Feature

May 13, 2009

Former Homeland Security Secretary Addresses Dean’s International Council

Michael Chertoff, former U.S. secretary of homeland security, spoke to the Harris School’s Dean’s International Council on May 7 about the various emerging threats to U.S. security in a technology-driven world. He touched on a wide range of topics from foreign militants groups to Mexican drug cartels to non-military issues like pandemic flu.

The Cold War structure of two superpowers that could—but most likely would not—annihilate each other has disappeared, said Chertoff. In its place is a world where technology enables any small group to cause large-scale death and devastation.

“It’s no longer a nascent state that has the monopoly on the use of the kind of force that can be catastrophic,” he said. And with this technology, destruction by small bands of terrorists, especially with nuclear weapons, holds graver consequences than ever before.

Among the foreign threats to U.S. national security, Chertoff listed Pakistan, Afghanistan, Yemen, and Somalia. These countries all have “ungoverned spaces” in which extremists—from Al Qaeda to pirates—can operate.

“All of these ungoverned spaces … will be a significant problem for us,” he said. “There is no option to leave that alone;” one lesson the United States learned from September 11, 2001. Additionally, he argued, concessions to extremists do not work, but only “increase the appetite.”

Shifting to Iran, Chertoff labeled the country’s movement towards developing a nuclear bomb a “serious consequence for the world.” He said Iranian possession of a nuclear bomb would “fundamentally alter the balance of power in the Middle East” and possibly spur other nations in the region to follow.

Chertoff also pointed to threats closer to home, including Mexico’s flourishing drug cartels along the U.S. border. “The biggest degradation to our security in the quickest period of time would occur if President Calerón lost his battle in Mexico.”

The United States must give Mexico much needed assistance or America’s southern border will resemble the Pakistan-Afghanistan one, where bold terrorist organizations feel secure. He again noted how technology influences terrorism by linking the use of the Internet to the beheading of some cartel victims.

Chertoff also cited non-military issues, including threats to cyber systems and dangers of contagious disease. He called the reaction to recent pandemic flu an example of what is both right and wrong with the U.S. government’s risk management—only addressing it when it is happening. He attributed the well-executed swine flu response plan to the Bush administration’s preparation for avian flu and warned against officials letting down their guard as the flu appears less dangerous than originally anticipated.

“All the threats I’ve talked about can be managed,” he said. “But they can only be managed if we take them seriously.” And the U.S. government must look ahead beyond immediate crises.

Chertoff, who recently set up a risk-management consulting firm, spoke at the bi-annual meeting of Harris School’s Dean’s International Council, a prestigious group of leaders from the United States and around the world. Council members act as an advisory group to the Harris School in issues of international importance and are a source of new policy initiatives and resource development.

 

Michael Chertoff

Contact Information
Communications Office
Phone: 773-702-7681


#