Just continuing to monitor the ongoing resource conflict surrounding varying claims for the Arctic’s rich natural gas resources as well as its strategic military location.

UPI: Russia’s Arctic Circle claims worry NATO

NATO’s new European commander expressed concerns Friday about potential disputes over Russia’s claims to resources in the Arctic Circle.

U.S. Navy Adm. James Stavridis noted climate change, which is melting ice around the polar cap, is opening trade routes and access to billions of barrels of oil. That, in turn, could lead to competition and friction, he said.

But in a speech at the Royal United Services Institute in London, Stavridis said he hopes for cooperation, The Times of London reported.

“I look at the high north and I think it could either be a zone of conflict — I hope not — a zone of competition, probably,” said Stavridis, Supreme Allied commander for Europe. “There are certainly going to be areas of disagreement between the alliance and Russia, but the issues are so big and so important that a cooperative approach, finding zones of cooperation, will be very important in the time ahead.”

Russia sent a submarine to the Arctic seafloor in February to symbolically plant a flag and announced in March that it would establish military bases along the northern coastline.

Along with the United States and Russia, Canada, Denmark and Norway lay claim to parts of the Polar region.

NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen said this week climate change had “potentially huge security implications” for NATO in the Arctic Circle.

It looks like the Canadian government, who has been quite bellicose in their claims, are preparing for the worst.

Portal for North America: Danish defense chief quietly tours Canadian Arctic.

The Chronicle Herald (CA): Military prepares for worst

…”The [Canadian Forces Aerospace Warfare Centre] predicts oil prices could quadruple by 2019, unmanned attack aircraft will police the skies, and the Arctic will become the zone of interest for the world’s great powers.

An all-commando Canadian army will fight terrorists in a region called the “arc of instability,” stretching from western Africa, through the Middle East and into Southeast Asia.”



The Belt of Conflict

The United States is continually expanding the presence of their forces to several points throughout the globe. The locations of these engagements form a “belt of conflict” which stretches the length of the globe. Now, the conflict in these areas is escalating to a point at which, some time in the future, the possibility of an international conflict with nuclear overtones can be seen. From military bases in Colombia, destabilization of Bolivia and Venezuela, funding and arming separatist groups in Africa, manufacturing humanitarian precepts for Sudanese involvement, the continuing conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, NATO expansion in Eastern Europe, strategic maneuvering in the Caspian basin, attempts to gain control of the “string of pearls” and the escalating competition over Arctic resources– the U.S is pursuing a policy of confrontation for the sole purpose of gaining access to natural resources, subverting potential international coalitions and securing freedom of international military deployment.

RIA Novosti: U.S. could deploy missile shield in Arctic – Russia’s NATO envoy

Ice News: US could launch missiles from the Baltic Sea

GeoPoliticalMonitor.com: U.S weapons end up in al-Qaeda hands

Telegraph: NATO commander warns of conflict with Russia in the Arctic Circle

Rick Rozoff: U.S., NATO Poised For Most Massive War In Afghanistan’s History