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【香港保衛戰當年今日・七】

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diff --git a/columns.xml b/columns.xml index b34689e0..092fb11c 100644 --- a/columns.xml +++ b/columns.xml @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -Jekyll2023-10-22T09:42:21+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/columns.xmlThe Republic of Agora | ColumnsUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIII究竟甚麼是道德相對主義?2023-10-09T12:00:00+08:002023-10-09T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/columns/what-exactly-is-moral-relativism<p>「這些不過是觀點與角度的問題而已。對你來說是那樣,對我來說是這樣。」這類說話,我們都不會陌生,甚至是我們常常會講的話。在現在這個「後現代」或「後真相」時代,彷佛我們都是「天然的相對主義者」。「客觀」、「絕對」這些詞只會讓我們眉頭緊皺。</p> +Jekyll2023-10-24T22:24:42+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/columns.xmlThe Republic of Agora | ColumnsUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIII究竟甚麼是道德相對主義?2023-10-09T12:00:00+08:002023-10-09T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/columns/what-exactly-is-moral-relativism<p>「這些不過是觀點與角度的問題而已。對你來說是那樣,對我來說是這樣。」這類說話,我們都不會陌生,甚至是我們常常會講的話。在現在這個「後現代」或「後真相」時代,彷佛我們都是「天然的相對主義者」。「客觀」、「絕對」這些詞只會讓我們眉頭緊皺。</p> <!--more--> diff --git a/feed.xml b/feed.xml index fe9ba753..54c767f5 100644 --- a/feed.xml +++ b/feed.xml @@ -1 +1 @@ -Jekyll2023-10-22T09:42:21+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/feed.xmlThe Republic of AgoraUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIII \ No newline at end of file +Jekyll2023-10-24T22:24:42+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/feed.xmlThe Republic of AgoraUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIII \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/heros.xml b/heros.xml index 96c0655c..bfa4a56e 100644 --- a/heros.xml +++ b/heros.xml @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -Jekyll2023-10-22T09:42:21+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/heros.xmlThe Republic of Agora | HerosUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIII以太坊的过去与现在2023-09-06T12:00:00+08:002023-09-06T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/heros/VitalikButerin-a1_r-ethereums-past-and-present<p>今天我打算回顾一下以太坊的历史,从2013年和2014年的开端开始,以及项目自那时以来经历的一些变化,还有我们对一些问题的思考方式如何与5年或10年前不同。</p> +Jekyll2023-10-24T22:24:42+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/heros.xmlThe Republic of Agora | HerosUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIII以太坊的过去与现在2023-09-06T12:00:00+08:002023-09-06T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/heros/VitalikButerin-a1_r-ethereums-past-and-present<p>今天我打算回顾一下以太坊的历史,从2013年和2014年的开端开始,以及项目自那时以来经历的一些变化,还有我们对一些问题的思考方式如何与5年或10年前不同。</p> <!--more--> diff --git a/hkers.xml b/hkers.xml index f803e9b1..e24d0423 100644 --- a/hkers.xml +++ b/hkers.xml @@ -1,4 +1,108 @@ -Jekyll2023-10-22T09:42:21+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers.xmlThe Republic of Agora | HkersUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIIIManoeuvre Or Defence?2023-10-10T12:00:00+08:002023-10-10T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/manoeuvre-or-defence<p><em>This article examines the points of divergence between two major schools of thought within the Israel Defense Forces regarding how best to defend the state against evolving threats.</em> <excerpt></excerpt> <em>Though specific to Israel, the debate has ramifications for European militaries as they confront a fires-centric Russian army that will attempt to operate from behind layers of anti-access capabilities including missiles, drones and UAVs.</em></p> +Jekyll2023-10-24T22:24:42+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers.xmlThe Republic of Agora | HkersUNITE THE PUBLIC ♢ VOL.33 © MMXXIIIIsrael Confronts Hamas2023-10-16T12:00:00+08:002023-10-16T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/israel-confronts-hamas<p><em>The legal and ethical challenges of operating in densely populated areas are going to be a tragic constant of 21st century warfare, with no easy solutions.</em></p> + +<excerpt /> + +<p>The impending ground invasion of Gaza by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has raised a range of questions about how military operations should be conducted in densely populated areas. The political context of the Israel–Palestine conflict, and the human tragedy that has engulfed Israeli and Palestinian families, has made the military considerations secondary to a raging political debate. For the military, however, the questions at stake are not exceptional but routine, and will likely define many of the planning considerations for operations throughout this century. Precedents set in Gaza, therefore, may cast a long shadow.</p> + +<p>Israel has declared war on Hamas. Legally, there are two questions that arise: the legality of the war, and the legality of how it is fought. As regards the former, Hamas’s incursion on to Israeli territory, the deliberate massacre of over 1,300 and the kidnapping of hundreds of Israeli civilians undoubtedly counts as an armed attack in response to which Israel has the right of self-defence. Given that Hamas has a stated objective of destroying the Israeli state, took the hostages on to the territory it controls, and is launching rockets and conducting command and control from that territory, it is also legal for Israel to operate against Hamas on the territory of Gaza in response. There is therefore no question as to the legality of the Israeli action, which aims to eliminate the capacity of Hamas to conduct further attacks.</p> + +<p>The difficulties arise as to how such a mission is to be carried out, given that the area of operations comprises densely populated urban terrain with a large proportion of children and non-combatants and very weak critical infrastructure. Under the Laws of Armed Conflict and International Humanitarian Law, Israeli forces are obligated to discriminate military from civilian targets, to restrict their activities to those that are of military necessity, and to exercise proportionality. It is not illegal for civilians to be killed as a result of operations. It is illegal for operations to target civilians or for there to be a lack of proportionality in striking military targets relative to assessed collateral damage.</p> + +<p>Discrimination is simplified by the fact that Hamas systematically uses civilian objects for military purposes. It has dug subterranean infrastructure beneath civilian buildings, including ammunition depots, and has boasted in its own media about using Gaza’s water reticulation infrastructure for manufacturing rockets. When militaries do this, they render such areas military objects that are targetable, which is why – for example – it was legal for coalition forces to strike a hospital in Mosul that had been repurposed for IED manufacture in 2016. The challenge for the attacking force therefore becomes a question of judging the military value of a target against the risk of collateral damage.</p> + +<p>The legal case for striking urban targets is often heavily weighted to the detriment of civilians because of the asymmetry in certainty about targets. If a Hamas command post is communicating from a structure and this is intercepted, if an Israeli ground unit takes fire from a structure, or if rockets are launched into Israel from a site, then there is confirmation that enemy military activity is taking place there. The civilians hiding in the building, trying to sleep or keep out of the line of fire, are invisible, and therefore are not counted in the judgement as to proportionality. This is why the RAF has long maintained that it knows of only one civilian killed in its strikes in Iraq, even though the civilian death toll from the air campaign during the war against Islamic State numbered in the thousands.</p> + +<p><strong><em><code class="highlighter-rouge">The laws of war are effective when parties view them as viable instructions for how to fight. When they prohibit fighting altogether, they are likely to be ignored</code></em></strong></p> + +<p>The campaign to defeat the Islamic State – which involved the assault of several major cities, from Ramadi and Fallujah to Mosul, Tel Affar and Raqqa – was conducted slowly, with painstaking targeting and legal processes to try and mitigate civilian harm. Nevertheless, the cities were laid waste, and thousands of civilians died. The death toll was also high for the attacking force. Iraq’s Counterterrorism Service, one of the most experienced and capable military units in the world at the time, suffered 40% casualties during the assault on Mosul.</p> + +<p>The challenge of how to take urban ground without destroying the city is insurmountable with the tools currently available. Moreover, because there is no prize for second place in war, and because sensor dominance quickly leads to an asymmetry in casualties, weaker forces will retreat into dense, urban terrain. Ukrainian troops did this in Mariupol. British forces expect to have to operate from urban strongholds in future conflict. Hamas and Islamic State’s decision to fall back into urban terrain made sound tactical sense.</p> + +<p>The laws of war are effective when parties view them as viable instructions for how to fight. When they prohibit fighting altogether, they are likely to be ignored. How to craft rules that protect civilians in this context, therefore, requires thoughtful proposals. The proposal advocated by some groups to exclude explosive weapons from urban fighting is a non-starter, as it would confer such an advantage on to the defender as to prevent an attacker from prosecuting operations.</p> + +<p>For Israel, tactical options are constrained by a range of additional factors. Iron Dome – the air defence system protecting Israeli cities from rocket attack – has a finite number of interceptors. Given the massive threat if Hizbullah joins the fray, Israel is keen to limit its expenditure of interceptors by interdicting left of launch. The threat of escalation with Hizbullah also means that Israel feels it necessary to preserve combat power. Both factors lead to an approach to Gaza that is fast and favours firepower. This weights the judgement as to military necessity.</p> + +<p>In the absence of tools and methods for fighting among the people, advertising intent and clear avenues for civilians to vacate the battlespace is a viable alternative. This is what Israel has done by instructing civilians to move South of the Gaza River, while indicating the routes and times where movement will not be interdicted. The proposed timeframe for evacuation was short, although it has now been extended by delays to the ground operation.</p> + +<p><strong><em><code class="highlighter-rouge">A policy to permanently drive Palestinians from Gaza would amount to ethnic cleansing and a war crime</code></em></strong></p> + +<p>Despite these measures, many civilians – as always in these cases – will choose to stay. Furthermore, in this specific context, many Palestinians fear that Israel is not trying to move them to a safe place, but instead trying to get them to vacate land which will be occupied and eventually settled. Palestinians fear that they will not be allowed to return. This is not the stated policy of the Israeli government. However, given Israel’s past conduct and the statements of several of its current ministers, this fear is understandable. It is also important to note that Israel has a history of valid tactical military justifications being instrumentalised by a minority within its cabinet to radically reshape its policy over time. This is how Operation Peace for Galilee in 1982, authorised by the Israeli cabinet to secure its northern border, was morphed in stages by Defence Minister Ariel Sharon into a siege of Beirut.</p> + +<p>A policy to permanently drive Palestinians from Gaza would amount to ethnic cleansing and a war crime. It is therefore vital that, alongside support to Israel in defending itself, the international community is clear as to its expectations in confirming Israeli intent, and the consequences if that intent morphs into something illegal. One clear test is whether Israel will help to make the area to which people are evacuating safe by allowing food, medicine and clean water to be moved into southern Gaza.</p> + +<p>It is also clear, however, that the international community will lack any credibility or authority on the issue if it simply demands a return to the status-quo ante. For many Palestinians, the progressive erosion of their control of the West Bank was choking off any prospect of a path to peace. For Israelis, the massacre conducted by Hamas on 7 October fundamentally changed their calculus. For years, Israel has been fearful as Iran and Hizbullah have consolidated their hold on Lebanon and Syria, amassing an arsenal of sophisticated weapons. In combination with the training and support to Hamas and the infiltration of Judea and Samaria, the IDF had come to view the status quo – amid increasing US disengagement from the region – as similarly unsustainable.</p> + +<p>The IDF’s assessment today is that if the threat is left to expand, it will eventually threaten the viability of the Israeli state. Thus, their objective in the current conflict is not to simply inflict a dose of pain on Hamas to deter further fighting, but to systematically destroy its military capacity to conduct operations and thereby write down one of the threats. This risks Hizbullah intervening. But given that the Israeli security state fears things getting worse over time, many in the security establishment feel that if a fight must happen, then they would rather have it today.</p> + +<p>For the international community, therefore, while deterring a regional escalation should be an objective, a mere temporary “stability” is unlikely to look attractive to either side. If the international community wants long-term stability, it must be more proactively engaged in exploring a path to peace, rather than pursuing a systematic disengagement that simply cedes the region to Iran, which has characterised Washington’s approach for the last three years. There may emerge, from the ashes of this unfolding tragedy, an opportunity to build a new road to peace, just as there is the risk that the flames will engulf what remains of a rules-based international system that so many words have been pledged to defend.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><strong>Jack Watling</strong> is Senior Research Fellow for Land Warfare at the Royal United Services Institute. Jack works closely with the British military on the development of concepts of operation, assessments of the future operating environment, and conducts operational analysis of contemporary conflicts.</p>Jack WatlingThe legal and ethical challenges of operating in densely populated areas are going to be a tragic constant of 21st century warfare, with no easy solutions.Integrate Offence And Defence2023-10-11T12:00:00+08:002023-10-11T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/integrate-offence-and-defence<p><em>This article articulates pathways forward in a future operating environment dominated by stalemates and threats to national homelands.