'Black Swans' to Watch Out for in 2014
By James Jay Carafano
WashingtonExaminer.com
Americans will die on American soil in large
numbers. So predicted the Hart-Rudman Commission
seven months before the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
No commissioner felt good about it getting it right.
But the purpose of identifying "black swan" events
before they happen is to give our leaders a chance
to prevent them.
Here are some black swans that threaten to nest next
year:
The unending Iranian nuclear threat:
The P5+1 deal exchanging sanctions relief
for building "trust and confidence" with the Iranian
regime will accomplish nothing. The mullahs are not
that interested in a civil nuclear program. They
want the capability to build a bomb and put it in a
missile so they can threaten other countries.
When the P5+1 deal expires next year, the sanctions
regime will be broken and the U.S. won't be able to
put it back together. Meanwhile,
Iran will claim the right to "enrich" nuclear
material. The U.S. will have two options: be
denounced by enemies and frenemies for refusing to
engage in more feckless negotiations, or play along
with Tehran, yammering our way through even more
rounds of negotiations that merely give Iran more
prep time to become the new kid on the nuclear
block.
The Taliban are back: Many in the
White House crave the "zero option," a scenario
in which the Afghan government refuses to allow NATO
forces to stay in-country. It happened in
Iraq, they note, so why not in
Afghanistan? (What they do not note is the
serious security threat now rising in Iraq.)
But even if Afghan President
Hamid Karzai and
President Obama reach an agreement, the
stay-behind force will be barely big enough to
protect itself from a major offensive. That could
leave NATO forces one "Alamo" away from pulling out.
You can be sure that putting together the next
"Black Hawk Down" -- the bloodbath in Mogadishu that
prompted
President Clinton to pull U.S. forces out of
Somalia -- is high on the Taliban's list of
military objectives.
China will be China: China has pressed territorial
claims on virtually every frontier, most recently
triggering a dust-up by asserting the right to
control airspace over territories claimed by
Japan and
South Korea. These shenanigans will continue.
Every incident is a test of how far Beijing can
press its claims --and a lesson on how to push
harder and farther next time.
North Korea won't be ignored: The
regime subsists on making itself a threat to the
international community. When Pyongyang feels it’s
not getting the attention it deserves, it “corrects”
the situation by doing something dangerous and
irrational.
The crisis in (insert Middle Eastern country here):
“If America could just wean itself off Arabian
oil, Washington could turn its back on this
troubled region.” That was the argument. It hasn't
worked out. Though we're moving toward energy
independence, vital U.S. interests still can be
compromised by any of a number of Middle East powder
kegs. Unfortunately, Washington continues to lose
influence in the region due to our completely
reactive and ineffective foreign policy.
Al Qaeda ain't dead: The terrorist group's activities are on the rise. Combined with resurgent Islamist political activism, the West faces a bitter witch's brew. Europe is already bracing for the time when Islamist fighters, recruited for battle in Syria and elsewhere, return to their adoptive homes in the West. The U.S. homeland is no more immune to this threat than it is to that of homegrown terrorists like the Tsarnaevs.
There is no shortage of black swans on the horizon. Here's hoping that in 2014, our leaders find the wisdom to embrace policies that make the world a safer place for all.
James Jay Carafano, a Washington Examiner columnist, is vice president for defense and foreign policy studies at the Heritage Foundation.