</em></p> + +<excerpt /> + +<p>A core challenge that is likely to be presented by the future operating environment is the combination of stalemates at the front with threats to national homebases. Not only will this strain militaries, but it will also generate organisational competition between those responsible for defensive tasks and those responsible for manoeuvre at the front.</p> + +<p>One way of overcoming these contradictions is through a concept which adopts elements of strike, Integrated Air and Missile Defence (IAMD), and manoeuvre. This is the goal envisioned under Israel’s Operational Victory Concept. Per this concept, which heavily emphasises multidomain integration, close coordination must be achieved between air and missile defences, strike and ground forces.</p> + +<p>As described by one of the authors in a previous article, this approach would involve three things. The first is the integration of sensors used for offensive and defensive tasks, and the use of the same capabilities to enable both strikes and interceptions. This integration can enable responsive fires. Instead of depending almost solely on an attempt to deliver a knockout blow at the outset of a conflict, this approach would also seek to create a blanket of sensor coverage to ensure that any projectile fired creates a risk of unmasking the launcher. Defensive forward-based intercepts can be followed up with strikes on launchers. As demonstrated by the updating of defensive radar systems such as the AN/MPQ-64 to extrapolate a launcher’s location from a missile’s trajectory, this is technologically viable today. The second element of the approach is strike capabilities with the range and speed to engage targets before they move or even complete a multi-rocket firing sequence. Precisely what this range and speed requirement is depends on the target. Over longer distances, one might need recourse to tools such as longer-range missiles or loitering munitions. It is also possible to create dual-purpose interceptors which can serve both air defence and strike missions, as illustrated by the US Navy’s SM-6. Though this entails costs, an integrated system is arguably cheaper than two separate lines of effort to support strike and defence. If operated in proximity to the enemy, as in the context of offensive manoeuvres, short-range strike-intercepting munitions might even be cheaper than descent-phase interceptors. The final component of this model is ground forces that manoeuvre to support strike by infiltrating an opponent’s lines, unmasking targets and forcing them to move, as well as engaging targets of opportunity. Sufficiently small and distributed ground formations networked with a wider force could serve as force multipliers for strike.</p> + +<p><strong><em><code class="highlighter-rouge">The costs of deflecting Iran’s proxies in the early stages of a conflict with Tehran could leave Israel exhausted in the event of direct Iranian intervention later on</code></em></strong></p> + +<p>In effect, this approach still maintains a focus on manoeuvre, presenting an opponent with multiple dilemmas and preventing them from acting in a coherent manner. However, physical manoeuvre is in this context a supporting element in a system based on dislocation by fire. In effect, manoeuvre, fire and defence must be balanced in a system which integrates their effects.</p> + +<h3 id="lessons-from-the-israeli-example">Lessons from the Israeli Example</h3> + +<p>The Israeli experience is instructive here. Israel faces the prospect of a multi-front war with Iranian proxies and Iran itself, in which there is a considerable risk that its air defence capabilities will be exhausted by the sheer volume of fire that it faces. Moreover, the state faces a prioritisation issue – the costs of deflecting Iran’s proxies in the early stages of a conflict could leave it exhausted in the event of direct Iranian intervention later on. It would seem, then, that seeking efficiencies by integrating offence and defence is an essential task.</p> + +<p>That being said, there exist considerable points of friction within the IDF. One criticism of the argument that fires and defences should be better integrated – advanced by the supporters of both manoeuvre and defence – is that a new investment in offensive ground capabilities in general, and in particular in an offensive forward-interception and launch-suppression layer, will draw from the resources the IDF requires in order to continue to strengthen and develop its existing multi-layer interception system. Dividing force design efforts would, in practice, be to Israel’s detriment. Given the relative effectiveness of Israeli defences thus far, there is an understandable conservatism regarding change. Phrases often heard in the corridors of the General Staff include: “don’t change horses midstream” or “don’t change a winning team”.</p> + +<p>However, if we examine the IDF’s last modernisation process in the 1990s, when the Syrian armour threat was regarded as a key strategic issue, Israel did not refrain from building a combat system that enjoyed five to six separate layers of response. Fighter plane interdiction capabilities were not considered an alternative to building a new cutting-edge fleet of remotely piloted aircraft. The plethora of aerial capabilities did not make redundant the long-range precision-guided munition squads deployed in the ground divisions, along with the Northern Command’s rocket and missile artillery division. All the while, the IDF continued to build and upgrade the Armoured Corps, supplying it with advanced tanks to help deal with forward enemy forces, and it would later control Syrian territory through improved capabilities. Thus, the decision to invest in another combat layer at the cost of a few billion NIS should not be seen as threatening other layers of defence. Put simply, the cost of layered and potentially redundant systems is outweighed by both the military and material costs of a single-vector solution. A failure to overwhelm a missile-centric adversary will surely prove to be more expensive in blood and treasure, as well as in strategic outcomes.</p> + +<p>In addition, many of the improvements in areas such as ISR that could enable a strike-based concept could also improve IAMD. For example, new and comparatively cheap UAVs and nano-satellites could enhance both the tracking of certain targets and the interception of ascending missiles and active launchers. Integrated systems such as the US Navy’s Naval Integrated Fire Control-Counter Air and the US Army’s Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System have already shown how non-dedicated ISR assets like the F/A-18 and F-35 can enhance missile defence, as well as how air defence radar can provide data to enable subsequent strikes.</p> + +<p><strong><em><code class="highlighter-rouge">Developing a significant forward fighting layer that can engage ballistic and UAV threats is a crucial component in fulfilling Israel’s goal of moving from responding to initiating</code></em></strong></p> + +<p>Moreover, the ability to engage targets with comparatively short-range capabilities including strike platforms and interceptors that rely on semi-active homing can free up more expensive assets for longer-range missions. Greater awareness about which missiles are likely to hit targets and new modes of intercept based on directed energy weapons (lasers) can also support this aim, though the latter will mature over the long term. As examples of the capabilities currently diverted from more strategically decisive missions, we might consider Israel’s “long arm” strategic strike capabilities and its next-generation Iron Dome (together with Arrow and David Sling). Both the air assets needed for strategic strike and the defensive capabilities of Iron Dome would be necessary for a conflict with Iran. However, if they are currently pinned down defending against more proximate threats, they will not be available for this role.</p> + +<h3 id="general-principles-for-defence-in-an-age-of-protracted-conflict-and-missile-threats">General Principles for Defence in an Age of Protracted Conflict and Missile Threats</h3> + +<p>There are a number of lessons that can be derived about the relationship between strike and defence, both in an Israeli context and more broadly:</p> + +<ul> + <li> + <p>The principles of the challenge facing multiple countries are quite similar. Protracted indecision in long multi-front wars disadvantages democracies with capital-intensive militaries. The need to defend civilians and critical national infrastructure, moreover, creates real opportunity costs in other areas. Countries that must defend against large numbers of cheap capabilities – from multiple-launch rocket systems (MLRS) to UAVs and even some missiles – will have to strip formations at the front of much-needed ground-based air defence (GBAD), unless they can find solutions. A combination of strike and defence can achieve this.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>It is possible and necessary to strive towards short wars and to remove the threat to the home front. Preserving routine in major cities, and especially the security of civilians, is of primary importance. The continuity of everyday life, education and the economy must be maintained.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>Future wars have the potential to become multi-arena scenarios, and as such it will be critical to achieve a decisive victory vis-à-vis proximate threats in order to free up resources deal with more distant ones.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>Strengthening intelligence, aerial strike and multi-layered defence components is crucial; however, it is not sufficient. Focusing on these components forces Israel into an attrition war and a strategy that serves its adversaries. Engaging MLRS, UAVs or missiles emanating from an area like Kaliningrad or southern Lebanon with aircraft or expensive GBAD and counter-rocket, artillery and mortar assets will both expend resources at unsustainable levels and draw assets from the offensive military actions needed to decide a war. For Israel, this would be long-range strike, while for NATO it might be supporting ground manoeuvre formations.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>Developing a significant forward fighting layer that can engage ballistic and UAV threats is a crucial component in fulfilling Israel’s goal of moving from responding to initiating. The ability to strike a launcher as it is embarking munitions, or to destroy a missile with a short-range interceptor that does not rely on an expensive seeker, will be crucial to thinning out threats. As much as possible, these systems should be able to leverage each other’s sensors.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>It is vital to prioritise research, planning, development and production of sophisticated responses to advanced weapons systems that will emerge in the coming years, such as hypersonic missiles, tactical nuclear weapons, cruise missiles and other capabilities.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>Without this, many of the cutting-edge capabilities and combat methods developed by militaries such as the IDF, including those incorporated in Momentum and the next multi-year plan, will end up amounting to only tactical improvements – which, important as they are, will not flip the script.</p> + </li> +</ul> + +<p>In effect, then, responding to the twofold challenges of a positional battlefield and adversaries with superior mass will require a synthesis of capabilities. Single-vector solutions, be they based on manoeuvre, fires or active defence, will likely be found wanting. An integrated solution that seeks to leverage synergies between fires, manoeuvre and active defence is likely to be costly, organisationally difficult and applicable only in comparatively small theatres. However, the efficiencies that such a solution provides are a prerequisite for operating in the future combat environment.</p> + +<hr /> + +<p><strong>Sidharth Kaushal</strong> is the Research Fellow of Sea Power at RUSI. His research covers the impact of technology on maritime doctrine in the 21st century and the role of sea power in a state’s grand strategy.</p> + +<p><strong>Eran Ortal</strong> is the current commander of The Dado Center for Interdisciplinary Military Studies. Ortal is also the founder of the Israel Defense Force Dado Center journal, dedicated to Operational art and military transformation.</p> + +<p><strong>Ran Kochav</strong> is an Israel Defense Forces brigadier general who has served as the commander of the Israeli Air and Missile Defense Forces. General Kochav has held a number of command roles within the IDF, including as the commander of the 66th battalion the divisional anti-aircraft officer of the 91st Division before the 2006 Lebanon war and head of the special forces section in the Air Group of IAF (2005-2006).</p>Sidharth Kaushal, et al.This article articulates pathways forward in a future operating environment dominated by stalemates and threats to national homelands.Manoeuvre Or Defence?2023-10-10T12:00:00+08:002023-10-10T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/manoeuvre-or-defence<p><em>This article examines the points of divergence between two major schools of thought within the Israel Defense Forces regarding how best to defend the state against evolving threats.</em> <excerpt></excerpt> <em>Though specific to Israel, the debate has ramifications for European militaries as they confront a fires-centric Russian army that will attempt to operate from behind layers of anti-access capabilities including missiles, drones and UAVs.</em></p> <p>In a recent article, three officers in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) outlined what they called Israel’s Golden Age of Security. According to them, the sunset of the Golden Age has to do with the breakdown of three privileges Israel has enjoyed in the past few decades: the privilege of low-intensity conflicts (replaced by large-scale scenarios involving Iran and increasingly capable proxies); the privilege of US support (which is weakening); and the privilege of internal unity in Israel (which is eroding). In the wake of the lessons from Russia’s war in Ukraine and the shadow of a likely US pivot to the Indo-Pacific should a war over Taiwan within the Davidson Window materialise, many of these challenges will be faced by European states as well.</p> @@ -74,7 +178,170 @@ <hr /> -<p><strong>Tobias Borck</strong> is Senior Research Fellow for Middle East Security Studies at the International Security Studies department at RUSI. His main research interests include the international relations of the Middle East, and specifically the foreign, defence and security policies of Arab states, particularly the Gulf monarchies, as well as European – especially German and British – engagement with the Middle East.</p>Tobias BorckNothing will be the same after the weekend’s carnage in Israel. The Palestinian question is back on the agenda, and with a vengeance. So will be Israel’s response.The Post-October 7 World2023-09-28T12:00:00+08:002023-09-28T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/the-post-october-7-world<p><em>On October 7, 2022, U.S.-China relations were reshaped with export controls on military AI, shifting global semiconductor manufacturing and distribution and complicating the global economy. This report outlines U.S. allies’ perspectives on “the new oil” in geopolitics.</em></p> +<p><strong>Tobias Borck</strong> is Senior Research Fellow for Middle East Security Studies at the International Security Studies department at RUSI. His main research interests include the international relations of the Middle East, and specifically the foreign, defence and security policies of Arab states, particularly the Gulf monarchies, as well as European – especially German and British – engagement with the Middle East.</p>Tobias BorckNothing will be the same after the weekend’s carnage in Israel. The Palestinian question is back on the agenda, and with a vengeance. So will be Israel’s response.Waterfall’s Shadow In Mekong2023-09-29T12:00:00+08:002023-09-29T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/waterfalls-shadow-in-mekong<excerpt /> + +<p><em>Infrastructure programs like China’s Belt and Road Initiative further authoritarian influence in climate and water-stressed regions. The United States needs strategies that simultaneously advance water security and national security to compete with China.</em></p> + +<h3 id="the-issue">The Issue</h3> + +<ul> + <li> + <p>The United States and its network of democratic partners and allies increasingly find themselves struggling to safeguard the rule of law, free markets, civil liberties, and human security in countries most at risk from climate change and its impact on water security.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>A network of authoritarian states led by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) are using infrastructure investment programs like the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) alongside gray zone campaigns to gain access and influence, often in areas most at risk of further climate shock and water insecurity, particularly in the Mekong region.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>As a result, continuing to develop water strategies offers a viable means of integrating development and deterrence to address core human security challenges and deny further authoritarian access and influence across the world’s most climate-stressed societies.</p> + </li> +</ul> + +<p>Taiwan is not the only flash point in the growing contest between the United States and China. As the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) exports its authoritarian model for governance and development, it creates new arenas for competition beyond the military sphere. From the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and infrastructure investments to the use of political warfare, Beijing is creating a new sphere of influence.</p> + +<p>Through a combination of trade, diplomacy, development, and coercion, the CCP is securing key terrain in a new geopolitical race. This terrain is centered on critical transportation and trade corridors beyond the traditional focus on sea lines of communication vital for securing its trade and power projection. This logic extends beyond the sea to river and ground lines of communication. For decades, China has been using multiple instruments of power to gain access and influence in the Lower Mekong River Basin. Over 245 million people live in the Mekong Region, and this population is projected to grow by as much as 100 percent by 2050. Trade between China and countries in the Lower Mekong has grown to over $400 billion, and Beijing uses its economic and diplomatic influence to gain military access, including increasing its regional force posture and building secret military bases.</p> + +<p>The Lower Mekong region, which includes Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia, is one of the most vulnerable to climate change, with an estimated 55 percent of the Mekong Delta population likely to be affected in the coming years. China funds dam projects in multiple countries that complicate water management and exacerbate environmental stress. The region is sinking as sea levels rise, leading to increased salinity and flooding in areas that Southeast Asia relies on to feed its growing population. In Vietnam alone, 500 hectares are lost each year to erosion thanks to these twin forces. This combination of rising seas, changing weather patterns, and water management issues, including upstream dams in China, is threatening food security. The Mekong is thereby a portrait of how population growth, environmental degradation, and climate change coalesce to threaten human security.</p> + +<p>The states along the Mekong River are also a focal point for a new era of great power competition. After decades of inattention, the United States is working with allies like Japan and a network of international institutions to make the region more resilient to Chinese influence. Since 2009, the United States has promoted a series of initiatives in the region, including the Lower Mekong Initiative and Mekong-U.S. Partnership, to promote projects ranging from food security and education to energy and water security. These initiatives are part of a larger regional strategy designed to outflank the growing influence of the CCP and related businesses with direct links to Beijing. As a result, water security — the ability of people to access clean, safe water for personal and agricultural use — is converging with national security.</p> + +<p>Water programming can play a central role in U.S. infrastructure development initiatives and development assistance in the Lower Mekong River Basin, where water access and management issues collide with great power competition and climate fragility. The region is also a focal point for China’s BRI, which intensifies the dilemma. Southeast Asian states must balance the promise of economic development they need to support rising living standards and growing populations with the loss of autonomy that comes with debt trap diplomacy, corruption, and gray zone campaigns. This challenge makes water a key cross-cutting issue that connects multiple U.S. government and Group of Seven (G7) initiatives designed to counter the growth of authoritarian access and influence under the guise of development assistance.</p> + +<blockquote> + <p>Water security — the ability of people to access clean, safe water for personal and agricultural use — is converging with national security.</p> +</blockquote> + +<p>This brief reports on a series of tabletop exercises (TTXs) used to explore how water programming, in coordination with a broader infrastructure strategy, can address both human security and national security challenges. Like earlier CSIS TTXs on water security focused on the Sahel, this series, which focuses on the Lower Mekong River Basin, examines the interplay of economic development and climate change with water security. Unlike the earlier TTX on the Sahel, however, this installment addresses long-term competition and explores how development initiatives interact with broader national security priorities.</p> + +<p>Based on the TTXs, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the broader interagency network committed to development should use water as a focal point for competitive foreign policy. By combining development projects that address core human needs with ongoing infrastructure initiatives designed to create regional and global economic corridors using theater strategy, the United States can take a new approach to competition with China. This competition complements the pivot to integrated deterrence by reassuring partners and offering a viable alternative to the BRI. Seen in this light, making water projects a focal point for strategy better aligns resources both within the U.S. government and across its network of allies and private sector partners. This alignment will help overcome common pitfalls of water projects, which tend to be underfinanced and require multiyear implementation plans. More importantly, it can show how new infrastructure networks offer an alternative to debt trap diplomacy and authoritarian influence that flows through the BRI around the world.</p> + +<h3 id="control-the-water-control-the-region">Control the Water, Control the Region</h3> + +<p>China uses BRI infrastructure investments to connect the Mekong River Basin and further bind states to its economy and geopolitical interests by focusing on water and trade. Through the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation (LMC) initiative, China seeks to gain leverage over water management while promoting economic development. Along these lines, China conducts “hydro-diplomacy” to build dams across the region. While these dams generate electricity, they also often create significant environmental strain that affects downstream water levels and food security. In addition to environmental stress, the projects often involve forcible displacement and uproot entire communities.</p> + +<p>China also supports projects that increase trade along the Mekong. Beijing has funded the construction of multiple river ports, often expanding existing sites to handle larger cargo ships. These efforts include shadowy investment vehicles that combine the state with business figures, including a significant investment in a Laos river port by a sanctioned Chinese businessman linked to casinos and illicit trade. These port investments frequently accompany larger special economic zones where sovereign governments cede more extensive tracts of land to Chinese business interests. Some of these special zones have become magnets for illegal wildlife trade. Parallel to these ports, China invests in rail lines, including major projects in Thailand and Laos.</p> + +<p>These projects bolster China’s centrality in the region. If nineteenth- and twentieth-century geopolitics are about ground and sea lines of communication connecting the world, then twenty-first-century strategy revolves around the infrastructure that enables modern trade. By connecting the Mekong region, China makes itself a principal node in the larger regional network and diminishes the influence of other states like the United States, Japan, and Australia. The CCP can also use a mix of subtle threats and espionage to turn otherwise independent nations into a new category of client states — a dependence compounded by upstream dams. Through the BRI, China has put itself in a position to dictate the terms of trade and the flow of water.</p> + +<h3 id="using-water-security-and-infrastructure-to-counter-the-chinese-communist-party">Using Water Security and Infrastructure to Counter the Chinese Communist Party</h3> + +<p>Over the last 10 years, thought leaders in Congress, academia, and successive presidential administrations have begun to see the importance of using increased focus on water strategy and large-scale infrastructure projects to promote the interests of the United States and its democratic partners and allies globally. In 2017, USAID launched the U.S. Global Water Strategy, a five-year planning framework focused on increasing water security. The same year, water security made its way into the National Security Strategy. These efforts built on earlier initiatives across the U.S. government.</p> + +<p>As a more recent example, the 2022 U.S. Global Water Strategy and supporting action plan approach water security as both a risk and an opportunity. Consistent with earlier USAID efforts, the strategy envisions using a mix of increased access to safe drinking water and sanitation (WASH), improved water resources management (WRM), and water productivity (WP) to reduce water-related conflict and fragility. The strategy envisions allocating additional resources to existing water security programs in an effort to increase access to safe WASH while addressing climate resilience and food security challenges associated with water sheds like the Mekong River Basin.</p> + +<p>These investments promote the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), advance U.S. foreign policy interests, and expand water access, which is a core human need. Building water projects that encourage better environmental stewardship and trade through a network of local governments, U.S. partners and treaty allies, nongovernmental organizations, and international institutions would offer a rival network to the BRI and authoritarian influence. Since modern geopolitics is more about networks than nations, any project that increases access to different political, economic, and human networks therefore creates a strategic advantage and offers a viable alternative to countries whose sovereignty is under threat from authoritarian states.</p> + +<p>While interest in water strategy has been growing since 2008, a new development involves infrastructure projects that link democratic states and the private sector to promote trade and human security while offering an alternative to the BRI. Parallel to a domestic focus on infrastructure investment in 2021, the administration under U.S. president Joseph Biden announced the Build Back Better World (B3W) initiative, which became the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGII) in 2022. The effort called for aligning foreign policy and sustainable development through projects that address climate change, health security, digital innovation and access, and gender equality. These pillars act as focal points for investments by G7 nations and create new opportunities for public-private partnerships.</p> + +<p>In other words, to counter the $1 trillion China has invested in the BRI, the Biden administration would create a rival infrastructure network that links free states and private companies. This approach is consistent with the network theory of victory, articulated above, wherein power stems from greater participation in one network over another. In 2022 the G7 committed to investing $600 billion dollars in public-private sector initiatives by 2027. PGII investments, in addition to the B3W pillars, would be guided by transparency, good governance, and respect for human rights, thus providing an alternative to the BRI and authoritarian overreach.</p> + +<p>These efforts reflect an increased focus on economic corridors as a central pillar of strategy in the Biden administration. These corridors combine public-private sector investments in transportation infrastructure (rail lines, riverine ports, and roads) with investments in clean energy and information and communication technology (ICT). The result is hubs that promote food security and access to healthcare as much as economic growth. For example, the Lobito corridor in southern Africa will link the Democratic Republic of Congo, Zambia, and Angola, creating the network of rail lines, economic hubs, and ports required to develop the region and ensure access to key minerals for a clean energy transition.</p> + +<p>In many respects, the strategic vision articulated in both the PGII and 2022 Global Water Strategy builds on USAID and U.S. allied water programs in the Mekong River Basin. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) is investing in infrastructure projects, many of which also complement G7 partner initiatives. For example, the Japan-U.S.-Mekong Power Partnership (JUMPP) funds projects that combine regional trade integration with energy security.</p> + +<p>From this perspective, the Mekong River offers an ideal regional case study for refining the complementary strategic initiatives envisioned by the Biden administration to counter the BRI. The challenge is to develop new policy playbooks that help visualize and describe a regional strategy for countering malign influence by the CCP while helping populations most affected by forces like climate change.</p> + +<h3 id="using-tabletop-exercises-to-refine-water-strategy">Using Tabletop Exercises to Refine Water Strategy</h3> + +<p>Because water and infrastructure projects are, by definition, interagency concerns, they create coordination challenges. These challenges are exacerbated by the focus on public-private partnerships in PGII and emphasis on combining diverse stakeholders specified in the 2022 Global Water Strategy. As a result, policymakers need creative forums to conduct stress tests and refine their strategy to bridge traditional governmental divides. Because strategy involves competing interests and uncertainty, these forums must include modeling how rival states like China and local spoilers might respond. Water strategy must find a way to combine development and deterrence, so PGII should complement broader theater campaign plans and efforts to deny malign Chinese influence. It is difficult to create a viable long-term strategy without illustrating how conflicting interests create alternative futures and shift the logic of programmatic investments over time. A TTX can help flesh out these types of programmatic uncertainties.</p> + +<p>TTXs, alongside crisis simulations and gaming in general, are tailor made for strategic problems like the challenge of advancing a water strategy that addresses human security and counters malign authoritarian influence. These forums allow expert players to simulate the fog, friction, and uncertainty at the heart of great power competition. This experience, in turn, promotes critical analysis and reflections on how to refine strategies that advance U.S. interests. Because strategy involves thinking about the clash of interests over time and space, it requires thinking about alternative futures and red teaming the different pathways to those futures.</p> + +<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/m8yONlG.jpg" alt="image01" /></p> + +<p>To this end, CSIS constructed a series of water security TTXs that focused on WASH and WRM efforts in the face of great power competition. The first iteration explored the Sahel and how a mix of political and public health shocks interacted with climate stress in the region. Players aligned PGII investments and water security to counter these crisis events.</p> + +<p>Based on the findings, CSIS built a second TTX that shifted the geographic focus to the Mekong River Basin and transformed the game design from crisis response to competitive strategy. The scenario explored how rival groups of players with a mix of military and development experience set strategic priorities and developed plans around water and infrastructure investments in the Mekong River Basin.</p> + +<p>The TTX started with an orientation that helped players understand prevailing water security issues in the region. The purpose was to illustrate the convergence of infrastructure investments and environmental insecurity with great power competition in the Mekong River Basin. The orientation included the following data:</p> + +<ul> + <li> + <p>whether the country is part of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF), a large U.S. trade initiative in the region</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>existing USAID water-related needs score by country</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>Freedom House trends for each country (2022 Global Freedom index)</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>China’s trade and debt trap diplomacy metrics, including countries’ imports from China and debt held by Beijing</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>U.S. foreign aid obligated and dispersed by country</p> + </li> + <li> + <p>resilience indicators including the Fragile States Index and Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative (ND-GAIN) Index, which evaluates how well states can adapt to climate change</p> + </li> +</ul> + +<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/L5nBJjR.jpg" alt="image02" /></p> + +<p>The scores helped participants understand water and infrastructure issues as they relate to foreign policy across the region. The USAID WASH Needs Index ranks countries in terms of their overall lack of access to clean water. The higher the score, the less access to reliable, safe water. In the Mekong, Thailand has the most reliable access to water, while Cambodia has the worst. By way of comparison, China ranks 61 with an index score of 0.31. Over 80 million people lack basic water access, and over 100 million lack basic sanitation. The score does not directly address issues related to climate change, such as growing salinity due to rising sea levels, changing weather patterns, and dam construction, and their combined effect on food security.</p> + +<p>The ND-GAIN Index addresses vulnerability to climate change and how well prepared states are to respond in terms of institutional readiness. The higher the score, the more prepared states are to adapt to the reality of climate change. As Table 1 shows, multiple countries (red highlighted cells) along the Mekong River Basin are rated as highly vulnerable to future climate shocks. Combined with foreign aid and trade data, the orientation helped players understand the growing influence of China in the region alongside the deterioration of freedom and growing state fragility, such as due to climate-induced stress.</p> + +<p>After the orientation, the U.S. team was briefed that additional funds were available to combine interagency efforts to counter BRI activities in Southeast Asia with a focus on the Mekong River Basin. The teams had to articulate a larger competitive strategy and three water security projects (WASH, WRM, WP) for the region as part of the larger PGII.</p> + +<p>To frame this strategy, the U.S. team was briefed that the strategic end state, according to guidance developed through the National Security Council (NSC), was to sustain U.S. and partner nation access and influence in Southeast Asia, consistent with the vision of a rules-based international order. The two principal objectives to achieve this end state were (1) promote PGII initiatives focused on water security and (2) reassure U.S. partners and allies. In other words, the TTX asked U.S. players to think about how development merges with deterrence in modern great power competition. To that end, the U.S. players filled out Table 2 to prioritize water security investments. Players could nominate three water programs (WASH, WRM, WP); each had to align with at least one PGII pillar and country. Based on the enhancement, players rated the extent to which the new water program would increase the access of the United States and its democratic partners to the region while denying China access and influence. For example, a player could propose a WASH initiative in Vietnam to counter increased water salinity owing to climate change and its effect on food security as one of the three expanded water programs.</p> + +<blockquote> + <p>In other words, the TTX asked U.S. players to think about how development merges with deterrence in modern great power competition.</p> +</blockquote> + +<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/Q7OFTlp.jpg" alt="image03" /></p> + +<p>The U.S. team then revealed its plans and discussed its strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats with a team playing the CCP. This action-reaction dynamic helped facilitate dialogue about the opportunity costs inherent in using water security programs and larger infrastructure projects to compete with China. Overall, players saw water strategy as a viable tool for countering the BRI but found that it required better integration with other instruments of power to support long-term competition.</p> + +<p>U.S. players tended to take a mixed approach to the region with two major strategies and one minority opinion. Two teams focused on Thailand and Vietnam — the countries they thought the most accessible and open to countering the CCP. The third team focused its efforts on the countries with higher WASH needs scores: Cambodia and Laos.</p> + +<p>The Thailand group proposed focusing on cultivating public-private partnerships to make Thailand the focal point for regional projects. These projects were concentrated in the digital and gender pillars of the PGII. The theory of competition was that creating new technical skills and increasing female employment in key sectors would benefit Thailand while creating a regional champion for water security projects.</p> + +<p>Since Thailand had the best WASH scores in the region, the group proposed investing in water-related businesses based in Thailand that could access Cambodia and Laos, which are closer to Beijing. The idea was to promote a new cadre of local businesses, including increased opportunities for more diverse workplaces that could build water projects across the region. The U.S. players rated this approach as likely to draw both G7 interest and private sector capital.</p> + +<p>The red team replicating the CCP noted that while Beijing would not challenge Thai businesses directly, China maintains indirect economic mechanisms it could use to counter a U.S.-led initiative. For example, one red player noted China could apply economic pressure by curtailing the number of tourists that travel to Thailand, a practice it used against South Korea in 2017. The red team also saw opportunities to use low-level cyber operations and propaganda, consistent with political warfare, to undermine trust and confidence in U.S.-backed businesses. In other words, U.S. efforts to work through a local partner to promote water security could be effective but would not remove all the ways and means Beijing has to apply pressure to states in the Mekong River Basin.</p> + +<p>A separate strategy that emerged focused on combining water projects with food security efforts to build resilience to climate shocks. The focus was on the climate pillar. This group assessed the magnitude of the climate challenge confronting Vietnam. Countries critical to regional food supplies, like Thailand, justified the focus, as Thailand and Vietnam two of the three top rice exporting countries in the world. The group also recommended a water-related project linked to agriculture and climate stress in Thailand. The focus of these efforts was more on mitigating future food security issues than on addressing current challenges. The team also assessed that these water programs could complement recent U.S. military outreach to Vietnam. Furthermore, given the size of the population and economic growth trends, the players rated projects in Vietnam as very attractive to both G7 and private sector partnerships.</p> + +<p>The red team noted that while these issues would produce regional benefits in the long run, they were unlikely to shift the U.S.-Vietnam relationship to a strategic partnership in the short term. Beijing would still retain the ability to drive a wedge between Washington and Hanoi. China retains significant military, economic, and ideological instruments to influence Vietnam, despite long-standing differences between the two countries.</p> + +<p>This discussion led to a debate about the balance of U.S. foreign assistance and how much should be linked to larger interagency strategies to counter China. Some saw addressing climate change and increasing water security as goals in themselves. The majority assessed that the United States, especially if its foreign assistance budgets increased, could integrate a focus on engaging local government and civil society, foreign assistance linked to poverty reduction and environmental growth, infrastructure-linked economic development, and governance programs with long-term competition without falling victim to the traps of the Cold War.</p> + +<p>These practitioners highlighted a need to refine interagency coordination along these lines and run periodic TTXs as a form of further calibrating regional strategies. These events would have to integrate multiple Biden administration strategies like the Indo-Pacific Strategy with PGII and the 2022 Global Water Strategy. In fact, the myriad of strategies published by the Biden administration led one player to express a need for more dynamic interagency coordination than traditional NSC meetings. Participants viewed the TTXs as a way of investigating opportunities to achieve the objectives in multiple strategy documents and avoid policy fratricide. One participant noted that this effort would also need to include integrated country strategies to balance regional, functional, and country-specific aspects of foreign policy. Another participant noted that while there is an agency strategic planning process in the U.S. Department of State and USAID, as well as different interagency coordination processes, efforts tended to have too many objectives to easily prioritize. This participant saw the focus on water security, infrastructure, and integrating development with deterrence as a way to synchronize and prioritize objectives.</p> + +<p>The third strategy to emerge from the TTX — and the minority perspective — was to focus on Cambodia and Laos, the countries with the worst WASH scores and projects linked to the health and digital pillars. Specifically, the players wanted to invest in low-cost internet of things (IoT) networks linked to local cellular service for remote monitoring — an opportunity to use ICT for WASH. The team assessed that they could address local needs in these countries in a way that offset some of the negative effects of Chinese dam construction on water and food security. One participant discussed how changing water flows were disrupting local economies and leading to migration. Another participant noted that despite Laos’s high dependence on China, the relationship between water governance and agriculture in Laos created a way to both address water security and show the population the negative effects of the Chinese authoritarian development model. Other players noted that this messaging could be enhanced by coordinating with elements like the Global Engagement Center (GEC). The player wanted to use the GEC’s data-driven approach to studying the information environment to tailor messages about the water security programs while monitoring for China’s efforts to undermine confidence in U.S. and allied water and infrastructure investments.</p> + +<p>The red team responded that while the effort might increase WASH scores in both countries, it would not significantly alter the influence of the CCP. Cambodia and Laos depend heavily on the Chinese economy. Furthermore, China could use its own propaganda and concepts like “Three Warfares” — influence operations that combine psychological and legal warfare with traditional propaganda — to promote rival narratives about the importance of each country’s relationship to Beijing. One red team member even said China could use this construct to take credit for Western money invested in water security while pinning the negative effects of its dam construction on foreign (G7) business interests.</p> + +<p>The discussion around the third strategy again highlighted the need to coordinate different agency planning processes with a focus on the information environment. One player suggested a need for an interagency competition manual similar to the recent U.S. Department of Defense Joint Concept for Competing. The group agreed the interagency collaboration needed a framework for conceptualizing long-term competition beyond deterrence and departmental interests. The challenge was how to develop this framework and balance military strategy with diplomacy and development. One player asked bluntly, “Who owns competition?” While the U.S. Department of State has processes to advance U.S. foreign policy objectives at the country and regional levels, it was not clear these formed critical components of major U.S. Department of Defense campaign plans that focus on competition. This insight brought some of the players back to recommending additional interagency TTXs to visualize and describe how to synchronize and prioritize objectives across multiple government agencies oriented toward long-term competition.</p> + +<p>The discussion led one player to note the missing role of the U.S. Congress in the debate. Congressional action led to prioritization of water security, and Congress must be brought into any discussion about increasing the foreign assistance budget. The participant noted increasing signs that Congress was interested in TTXs and creative forums for analyzing policy, though the initial forays focused on military matters. The player proposed designing the TTXs on long-term competition in a manner that allowed congressional staffers — and, if possible, entire committees — to play, building on recent efforts by the House Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party. The player advocated starting a new series of congressional games that touch multiple committees, including the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and House Armed Services Committee.</p> + +<h3 id="connect-the-world-to-compete-with-china">Connect the World to Compete with China</h3> + +<p>Modern competition is about more than military balances. It extends to development projects and building a network that connects people and creates conditions for solving collective action problems plaguing the twenty-first century: climate change, water access, food insecurity, and poverty. In the process, it also creates a new positional advantage that prevents authoritarian states from co-opting economic corridors. It is a new great game that must be played with a different set of rules than the cold wars of old.</p> + +<p>The more the Biden administration can synchronize its development and diplomacy with theater strategy, the more likely it will be to gain an enduring advantage in long-term competition with China. This advantage starts with visualizing and describing regions in terms of people’s needs, likely environmental shocks, and transportation corridors to identify clusters of projects that offset authoritarian overreach while helping local communities address core human security challenges.</p> + +<ul> + <li> + <p><strong>Calibrate regional strategies.</strong> The United States should look for opportunities to better align foreign assistance and defense budgets. Unfortunately, aid budgets are unlikely to grow in the near term based on the budget deal and election cycle. As a result, USAID — along with the Millennium Challenge Corporation and the DFC — will need to work with Congress and interagency partners to identify how best to align existing programs and resources. Based on standing legislation, USAID will continue to spend on water projects. These efforts could be coordinated with less confrontational defense dollars linked to efforts like the Pacific Deterrence Initiative and ongoing theater campaigns. The net results would be a two-level prioritization framework that better aligns ends, ways, and means. USAID should prioritize projects likely to draw the most traction across agencies as a means of making each development dollar go further and extend U.S. strategic interests.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p><strong>Conduct stress tests and refine regional strategies through TTXs.</strong> USAID and other interagency partners will need to augment traditional approaches to long-term planning to embrace more dynamic methods aligned with understanding the new era of competition. Turning traditional war games into peace games and TTXs is the first step and will help leaders analyze complex interactions almost certain to accompany water and broader infrastructure projects. These games should occur at three levels. First, they should be part of program design and help identify opportunities for interagency as well as private sector partnerships. Second, they should be conducted through existing interagency processes and evaluate how guidance ranging from the Indo-Pacific Strategy to integrated country strategies align with PGII and the 2022 Global Water Strategy. Third, the games must involve Congress and bring a mix of staffers and elected representatives into the dialogue. Too often, U.S. strategy — whether defense or development — has been stovepiped and segmented by branch and agencies, producing unhealthy tension and friction. Games offer a means to overcome these self-imposed barriers that help different stakeholders develop a common understanding of modern competition. These congressional games should also focus not just on optimal resourcing but also on authorities and how best to tailor the interagency framework to support long-term competition. If twenty-first-century competition is as much as about development as deterrence, the United States needs to ensure it has both the ways and means to gain an enduring advantage.</p> + </li> + <li> + <p><strong>Amplify regional strategies.</strong> In a connected world, the message matters as much as the facts. Efforts to better integrate water projects with public-private sector infrastructure initiatives and theater strategy require global messaging that counters authoritarian influence campaigns. This messaging campaign should be integrated with existing initiatives like the GEC and embassy-level outreach and should be built into programmatic requirements for the network of vendors that support modern development. The messages should be tailored to audiences across diverse regions and retain the ability to counter malign foreign influence campaigns. The result is not propaganda but ensuring affected populations can cut through the noise to understand why the U.S. government, alongside its partners and the private sector, is investing in water infrastructure.</p> + </li> +</ul> + +<hr /> + +<p><strong>Benjamin Jensen</strong> is a senior fellow for future war, gaming, and strategy in the International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, D.C.</p> + +<p><strong>Daniel F. Runde</strong> is a senior vice president, director of the Project on Prosperity and Development, and holds the William A. Schreyer Chair in Global Analysis at CSIS.</p> + +<p><strong>Thomas Bryja</strong> is a program coordinator in the Project on Prosperity and Development at CSIS.</p>Benjamin Jensen, et al.The Post-October 7 World2023-09-28T12:00:00+08:002023-09-28T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/the-post-october-7-world<p><em>On October 7, 2022, U.S.-China relations were reshaped with export controls on military AI, shifting global semiconductor manufacturing and distribution and complicating the global economy. This report outlines U.S. allies’ perspectives on “the new oil” in geopolitics.</em></p> <excerpt /> @@ -7514,512 +7781,4 @@ <hr /> -<p><strong>Philip Shetler-Jones</strong> is a Senior Research Fellow in the International Security team at RUSI. His current research is concentrated on Indo-Pacific security. His recent publications have focused on the defence policy of Japan, attitudes of China to NATO, and narratives about the defence of Taiwan.</p>Philip Shetler-JonesJapan’s latest defence document sets out the arguments for a historic increase in spending to match the shifting global security environment. But the task of convincing the Japanese public is far from complete.CN’s Emergence As Superpower2023-08-15T12:00:00+08:002023-08-15T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/chinas-emergence-as-superpower<p><em>This report compares the key trends in civil and military power in the United States, developed democracies, China, and Russia. The graphs, maps, and tables in this report only highlight a limited range of the complex changes involved, and reliable data are often lacking for the years after 2020. They still show, however, that the civil and military role of the world’s major powers is in a process of dramatic and unpredictable change.</em></p> - -<excerpt /> - -<h3 id="the-key-impact-of-chinas-emergence-as-a-major-global-economic-power">The Key Impact of China’s Emergence as a Major Global Economic Power</h3> - -<p>China has emerged as an economic superpower that rivals the United States in many ways, although the total economic power of modern democracies — most of which are strategic partners of the United States — vastly exceeds the size of the Chinese economy, trade efforts, and efforts in technology and research and development. China also faces major internal challenges created by outside restrictions and economic sanctions, its handling of Covid-19, and state interference in its economic development.</p> - -<p>Nevertheless, China is already competing with the economies of developed democratic states on a global level. Its “belt and road” efforts to establish economic ties to developing states and control critical minerals and resources. It may succeed in creating a rival economic bloc that can function and grow outside the “rules-based order” democracies created after World War II, and it is already competing in its relations with a number of developing states and other countries.</p> - -<p>The trends presented in this report show that this competition may well become an ongoing confrontation between China and its allies, and developed democracies and their strategic partners, unless radical changes take place in Chinese policies and leadership. And — as is discussed shortly — is a growing level of civil confrontation that is being matched by military confrontation as well.</p> - -<h3 id="russias-diminished-global-economic-role">Russia’s Diminished Global Economic Role</h3> - -<p>The following graphics show that Russia is not an economic superpower now that it has lost control of most East European states and many of the Central European and Asian elements of the former Soviet Union. Russia has long lagged badly in total economic growth, trade, research and development, and all the other major areas of economic power. Russia’s size, geographic position, and large oil and gas reserves do, however, still make it a key global power.</p> - -<h3 id="key-uncertainties-in-the-civil-impacts-of-economic-power">Key Uncertainties in the Civil Impacts of Economic Power</h3> - -<p>It should be stressed, however, that current trends can only tell part of the story. Any analysis of economic and civil power will be shaped by many key trends that cannot be quantified. They include the longer-term impacts of the economic stresses between and within developed states, the impact of internal politics, the impact of demographic change and population pressure, and the impact of global warming. They also include the degree to which the developed democracies can succeed in cooperating and creating truly functional economic strategic partnerships. As yet, governments often rely far more on rhetoric about such cooperation than on taking tangible action, although there are positive indicators as well.</p> - -<p>The graphics in this analysis also do not include the developing world. Here, the allocation of international economic power has generally favored developed states. As the UN, World Bank, IMF, and a host of NGO reports make clear, many states have failed to move towards effective development and face major challenges from failed or corrupt governance, repression and internal division, population pressure, limited water supplies, and climate change. For all the former rhetoric about globalism, this includes at least one-third of the world’s nations.</p> - -<p>At the same time, there are cases like India, where the trends in global power could move in other directions. While they are not yet positive enough to include in this analysis, India has overtaken China as the world’s most populous state, has a GDP of some $9.3 trillion, and ranks high in terms of total military spending. Several major petroleum states in the Gulf are taking positive steps to develop beyond a reliance on energy exports, as are some states in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. For all the failings in the developing world, they are also important potential successes.</p> - -<h3 id="the-impact-of-trends-in-military-power">The Impact of Trends in Military Power</h3> - -<p>The graphs and tables that follow show that the United States remains the world’s largest military power, the one with the most combat experience and highest levels of total spending and investment in modernization, and the one with the strongest strategic partners.</p> - -<p>It is also clear, however, that the United States already faces growing competition from China, particularly in the Pacific and in the Indian Ocean as well. In the case of Taiwan, competition has already turned to serious confrontation and the risk of war. Once again, China has vastly increased its capabilities since 1990, as well as its military links to other Asia power. Much depends on the United States’ ability to strengthen its strategic partnerships with Japan, South Korea, Australia, the Philippines, and other Asian states — as well as European states with major power projection capabilities like Great Britain and France.</p> - -<h3 id="the-uncertainties-driven-by-the-war-in-ukraine">The Uncertainties Driven by the War in Ukraine</h3> - -<p>At the same time, the United States and its strategic partners face a major challenge from Russia and one that current U.S. national strategy tends to seriously understate. As the graphics show, Russia may not have an economy that can fully support its present conventional forces, but it remains a major threat to the United States’ European strategic partners and NATO, and the Russian military threat must be given equal priority with that from China.</p> - -<p>The trends shown in this analysis do not generally go beyond 2021 and cannot reflect the many longer-term changes in the military balance that are growing out of the war in Ukraine. It is clear, however, that the United States and its NATO allies are engaged in major proxy war, supporting Ukraine in its defense against Russia. They also are already rebuilding NATO’s overall level of extended deterrence against Russia, and doing so at a time when Vladimir Putin, Russia’s leader, has made it clear that he sees NATO as a major and continuing threat.</p> - -<p>There is no current way to predict how the war in Ukraine will change the overall balance of military power and how and when it will end. It seems almost certain, however, that as long as Putin rules Russia, the United States and the rest of NATO will be engaged in a new Cold War, and one which will effectively match a similar Cold War between the United States and its strategic partners in Asia and China.</p> - -<h3 id="a-return-to-nuclear-forces">A Return to Nuclear Forces</h3> - -<p>As the final sections of this analysis also show, these two Cold Wars have a major nuclear dimension. The race to build up conventional military power is, in some ways, being outpaced by a new nuclear arms race. This race not only reflects the near collapse of nuclear arms control but a potential return to major tactical, theater, and dual-capable nuclear forces. It also is clear that Russia is now only a superpower to the extent it has inherited a massive legacy of nuclear weapons and technology from the former Soviet Union.</p> - -<p><strong>China’s Rising Economic Power Has Vastly Outstripped Russia and Competes with the U.S. and EU</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/cM7eSyu.png" alt="image01" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/RJSkJxT.png" alt="image02" /></p> - -<p><strong>But, China Does Not Compete in Per Capita Income and Russia has a Very Low Per Capita Income</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/qWCH8qO.png" alt="image03" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/siidfvg.png" alt="image04" /></p> - -<p><strong>China Has Become the World’s Dominant Manufacturer While Russia’s Rank Is Critically Low</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/JDrH11c.png" alt="image05" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/r2yhOJ2.png" alt="image06" /></p> - -<p><strong>China’s Technology Base Has Outstripped Russia and European States and Increasingly Competes with the U.S.</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/7W8H9TH.png" alt="image07" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/QXKUiGA.png" alt="image08" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/1sVgxdr.png" alt="image09" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/hjoeJS2.png" alt="image10" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/FU4XtqA.png" alt="image11" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/tw5Wc54.png" alt="image12" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/H91yYqZ.png" alt="image13" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/XsLTVTT.png" alt="image14" /></p> - -<p><strong>China and the U.S. are Major Global Traders</strong></p> - -<p><strong>Russia Is a Third-Rate Trading Power – Falling Well below Major Western European Powers, Japan, and South Korea</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/b4CYsAO.png" alt="image15" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/ftO9Eh5.png" alt="image16" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/k9NioZc.png" alt="image17" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/W7nCqK5.png" alt="image18" /></p> - -<p><strong>Comparative Military Spending is Highly Uncertain, but the U.S. still has a Clear Lead.</strong></p> - -<p><strong>China has made sustained major rises since 2000.</strong></p> - -<p><strong>Russia has lagged badly since the early 1990s, but has made significant increases as a result of the Ukraine War.</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/Bq2fR0b.png" alt="image19" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/An0jMjG.png" alt="image20" /></p> - -<p><strong>Russia Is Still a Major Military Power but Its Reported Military Spending following the break up of the FSU was Far Below the Level Needed to Fully Sustain and Modernize Its Force Structure Through 2020-2021</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/jbk1RzW.png" alt="image21" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/2kLEaTS.png" alt="image22" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/O5Ir3vB.png" alt="image23" /></p> - -<p><strong>Some Estimates Do, However, Reflect a Major Rise in Russian Spending Since 2021</strong></p> - -<ul> - <li> - <p>The previous SIPRI data reflect a major increase from $65.9 billion 2021 to $86.4 billion in 2022, but this is not a serious rise not relative to the increases made by the U.S., China, and major NATO states.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>The IISS report that the draft Russian 2023 budget, submitted to to the State Duma on 30 September 2022, showed that final core spending for 2022 rose from an original proposal of RUB3.50tr (USD50.0bn) to RUB4.68tr (USD66.9bn), with a corresponding rise in total military spending from RUB4.98tr (USD71.1bn) to RUB6.15tr (USD87.9bn).</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Reuters reports that Russia spent 2 trillion rubles ($26 billion) on defence in January and February 2023, a 282% rise over the 525.4 billion rubles in the first two months of 2022, and driven by the conflict in the Ukraine.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Other estimates emerging from a Google search indicate Russia’s official 2022 military budget could be 4.7 trillion rubles ($75bn), or higher, and reach $84 billion for 2023. This is 40% more than initial military budget announced in 2021. They also estimate that Russia plans to spend a total of $600 billion on military and the police between 2022–2025, or $150 billion a year</p> - </li> -</ul> - -<p><strong>Chinese Military Spending Has Led To a Massive Force Modernization Effort that Continues in 2023</strong></p> - -<ul> - <li> - <p>Rises in spite of COVID crisis, investment crisis, and other issues.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Government fiscal revenues down 30-40% in some months of 2022.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Military spending up more than 7% in 2022.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Planned to increase by 7.2% in 2023</p> - </li> -</ul> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/sI2wGub.png" alt="image24" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/L9hod4F.png" alt="image25" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/ndKmDit.png" alt="image26" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/QlP9Hmh.png" alt="image27" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/G2pN1aX.png" alt="image28" /></p> - -<p><strong>Arms Transfers Provide an Important Indicator of Comparative Strategic Influence and Security Assistance</strong></p> - -<ul> - <li> - <p>The U.S. has cancelled its report on World Military expenditures and arms transfers, and there now is no reliable declassified estimate of the actual market value of arms sales.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>SIPRI does, however, provide an well structure estimate of the total value of major weapons transfers based on estimates of comparable prices.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>These SIPIR estimates indicate the the U.S. retains a massive lead over other providers of arms transfers and had 40% of the world total in 2018-2022.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Russia had a 16% share.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>The other major arms sellers were largely strategic partners of the U.S.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>China only had a 5.2% share, although it was increasing.</p> - </li> -</ul> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/MVDP8jj.png" alt="image29" /></p> - -<p><strong>Russia Only Remains a True Military Superpower in Nuclear Forces</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/VglODtS.png" alt="image30" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/qE0dzrW.png" alt="image31" /></p> - -<p><strong>Chinese Nuclear Capability Is Growing Sharply</strong></p> - -<ul> - <li> - <p>Seems to be more than doubling its stockpile of nuclear weapons. May have risen from around 200 to 350 by 2020. 272 operational for exiting missiles and bombs and 78 for new systems. Possibly grew by 118 warheads during 2020-2021. Estimates for 2023 are 410 weapons.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Have detected 270+ new missile silos. 119 in Northwestern China seem to be for ICBMs.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>The Chinese Military Power estimates China may have some 1,000 operational nuclear warheads by 2030, most deployed on systems capable of ranging the continental United States”</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>China has rejected arms control initiatives and provides steadily less transparency.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>It is improving nuclear command and control and battle management systems.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Deploying advanced solid-fuel mobile ICBMs (DF-21 &amp; DF-31/DF-31A/DF-32AG), MIRV’d liquid fuel ICBM (DF-5B), new MIRV’d DF-41 ICBM, Type 094 SSBN with JL-2 SLBMs.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Developing low noise 096 SSBNs and a 9,000 kilometer range 096 SLBM.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Progressively harder to determine what theater and short-range delivery systems may become dual-capable. DF-21 MRBM (2,150 KM) and DF-26 IRBM (4,000 KM) known to be nuclear. DF-21 is precision strike, dual-capable and could deliver low-yield nuclear weapons.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>Modifying H-6 nuclear bombers to H-6N with refueling, missile carrying capability. H-20 stealth bomber in development.</p> - </li> - <li> - <p>May be evolving far beyond countervalue second strike capability. Examining use as theater warfare threat?</p> - </li> -</ul> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/AfXuCYm.png" alt="image32" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/x6h08cj.png" alt="image33" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/wbfUgQ3.png" alt="image34" /></p> - -<p><strong>China Is Radically Changing Its Global Civil and Military Presence in Areas Once Dominated by the U.S. and Its Partners</strong></p> - -<blockquote> - <p>“The ultimate in disposing one’s troops is to be without ascertainable shape. Then the most penetrating spies cannot pry in nor can the wise lay plans against you. It is according to the shapes that I lay plans for victory, but the multitude does not comprehend this. Although everyone can see the outward aspects, none understands the way in which I have created victory.” (Sun Tzu)</p> -</blockquote> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/jWoPdX9.png" alt="image35" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/AOY8aAt.png" alt="image36" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/RoANn9S.png" alt="image37" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/xVuGY8c.png" alt="image38" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/Vx7SCfc.png" alt="image39" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/rxMPLMC.png" alt="image40" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/OZiTS7l.png" alt="image41" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/Hc43aMb.png" alt="image42" /></p> - -<p><strong>European, Chinese, Japanese, and Korean Vulnerability to Energy Chokepoints –Chinese and Asian Dependence Is Most Critical</strong></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/4jrygnC.png" alt="image43" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/CArhd7a.png" alt="image44" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/u2BV39G.png" alt="image45" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/X8NuvMA.png" alt="image46" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/aZRRFmq.png" alt="image47" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/2VsrOw3.png" alt="image48" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/mhENNsY.png" alt="image49" /></p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/kUG4J08.png" alt="image50" /></p> - -<hr /> - -<p><strong>Anthony H. Cordesman</strong> is the Emeritus Chair in Strategy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). He has previously served in the Office of the Secretary of Defense, the National Security Council, the State Department, and the Department of Energy.</p>Anthony H. CordesmanThis report compares the key trends in civil and military power in the United States, developed democracies, China, and Russia. The graphs, maps, and tables in this report only highlight a limited range of the complex changes involved, and reliable data are often lacking for the years after 2020. They still show, however, that the civil and military role of the world’s major powers is in a process of dramatic and unpredictable change.【初選47人案・審訊第 105 日】2023-08-14T12:00:00+08:002023-08-14T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/trial-of-hk-democrat-primary-elections-day-105<ul> - <li>柯耀林選舉經理作供 指柯曾令不可提「光時」、港獨及「攬炒」</li> -</ul> - -<excerpt /> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/3bYWueY.png" alt="image01" /></p> - -<p>【獨媒報導】47人涉組織及參與民主派初選,被控「串謀顛覆國家政權」罪,16人不認罪,今(14日)踏入審訊第105天。參選新東的區政聯盟前召集人兼前西貢區議員柯耀林,今傳召選舉經理陳展浚作供,陳稱區政聯盟為鬆散的組織,成員團體互不代表和從屬,而柯曾考慮參選新界東和超級區議會,但於超區協調會議看到有岑敖暉後,認為岑知名度很高、他參選超區無任何空間,終決定參選新東。陳並指,柯只曾出席首次新東協調會議但早走、缺席第二次協調會議,亦無收過任何協調文件,而他無向組織者查詢會上內容,因認為組織者有責任就重要事項主動通知。</p> - -<p>陳又表示,曾為柯發布「墨落無悔」聲明帖文,而柯自2019年區選便命令團隊不可於宣傳材料提及「光復香港 時代革命」和支持港獨,初選時亦不容出現「攬炒」二字,指他們團隊均認為如癱瘓政府運作,「香港會何去何從呢?癱瘓咗又點樣呢?」</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/Dy3I31j.png" alt="image02" /> -▲ 陳展浚</p> - -<h4 id="辯方傳區政聯盟執委柯耀林助理作供">辯方傳區政聯盟執委、柯耀林助理作供</h4> - -<p>鄒家成上周作供完畢,新東餘下3名被告林卓廷、梁國雄及柯耀林均不作供,只有柯耀林傳召一名辯方證人。辯方大律師唐樂山今傳召曾任柯助理和選舉經理的陳展浚作供,陳確認於2012年任民主黨實習生、被分配到將軍澳工作時認識時為民主黨黨員的柯耀林,同年柯排劉慧卿名單參與立法會選舉。陳於2013年加入民主黨、2016年退黨,柯亦於2018年退黨。</p> - -<p>法官陳仲衡關注陳如何知道,陳指因當時在柯耀林與林卓廷爭拗的風波中,柯帶領59人退黨,「我中間係有參與全程個過程同埋規劃」;並確認柯於2017年從馬來西亞返港,為2019年區議會選舉準備時,他已成為柯的助理。</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/0plK5rz.png" alt="image03" /> -▲ 2018年12月12日 59人宣布退出民主黨(資料圖片)</p> - -<h4 id="助理稱柯要求定期更新區議會事務及政治發展">助理稱柯要求定期更新區議會事務及政治發展</h4> - -<p>陳確認,柯於2004至2011年任西貢廣明區議員,並於2019年再度當選,其後他正式成為柯的議員助理。陳指柯並非全職區議員,他同時是一間物業管理公司的全職營運總監、廣明苑業主立案法團主席,亦是將軍澳民生關注組主席和區政聯盟召集人;而陳與柯每日會通電話,如時間許可一星期至少有三晚一起吃飯和開會,至初選期間陳任柯的選舉經理,基本上每日見面。</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/PUWh3H3.png" alt="image04" /> -▲ 柯耀林</p> - -<p>陳續指,柯會在平日晚上和周末處理區議會事務、與市民會面,而因柯「工作真係好繁忙」,故要求他們定期甚至每天向他更新區議會事務和政治發展,柯每天與他通電話時亦會問及,但陳「有冇同佢講、講漏咗佢都唔會知道」。</p> - -<h4 id="區政聯盟會章提一國兩制原則下爭取民主">區政聯盟會章提一國兩制原則下爭取民主</h4> - -<p>陳展浚同意,柯耀林自2000年就是將軍澳民生關注組成員,初選期間任該組織主席;陳則是組織召集人,組織主要關注將軍澳地區工作和參與西貢區議會的選舉和議會事務,但並非政黨,只是跨民主派政黨地區組織,成員包括獨立人士。</p> - -<p>陳並指,將軍澳民生關注組與沙田區政、大埔及北區團隊,為區政聯盟的三大團體成員,聯盟很多成員是從民主黨和新民主同盟離開,而陳是執委會成員,其有份草擬的會章第一條為「在一國兩制大原則下,爭取民主、維護自由、捍衛法治,團結社區力量,為香港市民服務」,亦規定只能以團體成員身分加入。惟陳表示,2020年3月區政聯盟進行改組,不再以團體形式運作、要以個人身分加入,主要是應付沙田區政有逾半成員退出的問題。</p> - -<h4 id="助理稱區政聯盟為共享資源成立-組織鬆散成員團體互不代表及從屬">助理稱區政聯盟為「共享資源」成立 組織鬆散、成員團體互不代表及從屬</h4> - -<p>陳並指,不論改組前後,「理論上」都是由執委會管理聯盟事務,但2019年區議會選舉後,執委會無再開過一次正式會議,故改組時無即時修改會章,至2021年才修改。法官李運騰一度指,若然如此改組便違反會章,陳指「唔可以咁講」,因他們有「追認」並將「團體」字眼改為「個人」。李一度說:「這對我來說在法律上完全不合理。(“None of that makes any legal sense to me.”)」</p> - -<p>陳續確認,區政聯盟是一個組織鬆散的組織,基本上三大團體就代表三大地區,「有自己完全嘅自主性,我哋互不代表,互不從屬。」辯方問若組織如此鬆散,為何會存在?陳指組織成立是望為2019年區議會選舉和2020年立法會選舉「共享資源」,「只不過希望有一個共同嘅組織名義。」李運騰問,那會章第一條是否組織真正的目的?陳同意,並指區政聯盟支持者來自區議員「樁腳」,票源與民主黨和新民主同盟高度重疊。</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/LChsy5Y.png" alt="image05" /> -▲ 2019年5月30日 區政聯盟宣布成立(資料圖片)</p> - -<h4 id="助理稱獲鍾錦麟告知有初選柯參加初選主要目的為得知支持度">助理稱獲鍾錦麟告知有初選、柯參加初選主要目的為得知支持度</h4> - -<p>就參加初選的經過,陳展浚指於2020年3至4月時,時任西貢區議會主席兼前民主動力副召集人、新民主同盟的鍾錦麟,詢問他們有否意欲參加初選和選舉協調,他即時通知柯耀林。陳並解釋,在西貢區議會中,將軍澳民生關注組與新民主同盟「衝突都幾大」,主要透過他和鍾作雙方溝通區議會和選舉協調事務的渠道。</p> - -<p>陳續指,柯當時有表達對參加初選的興趣,「因為無論有冇初選,我哋都計劃必然參與2020年嘅立法會選舉」,又指據過往經驗,一名候選人參加初選需30至50萬選舉經費,參與正式選舉至少需150至200萬,若直接參加直選,「柯生好大機會要按樓」;故參與初選最主要目的是望做民調以知道柯的支持度,如支持度低就不參與直選,可「慳返啲錢」。</p> - -<p>陳續指,柯並非區政聯盟唯一一個考慮出選的候選人,初期考慮出選的還包括大埔及北區團隊的區鎮樺,以及沙田區政的丁仕元和李永成。被問柯對參選哪區有興趣,陳指「其實唔係主要佢有興趣,係其他人希望佢出選超區」,而將軍澳民生關注組則想他參選新界東;陳指柯本人對兩區均持開放態度,視乎其他人如何商討和決定。</p> - -<h4 id="助理稱柯首次新東協調會議早走因西貢區議會開會缺席第二次會議">助理稱柯首次新東協調會議早走、因西貢區議會開會缺席第二次會議</h4> - -<p>就4月14日的首次新東協調會議,陳展浚指柯耀林有出席但早走,並於離開後即時致電他,指會議中段開始「有啲人因為一啲恩怨不斷喺度爭拗」,故離場並約陳於將軍澳共膳。陳指當晚9時看到柯,柯稱會議達成一些共識,包括辦投票而非民調、「贏咗初選有得選,輸咗冇得」、新東出線名額為「6+1」。法官指柯的說話屬傳聞證供,辯方指並非依賴其說話真實性,只是作為背景。陳並確認柯當時未決定參選超區抑或新東,當時「靜觀其變」。</p> - -<p>陳續指,據他所知區鎮樺也有出席首次會議,區並通知柯5月5日第二次新東會議,但柯終無出席,因西貢區議會當晚開會到晚上10時。辯方展示會議出席紀錄,陳確認當天列席,而鍾錦麟和柯耀林均由約早上9時半開會至晚上10時40分。陳指因當天大埔區議會亦超時,故區鎮樺也無出席第二次會議,他事後從新聞報導得知李永成有出席。</p> - -<p>陳指他無問李永成會上發生何事,因李也有意出選新界東,「大家係內部競爭關係,唔係好方便」;而當時亦「冇呢個意識去問」組織者。</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/xhQ2Dz1.png" alt="image06" /> -▲ 李永成(資料圖片)</p> - -<h4 id="助理稱柯曾出席超區協調會議-因岑敖暉知名度高遂不考慮超區">助理稱柯曾出席超區協調會議 因岑敖暉知名度高遂不考慮超區</h4> - -<p>陳續指,柯當時未決定參選新東抑或超區,並於5月14日出席超區協調會議。柯事後告訴陳,看到岑敖暉出席會議,認為岑「知名度好高」,「佢覺得計過數,超級區議會冇任何空間」,故不再考慮參選超級區議會;而柯於初選截止提名前兩三日才決定參選新界東。</p> - -<h4 id="助理稱無收過協調文件無查詢因認為組織者有責任主動通知">助理稱無收過協調文件、無查詢因認為組織者有責任主動通知</h4> - -<p>陳續指,他無從組織者、柯耀林及區政聯盟收到任何有關協調會議共識和協議的文件和草稿。法官陳仲衡問,他們無出席第二次會議、亦無從組織者收到文件,不會想從組織者知道會上發生何事嗎?陳說:「如果係有重要嘅事項,協調者係有責任主動通知我哋,即使我哋冇出席。」李運騰指,但當時柯耀林並無表明會參選新界東,陳仍認為組織者有責任就重要決定通知他們?陳說:「係,因為無論邊個出選,區政聯盟都好大機會派人出選。」法官陳慶偉追問,為何陳會認為組織者有責任通知潛在初選參與者,陳展浚重申因區政聯盟「明顯係好大機會會參與直選,咁所以佢都係需要接觸返我哋,如果我哋冇出席,係要話返畀我哋聽究竟係咪有任何決定」,聯盟只是未定出選人選。</p> - -<p>陳慶偉指認為區政聯盟應問組織者,因他們不想在無勝算的正式選舉花百多萬,並再追問為何當時無興趣向組織者查詢。陳展浚指因認為其中一個組織者鍾錦麟也知道他們因區議會事務缺席第二次會議,如該次會議內容「真係咁重要,佢會通知我哋,佢冇同我哋講,我哋就唔問」。陳仲衡指,但鍾當天也同於西貢區議會開會,不知道協調會議發生何事,陳展浚說:「咁可能佢哋民主動力事後有溝通。」</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/VMTLFgl.png" alt="image07" /> -▲ 鍾錦麟(資料圖片)</p> - -<p>陳慶偉續說,因此陳是說,區政聯盟樂意將所有責任推給其他人、自己則不用承擔任何責任?陳說:「誒法官閣下,我唔知你點樣理解,我只係將事實去講返出嚟嘅啫。」陳慶偉追問他的理解與陳展浚理解是否一致?陳說只能說他們頗依賴組織者主動提供最新發展,「如果你覺得我哋呢方面做得不足,呢個都係事實嚟嘅,因為我哋的確係一個幾鬆散嘅組織」;又指他們只是出席了第一次會議,「理解嘅嘢就係咁多」,組織者之後無任何更新,再找他們已是有關票站事宜。</p> - -<p>李運騰指,因此柯報名參選新東前,只曾出席第一次協調會議的頭半部分,並缺席第二次會議,亦從沒有從組織者收到任何文件,實際上他對協調會議上說過的事知道很少?陳同意。</p> - -<h4 id="助理稱柯耀林曾令團隊不可有光時港獨及攬炒">助理稱柯耀林曾令團隊不可有「光時」、港獨及「攬炒」</h4> - -<p>辯方續就柯耀林 Facebook 發布的「墨落無悔」發問,陳指柯的 Facebook 專頁除了柯外,還有約十人包括他管理,施德來和陳志全聞言面露驚訝和發笑。陳並指,帖文基本上由團隊其他人撰寫,柯不會撰文,但重要的帖文會由柯看過後才發布,涉地區事務的則未必全部看。</p> - -<p>陳亦確認,就柯所有選舉宣傳材料包括片段和單張,均由團隊成員草擬,陳審批和最終修改,再交柯做最終決定和修改。至於柯曾否就相關內容作出指示,陳指由2019年區議會選舉開始,柯便命令全個將軍澳民生關注組、包括其團隊,「唔可以有『光復香港 時代革命』口號,同埋係支持港獨嘅」,而「初選期間都唔容許有『攬炒』呢兩個字出現」</p> - -<p>陳仲衡問柯曾否定義「攬炒」,陳稱他們無很詳細定義,但柯與他們整個將軍澳團隊的看法,也是:「如果癱瘓政府嘅運作嘅話,香港會何去何從呢?癱瘓咗又點樣呢?」</p> - -<p>陳續指,柯 Facebook 的「墨落無悔」聲明是由他發布,事前他有與柯於 WhatsApp 討論。辯方明將展示相關紀錄,案件明早續審。</p> - -<hr /> - -<p>案件編號:HCCC69/2022</p>獨媒報導柯耀林選舉經理作供 指柯曾令不可提「光時」、港獨及「攬炒」【初選47人案・審訊第 104 日】2023-08-11T12:00:00+08:002023-08-11T12:00:00+08:00https://agorahub.github.io/pen0/hkers/trial-of-hk-democrat-primary-elections-day-104<ul> - <li>鄒家成:「墨落無悔」寫法諷刺戴耀廷「講咗唔算數」、惟非替戴填補空白</li> - <li>鄒家成完成作供 指若政府五大訴求僅不回應雙普選會「袋住先」</li> -</ul> - -<excerpt /> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/hZ6rsFw.png" alt="image01" /></p> - -<p>【獨媒報導】47人涉組織及參與民主派初選,被控「串謀顛覆國家政權」罪,16人不認罪,今(11日)踏入審訊第104天。鄒家成繼續接受盤問,表示戴耀廷稱毋須簽協議只是發起「墨落無悔」的「導火線」,刺激他們思考「要簽啲乜嘢」去展現抗爭意志,但他們並非想製作一份以協調會議為基礎的協議、聲明無寫上會議已達成共識的項目,「墨落」中會運用否決權迫特首回應五大訴求、及支持度不足須停止選舉工程兩點聲明,均是具爭議或暫時未有共識。法官陳慶偉問,發起「墨落無悔」是否填補戴耀廷留下的空白(fill the gap of Benny Tai)?鄒不同意。而就主控萬德豪指,鄒發起「墨落」是想集結人一起否決預算案,鄒說:「萬專員,我哋之間係唔係有咩誤會呀?唔同意」,多人大笑。</p> - -<p>鄒又指,張可森當時加上「墨落理應無悔,否則等於失信於選民」,是承上啟下,諷刺戴耀廷「講咗嘅嘢唔算數」及帶出「墨落」兩點聲明;亦「畫龍點睛」,精要之處在「選民」,強調參選人如反悔要接受選民問責。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱戴耀廷稱毋須簽協議與墨落無悔僅導火線未必有密切因果關係">鄒稱戴耀廷稱毋須簽協議與「墨落無悔」僅導火線、未必有密切因果關係</h4> - -<p>鄒家成第6日作供,今續接受控方盤問。開庭前,有旁聽親友向鄒家成說:「今日最後一日」,鄒說「希望係啦」,有親友回應:「加油呀捱埋今日呀。」甫開庭,鄒笑着向主控萬德豪問:「Mr. Man, you don’t need Monday right?」林卓廷等發笑,萬德豪笑問:「Why are you asking me?」鄒答:「我會全力配合。」</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/yARh4ZK.png" alt="image02" /> -▲ 副刑事檢控專員(I) 萬德豪</p> - -<p>控方盤問焦點,在於鄒家成等人發起的「墨落無悔」聲明,是否戴耀廷原擬要求參選人簽署的協調會議共識。控方先引鄒家成2020年6月與張可森和梁晃維的訪問發問,被問「點解發起抗爭聲明」時,鄒表示:「一路開幾次會都話係有一個共同綱領大家要簽,但喺無通知我哋嘅情況底下,跟住就開咗個記招跟住就話唔需要簽,嗰陣先知原來係唔需要簽。我哋第一個感覺就話我哋要簽返啲嘢喎,唔可以畀泛民主派單方面去撕毀約章。」</p> - -<p>鄒同意,他提及「一路開幾次會」是指新東協調會議。陳慶偉指理解鄒說法亦是指向其他兩人,鄒否認,並重申訪問前「我哋冇夾過」,3人均是「自說自話」,記者問題也是「當場先知」。李運騰提到,而鄒提到的感受,是其他兩人也有的感覺?鄒說根據當時討論,「我估佢哋應該都有呢個感覺」,追問下稱「我相信嘅」。</p> - -<p>就訪問提到要簽「共同綱領」,鄒同意是指「已達成共識的共同綱領」,而提到不想被泛民撕毀約章,是想就已達成的共識簽署。萬問,因此3人發起「墨落無悔」?鄒認為「未必有一個好密切嘅因果關係」,指戴稱毋須簽文件的說法只是發起「墨落」的背景和「導火線(triggering point)」,刺激他們思考要簽什麼文件。</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/k4xfrmK.png" alt="image03" /> -▲ 左起:張可森、鄒家成、梁晃維(資料圖片)</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱無將4點協調共識放墨落-因無助展現抗爭意志">鄒稱無將4點協調共識放「墨落」 因無助展現抗爭意志</h4> - -<p>李運騰續說,而「墨落」不一定反映協調會議已同意的事項,可能「更進一步」?鄒同意,指「因為我哋唔係想整一個以協調會議為基礎嘅協議呀嘛」,故聲明「其實冇寫一啲已達成共識嘅項目喺度」。李提到,但聲明提及「最大公因數」,「墨落」兩點聲明(即會運用否決權,及如支持度不足會停止選舉工程),是否就是「最大公因數」?鄒否認,指辦初選、辦論壇、「贏咗有得選,輸咗冇得選」、及以靈童制為替補機制4點共識,才是他們討論時「搵到五區嘅最大公因數」。</p> - -<p>鄒並強調,沒有將上述4點放進「墨落」,「因為對我嚟講一件事還一件事」,發起「墨落」目的就是想「展現抗爭意志」和「保障返一啲政治素人」。鄒指他的確同意想簽一份由初選籌組平台提供的文件,因這是他參加兩次新東會議後的想法;不過當戴稱毋須簽,就刺激他們思考「我哋需要簽啲乜嘢去展現我哋嘅抗爭意志」,經討論後得出兩點聲明。</p> - -<p>萬德豪再問,鄒認為「墨落」是一個好機會,讓他放進4點共識讓人們簽署嗎?鄒說不會,「因為嗰4點係無助於展現抗爭意志嘅,我覺得一般市民大眾根本就唔 care 嗰4點。」</p> - -<h4 id="鄒指張可森擬墨落理應無悔一句-諷刺戴耀廷講咗嘅嘢唔算數">鄒指張可森擬「墨落理應無悔」一句 諷刺戴耀廷「講咗嘅嘢唔算數」</h4> - -<p>就「墨落」提到「墨落理應無悔,否則等於失信於選民」,鄒引張可森指這是「畫龍點眼」的說法,精要之處在於「選民」兩字,張想強調「墨落」是面向公眾的聲明,「要接受問責嘅對象係選民,而唔係我哋三個或者其他參選人」。萬德豪說任何公開聲明也是面向公眾,鄒說:「所以佢想畫龍點睛加呢句說話囉。」</p> - -<p>鄒續主動交代背景,「畀大家再了解多啲個 picture」,指「墨落」初稿標題原只是「本土派立場聲明書」,但張可森「想昇華成個聲明,叫我哋畀啲時間佢再諗多一個標題」,終加上「墨落無悔 堅定抗爭」,並改為「抗爭派立場聲明書」,內文亦加入「墨落理應無悔,否則等於失信於選民」一句。</p> - -<p>萬德豪續問,「點睛」之處是運用否決權迫使特首回應五大訴求?鄒指「墨落」兩點聲明當然是重點,但重申精要之處在「選民」。李運騰問,即鄒想透過聲明告訴選民他們進入立法會會做的事?鄒說:「我同意㗎。」</p> - -<p>陳仲衡續說,但看到聲明的選民並不會知道參與者之間達成過的協議,根本不存在「失信」,鄒重申「之前協調會議達成咗嘅共識係唔重要嘅……選民根本冇興趣知道嗰4點」,而「墨落理應無悔」一句主要指參選人簽了「墨落」並同意聲明中的兩點,如最後違反承諾就等於「失信於選民」。</p> - -<p>李運騰指如那是真的,該句便應附在提及兩點聲明的第三段。鄒指因此他曾提過據張可森說法,該句是「過渡句」,「佢話想產生一個承上啟下同畫龍點睛嘅作用」,張一方面想「承上」諷刺戴耀廷「講咗嘅嘢唔算數」,另一方面想「啟下」談及兩點聲明,「佢有佢嘅堅持啦。」</p> - -<h4 id="鄒指草擬聲明時亦考慮該點是否具爭議-指會運用否決權重要亦具爭議">鄒指草擬聲明時亦考慮該點是否具爭議 指會運用否決權重要亦具爭議</h4> - -<p>鄒在盤問下續指,協調會議4點共識對選民不重要,是因無助展現抗爭意志,但認為辦初選和論壇、及贏輸機制是對參選人重要,至於靈童制他則不太重視。陳慶偉打斷指,認為靈童制對參選人和選民重要,指黃之鋒於九東會議就此爭論,如他投選黃之鋒,也想知道誰是他的 Plan B;陳亦認為贏輸機制對選民重要,舉例若他投票予萬德豪,而萬落敗仍參加正式選舉,他一定不會投選他。陳又主動提到「三投三不投」,指如果贏輸機制不重要,「吳政亨為什麼要花這麼多錢在《蘋果日報》賣廣告?要賣給誰看?《蘋果日報》的目標讀者是誰?是公眾!」</p> - -<p>鄒說「嗱我初選真係唔識佢(吳政亨)㗎」,又笑着回應,「其實我同意你講嘅嘢,我啱啱已經準備講你啱啱講嘅嘢喇」,被告和旁聽席發笑。鄒並指討論以靈童制抑或排名制作替補機制時,大家都不想被DQ後自己主張的理念無人繼承,舉例如他被DQ,用排名制便會由范國威代表他,但「支持我嘅人未必係會投畀佢范國威嘅」。鄒續指對他而言,靈童制「我覺得係常識嚟㗎喇」,新東亦幾乎無爭拗,在2016年立法會選舉亦已開始使用。</p> - -<p>鄒又重申,沒有將靈童制寫進「墨落」,是因屬五區共同共識,並指「我喺 set 一個聲明嘅時候,決定咩 point 呢,除咗係覺得能夠展現抗爭意志呢個考慮之外,亦都有具爭議性或者當時未有共識嘅考慮」。陳仲衡問,鄒是指因戴耀廷未能就參與者同意的事項提供聲明簽署,故3人決定就未取得共識的事項發布聲明?鄒說:「呢個真係我哋當時討論個次序。」</p> - -<p>陳慶偉表示明白,但若然如此為何不在聲明表明:戴耀廷曾提出就已同意的事項簽協議但食言、而這不重要,重要的是有未取得共識的事項,而發起人望邀請人就此簽署。鄒說:「我覺得交代咗喎,你啱啱講嘅嘢都正正係我哋嘅諗法嚟。」陳慶偉問,因此「墨落」是一份補充文件,補充(complement)共同綱領?鄒重申,原本達成的共識是「墨落」的背景,而會運用否決權一點有很大爭議性,他們三人亦覺得重要。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒不同意墨落是嘗試填補戴耀廷留下的空白">鄒不同意「墨落」是嘗試填補戴耀廷留下的空白</h4> - -<p>萬德豪續問到,梁晃維於訪問稱:「既然如果戴教授佢唔希望好似送上一個魔鬼嘅祝福,令到好多人被DQ嘅話,咁就不如我哋作為有意參選人 take up 返嗰個責任,所以就會有呢個聲明書出現」,問是否指因戴耀廷不想簽署文件,故3人發聲明就是承擔製造DQ風險的責任?</p> - -<p>鄒重申,戴稱不想製造「DQ紅書」,故三人決定發起一個自願性質的聲明,讓參選人自行承擔被DQ風險。陳慶偉續問,即3人嘗試填補戴留下的空白(「fill the gap of Benny Tai」,即頂替戴無做的事)?鄒不同意,亦不同意會予聲明讀者此印象。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱草擬墨落時將項目分成有共識及具爭議或暫未有共識">鄒稱草擬「墨落」時將項目分成有共識、及具爭議或暫未有共識</h4> - -<p>鄒盤問下續指,不知道新西和港島有否就否決財案達成共識。萬德豪問他有無興趣知道?鄒說「其實都唔係話咁有興趣」,旁聽發笑。鄒續提到討論草擬「墨落」時,曾將協調會議上討論過的項目分成兩個類別,有如「兩個籃」,一個是「最大公因數」,即已達成共識的事項;另一個是「具爭議性」或「暫時未有共識」的項目。而當時他帶領以新東協調會議為藍本一起討論,並第一時間說明第二次新東會議的爭拗,將否決預算案「揼咗落去具爭議性呢個籃度」。</p> - -<p>萬德豪追問他不想知道新西和港島會議的事?鄒指因當時主要想梳理兩個籃內有什麼,「既然我搵到喇,咁我哋就冇再進一步去討論,即係份『墨落無悔』趕住出街呀。」鄒並指,其後找出辦初選等4點共識,放進有共識一籃。至於就「我認同若支持度跌出各區預計可得議席範圍,須表明停止選舉工程」一點,則放進「暫時未有共識」一籃。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱出線人數未達共識-故停止選舉工程一點寫得較籠統">鄒稱出線人數未達共識 故停止選舉工程一點寫得較「籠統」</h4> - -<p>鄒解釋,雖然這點在新東無爭議,但梁晃維當時提到港島「好煩好複雜」,出線人數未傾好、「又無啦啦話有四票」;張可森則稱九西連目標議席亦未傾好,亦有區指要「n(目標議席)+1」或「n+2」,故他們終將該點聲明「寫得籠統少少」,讓其他區參選人未來仍有一個商討的空間。他們亦認為該點「幾重要」,因是保障政治素人,故也放進「墨落無悔」。</p> - -<p>惟陳慶偉指,如這是鄒的關注,聲明卻無提及出線名單數目、或該數目如何決定。鄒同意沒寫明,解釋因當時有數個區連出線人數和目標議席都未達共識,故只寫上「可得議席範圍」;亦因有選區會於初選後再討論出線名單,遂故意無寫上棄選的時間點,以讓簽署人跟從該區得出的結果。鄒又強調,棄選機制是初選邏輯,亦保障本土政治素人,「可能因為我哋三個都係政治素人,我哋睇到個重要性。」</p> - -<p>陳慶偉指他明白該點精神如「三投三不投」,及對素人的重要性,但再指如鄒關注出線名單數,為何不在聲明寫明,又指三人當時應在想戴耀廷遺漏了一個重要的事項,「重要到認為你們要填補空白!」鄒回應,認為各區協調會議並非沒有處理棄選機制,而在可見的未來亦不是會沒有共識,他認為聲明已清晰交代,至於法官指議席數目不清晰、沒有寫明「6 6 4 4 3」,「係因為其他區都仲傾緊吖嘛」。</p> - -<p>陳慶偉指,控方的立場就是,這兩點其實就是參與者達成最重要的共識,所以鄒家成3人才決定將這兩點放進「墨落」,但鄒說有關目標議席未有共識,故是測試鄒的邏輯,問鄒是否明白,惟鄒搖頭,亦指沒有要再解釋的事項。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱墨落無悔非35計劃參選人共識">鄒稱「墨落無悔」非「35+計劃」參選人共識</h4> - -<p>而就鄒早前稱「墨落無悔」與「35+計劃」無關,萬問若然如此,鄒實可自己發表聲明,無需叫其他人簽署一份聯合聲明?鄒回應:「我係可以有呢個選項,但我冇選擇呢個選項。」</p> - -<p>萬指鄒沒有這樣做,是因為想集結其他人一同在立會過半後否決財政預算案?鄒望着萬說:「萬專員,我哋之間係唔係有咩誤會呀?」引來哄堂大笑,鄒續說「唔同意」。萬再問,「墨落無悔」的內容,是否「35+計劃」參選人達成的共識?鄒說「不是」。</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/eK1GiEa.png" alt="image04" /> -▲ 鄒家成(資料圖片)</p> - -<p><img src="https://i.imgur.com/cfylutv.png" alt="image05" /></p> - -<p>【獨媒報導】47人涉組織及參與民主派初選,被控「串謀顛覆國家政權」罪,16人不認罪,今(11日)踏入審訊第104天。鄒家成繼續接受盤問,表示五大訴求中最重視雙普選,但若政府回應除雙普選以外的四個訴求,他也會接受,指爭取訴求需要長時間、五大訴求並非一步登天:「袋住先啦!爭取雙普選真係唔係一時三刻做到。」控方質疑鄒是「妥協」,鄒不同意,並指若政府不回應五大訴求,只是給予「甜頭」來「氹」議員投贊成票,此情況下投贊成才屬妥協;但在這情況下,他仍會對預算案投反對票,強調「有回應(五大訴求)先至有得傾」,亦同意張可森稱「抗爭就係不容妥協嘅藝術」。</p> - -<p>鄒今完成6日作供,步入囚室前頻頻向旁聽和律師席抱拳致謝。新東餘下3名被告林卓廷、梁國雄及柯耀林均不出庭作供,柯耀林一方將傳召一名辯方證人。</p> - -<h4 id="張可森曾發文稱新西與會者同意會運用否決權-鄒指沒看過">張可森曾發文稱新西與會者同意會運用否決權 鄒指沒看過</h4> - -<p>鄒家成繼續接受盤問。他在盤問下同意,知道張可森和梁晃維有 Facebook,但「未 friend 到成日睇」,對他們有關初選的帖文也未必有興趣。控方續展示張可森6月11日、即「墨落」發布後翌日的帖文,提到與鄒和梁晃維一同發起「墨落」,及新西協調會議上所有人都逐一表明,同意「會運用立法會權員的權力,包括否決財政預算案,要求政府落實五大訴求」。鄒指沒有看過該帖文,亦無獲張告知,他亦無出席過新西協調會議。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱政府回應五大訴求才有得傾即使有甜頭亦不妥協">鄒稱政府回應五大訴求才「有得傾」、即使有「甜頭」亦不妥協</h4> - -<p>而就張可森於3名發起人的訪問提及,「香港而家討論緊嘅唔係政治,唔係咩妥協嘅藝術,唔係開天殺價、落地還錢,唔係我哋一開始話攬炒,然後佢回一回價我哋又唔攬炒」,鄒指理解張意思是不會看到預算案「派吓錢、或者講吓起醫院咁樣」就會「妥協」。萬德豪指張意思是3人一開始就想「攬炒」?鄒指應無此意思,張亦無向他解釋過如何看「攬炒」。</p> - -<p>控方續引張提及,「我哋香港而家討論緊嘅係抗爭,即係如果政治係妥協嘅藝術,抗爭就係不容妥協嘅藝術」,鄒同意其說法。萬追問,即不會妥協、不會談判(negotiate)?鄒說要視乎如何看「妥協」,並指理解張可森稱不容妥協意思是,如果政府在財政預算案可能「畀咗啲甜頭」予立法會議員或民眾、但不回應五大訴求,「我都係投反對票㗎喇」;而「除非你回應咗五大訴求啦、除非你喺 budget 度畀我睇到你有回應啦,有回應先至有得傾囉」,鄒亦同意張的看法。</p> - -<h4 id="被問若只回應部分訴求會否談判-鄒稱視乎政府是否有心推動">被問若只回應部分訴求會否談判 鄒稱視乎政府是否「有心推動」</h4> - -<p>萬問,而即使政府只回應一個或兩個訴求,鄒亦會同意與政府談判?鄒指,「最重要係睇政府個態度係咪有心去推動」,指看過財政預算案、與政府官員有對話,「傾完之後其實你都大概有個了解㗎喇,呢個過程我覺得都係一個談判過程。」鄒又指,如果政府不回應五大訴求,用其他方法「氹啲立法會議員去投贊成票」,此情況下投贊成便屬「妥協」,故張稱「抗爭係不容妥協」,是指「爭取五大訴求係唔可以妥協」。</p> - -<p>萬指,但如果政府無回應雙普選,鄒會滿意嗎?鄒承認五大訴求中最重視爭取雙普選,但「真係要好整體睇吓政府如何回應」,亦「真係好難逐個逐個訴求抽走再問我點樣睇」。鄒又指要視乎回應時間:「我假設去到十年之後,其實啲示威者都坐完監咁濟㗎喇,咁要求政府釋放示威者仲有冇意義呢?所以其實係好複雜㗎答呢條問題」,並指除了政府已回應的兩個訴求(撤回逃犯條例和6.12暴動定性),餘下三個訴求中(釋放所有示威者、成立獨立調查委員會及雙普選)「雙普選係應該要堅持到底嘅」。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱若政府僅不回應雙普選會袋住先-控方質疑屬妥協惟鄒否認">鄒稱若政府僅不回應雙普選會「袋住先」 控方質疑屬「妥協」惟鄒否認</h4> - -<p>萬德豪續問,如果在2021年預算案,政府願回應除雙普選以外的四個訴求,鄒會滿意嗎?鄒說:「我會呀。」萬追問:「你會?你會接受?」鄒再說「我會呀」,指「因為爭取訴求係需要長時間」,重申爭取五大訴求「唔係要一步登天,背後更重要嘅精神係,一種鍥而不捨、繼續爭取嘅精神,所以要逐步逐步嚟」。</p> - -<p>萬追問,即使對鄒來說,雙普選是最重要的訴求?鄒笑言:「袋住先啦!」多人發笑,鄒續說:「爭取雙普選真係唔係一時三刻做到嘅,要搞諮詢都要時間。」法官李運騰續指,但由當選至政府翌年發表預算案,只有很短、以月計的時間,鄒同意。萬續問,那鄒認為他所說的是妥協嗎?鄒再重申:「我唔同意喎,因為我爭取緊五大訴求吖嘛。」</p> - -<p>萬續引張可森提及:「當你簽咗呢張嘢(「墨落無悔」)應承咗嘅時候,你絕對唔可以反悔,唔可以話我哋政治就係妥協㗎嘞,所以我哋一開始開個價咁高希望可以落返嚟」,惟鄒說:「佢冇講爭取五大訴求要一步登天喎,Mr. Man。」萬再問,那鄒曾否告知選民他不是要一步登天?鄒指沒有,指他甚少與選民就五大訴求溝通,他在初選期間「主要都係宣揚香港民族理念」。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒重申運用否決權無達共識-墨落無悔並非重申立場">鄒重申運用否決權無達共識 「墨落無悔」並非「重申」立場</h4> - -<p>控方亦再質疑「墨落無悔」是協調會議共識。就3名發起人在6月19日向組織者發出的訊息,提到當時共39位以上參與者以個人或政黨名義簽署,並指「初選原設共同綱領,有意以『運用包括否決財政預算案之基本法賦予的立法會權力,迫使特首回應五大訴求。』的素人以及政黨因此共同目標而集結」。萬德豪問「共同目標」是否否決預算案。鄒指應是按「墨落」的結果理解,即有39人因為「墨落」的第一點聲明而「集結」簽署。</p> - -<p>萬亦指訊息提到「初選原設共同綱領」,鄒解釋是指協調會議原本有討論過否決權議題,但中間有些拗撬,最後有39個人或政黨同意。法官陳仲衡指,但似乎整段也是談及戴耀廷記者會稱毋須簽協議之前的事,鄒不同意,指「如果唔係唔會出到『墨落無悔』39個人嘅結果出嚟啦」。</p> - -<p>萬續問,而訊息提到「在戴教授決定參與者毋須簽署共同綱領後,雖然大部份參與者有簽署『抗爭派立場聲明書』重申自己堅定的立場」,故「墨落」是「重申」運用否決權的立場?鄒問控方是否指參與者原本一直同意會運用否決權一點,而他們有「墨落」後簽署,故是「重申」立場,萬同意。鄒說:「我只能夠講,我個人上,我由持至終都係支持嘅」,而他不是代表其他簽署者。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒稱不獲發新東協議文件癱瘓議會不包括解散立會">鄒稱不獲發新東協議文件、「癱瘓議會」不包括解散立會</h4> - -<p>鄒續確認,就「35+立會過半計劃 民主派新界東協調機制協議」文件,「冇發過畀我。」萬續問鄒是否沒有反對協議內容,惟法官陳慶偉指鄒沒收過文件。萬指這是控方案情,林卓廷說「吓」。李運騰續指若證人已否認,控方沒有基礎繼續提問,但引文件提及首7張名單參與官方選舉,問是否有達成共識,鄒同意。</p> - -<p>而就鄒家成於新東初選民間論壇提到,每個代議士都應有心理準備「用任何手段,癱瘓每一個議會嘅進行」,鄒指不包括解散立法會。萬續指,而鄒當時知道否決預算案,特首可解散立法會?鄒說:「《基本法》係咁寫,」</p> - -<p>控方最後指出案情,指鄒家成與其他被告串謀取得立法會主導權,無差別否決預算案,迫使特首或政府回應五大訴求,並意圖顛覆國家政權,鄒表示不同意。</p> - -<h4 id="鄒作供完畢-林卓廷梁國雄柯耀林不出庭作供">鄒作供完畢 林卓廷、梁國雄、柯耀林不出庭作供</h4> - -<p>控方表示盤問完結,大律師陳世傑指沒有覆問,亦不會傳召證人,辯方案情完結。鄒完成6日作供,在懲教陪同下步回被告欄,一度向旁聽席微笑戚眉。</p> - -<p>代表林卓廷的大律師沈士文及代表梁國雄的大律師黃宇逸其後分別表示,林卓廷和梁國雄均選擇不作供亦沒有證人。代表柯耀林的大律師唐樂山則指,柯選擇不作供,但會傳召一名事實證人,意味新東案情將完結。法官李運騰笑指:「我必須說這星期的尾聲有些驚喜(surprises)。」案件押至下周一(11日)續審,除柯耀林外,尚餘參選超區的李予信和衞生服務界余慧明未開展辯方案情。</p> - -<p>散庭時,鄒不住向旁聽親友揮手,又指向自己做睡覺手勢,步入囚室時又不停雙手抱拳作揖,向旁聽人士和律師道謝。</p> - -<hr /> - -<p>案件編號:HCCC69/2022</p>獨媒報導鄒家成:「墨落無悔」寫法諷刺戴耀廷「講咗唔算數」、惟非替戴填補空白 鄒家成完成作供 指若政府五大訴求僅不回應雙普選會「袋住先」 \ No newline at end of file +<p><strong>Philip Shetler-Jones</strong> is a Senior Research Fellow in the International Security team at RUSI. His current research is concentrated on Indo-Pacific security. His recent publications have focused on the defence policy of Japan, attitudes of China to NATO, and narratives about the defence of Taiwan.</p>Philip Shetler-JonesJapan’s latest defence document sets out the arguments for a historic increase in spending to match the shifting global security environment. But the task of convincing the Japanese public is far from complete. \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/hkers/2023-09-29-waterfalls-shadow-in-mekong.html b/hkers/2023-09-29-waterfalls-shadow-in-mekong.html new file mode 100644 index 00000000..185c15cf --- /dev/null +++ b/hkers/2023-09-29-waterfalls-shadow-in-mekong.html @@ -0,0 +1,256 @@ + + + + + + + + + + Waterfall’s Shadow In Mekong · The Republic of Agora + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
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Waterfall’s Shadow In Mekong

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The Waterfall’s Shadow in the Mekong Region: Insights on Water Programs and Infrastructure Competition in the Twenty-First Century

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Benjamin Jensen, et al. | 2023.09.29

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Infrastructure programs like China’s Belt and Road Initiative further authoritarian influence in climate and water-stressed regions. The United States needs strategies that simultaneously advance water security and national security to compete with China.

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The Issue

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    The United States and its network of democratic partners and allies increasingly find themselves struggling to safeguard the rule of law, free markets, civil liberties, and human security in countries most at risk from climate change and its impact on water security.

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    A network of authoritarian states led by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) are using infrastructure investment programs like the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) alongside gray zone campaigns to gain access and influence, often in areas most at risk of further climate shock and water insecurity, particularly in the Mekong region.

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    As a result, continuing to develop water strategies offers a viable means of integrating development and deterrence to address core human security challenges and deny further authoritarian access and influence across the world’s most climate-stressed societies.

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Taiwan is not the only flash point in the growing contest between the United States and China. As the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) exports its authoritarian model for governance and development, it creates new arenas for competition beyond the military sphere. From the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and infrastructure investments to the use of political warfare, Beijing is creating a new sphere of influence.

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Through a combination of trade, diplomacy, development, and coercion, the CCP is securing key terrain in a new geopolitical race. This terrain is centered on critical transportation and trade corridors beyond the traditional focus on sea lines of communication vital for securing its trade and power projection. This logic extends beyond the sea to river and ground lines of communication. For decades, China has been using multiple instruments of power to gain access and influence in the Lower Mekong River Basin. Over 245 million people live in the Mekong Region, and this population is projected to grow by as much as 100 percent by 2050. Trade between China and countries in the Lower Mekong has grown to over $400 billion, and Beijing uses its economic and diplomatic influence to gain military access, including increasing its regional force posture and building secret military bases.

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The Lower Mekong region, which includes Vietnam, Thailand, Laos, Myanmar and Cambodia, is one of the most vulnerable to climate change, with an estimated 55 percent of the Mekong Delta population likely to be affected in the coming years. China funds dam projects in multiple countries that complicate water management and exacerbate environmental stress. The region is sinking as sea levels rise, leading to increased salinity and flooding in areas that Southeast Asia relies on to feed its growing population. In Vietnam alone, 500 hectares are lost each year to erosion thanks to these twin forces. This combination of rising seas, changing weather patterns, and water management issues, including upstream dams in China, is threatening food security. The Mekong is thereby a portrait of how population growth, environmental degradation, and climate change coalesce to threaten human security.

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The states along the Mekong River are also a focal point for a new era of great power competition. After decades of inattention, the United States is working with allies like Japan and a network of international institutions to make the region more resilient to Chinese influence. Since 2009, the United States has promoted a series of initiatives in the region, including the Lower Mekong Initiative and Mekong-U.S. Partnership, to promote projects ranging from food security and education to energy and water security. These initiatives are part of a larger regional strategy designed to outflank the growing influence of the CCP and related businesses with direct links to Beijing. As a result, water security — the ability of people to access clean, safe water for personal and agricultural use — is converging with national security.

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Water programming can play a central role in U.S. infrastructure development initiatives and development assistance in the Lower Mekong River Basin, where water access and management issues collide with great power competition and climate fragility. The region is also a focal point for China’s BRI, which intensifies the dilemma. Southeast Asian states must balance the promise of economic development they need to support rising living standards and growing populations with the loss of autonomy that comes with debt trap diplomacy, corruption, and gray zone campaigns. This challenge makes water a key cross-cutting issue that connects multiple U.S. government and Group of Seven (G7) initiatives designed to counter the growth of authoritarian access and influence under the guise of development assistance.

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Water security — the ability of people to access clean, safe water for personal and agricultural use — is converging with national security.

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This brief reports on a series of tabletop exercises (TTXs) used to explore how water programming, in coordination with a broader infrastructure strategy, can address both human security and national security challenges. Like earlier CSIS TTXs on water security focused on the Sahel, this series, which focuses on the Lower Mekong River Basin, examines the interplay of economic development and climate change with water security. Unlike the earlier TTX on the Sahel, however, this installment addresses long-term competition and explores how development initiatives interact with broader national security priorities.

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Based on the TTXs, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and the broader interagency network committed to development should use water as a focal point for competitive foreign policy. By combining development projects that address core human needs with ongoing infrastructure initiatives designed to create regional and global economic corridors using theater strategy, the United States can take a new approach to competition with China. This competition complements the pivot to integrated deterrence by reassuring partners and offering a viable alternative to the BRI. Seen in this light, making water projects a focal point for strategy better aligns resources both within the U.S. government and across its network of allies and private sector partners. This alignment will help overcome common pitfalls of water projects, which tend to be underfinanced and require multiyear implementation plans. More importantly, it can show how new infrastructure networks offer an alternative to debt trap diplomacy and authoritarian influence that flows through the BRI around the world.

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Control the Water, Control the Region

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China uses BRI infrastructure investments to connect the Mekong River Basin and further bind states to its economy and geopolitical interests by focusing on water and trade. Through the Lancang-Mekong Cooperation (LMC) initiative, China seeks to gain leverage over water management while promoting economic development. Along these lines, China conducts “hydro-diplomacy” to build dams across the region. While these dams generate electricity, they also often create significant environmental strain that affects downstream water levels and food security. In addition to environmental stress, the projects often involve forcible displacement and uproot entire communities.

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China also supports projects that increase trade along the Mekong. Beijing has funded the construction of multiple river ports, often expanding existing sites to handle larger cargo ships. These efforts include shadowy investment vehicles that combine the state with business figures, including a significant investment in a Laos river port by a sanctioned Chinese businessman linked to casinos and illicit trade. These port investments frequently accompany larger special economic zones where sovereign governments cede more extensive tracts of land to Chinese business interests. Some of these special zones have become magnets for illegal wildlife trade. Parallel to these ports, China invests in rail lines, including major projects in Thailand and Laos.

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These projects bolster China’s centrality in the region. If nineteenth- and twentieth-century geopolitics are about ground and sea lines of communication connecting the world, then twenty-first-century strategy revolves around the infrastructure that enables modern trade. By connecting the Mekong region, China makes itself a principal node in the larger regional network and diminishes the influence of other states like the United States, Japan, and Australia. The CCP can also use a mix of subtle threats and espionage to turn otherwise independent nations into a new category of client states — a dependence compounded by upstream dams. Through the BRI, China has put itself in a position to dictate the terms of trade and the flow of water.

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Using Water Security and Infrastructure to Counter the Chinese Communist Party

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Over the last 10 years, thought leaders in Congress, academia, and successive presidential administrations have begun to see the importance of using increased focus on water strategy and large-scale infrastructure projects to promote the interests of the United States and its democratic partners and allies globally. In 2017, USAID launched the U.S. Global Water Strategy, a five-year planning framework focused on increasing water security. The same year, water security made its way into the National Security Strategy. These efforts built on earlier initiatives across the U.S. government.

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As a more recent example, the 2022 U.S. Global Water Strategy and supporting action plan approach water security as both a risk and an opportunity. Consistent with earlier USAID efforts, the strategy envisions using a mix of increased access to safe drinking water and sanitation (WASH), improved water resources management (WRM), and water productivity (WP) to reduce water-related conflict and fragility. The strategy envisions allocating additional resources to existing water security programs in an effort to increase access to safe WASH while addressing climate resilience and food security challenges associated with water sheds like the Mekong River Basin.

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These investments promote the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), advance U.S. foreign policy interests, and expand water access, which is a core human need. Building water projects that encourage better environmental stewardship and trade through a network of local governments, U.S. partners and treaty allies, nongovernmental organizations, and international institutions would offer a rival network to the BRI and authoritarian influence. Since modern geopolitics is more about networks than nations, any project that increases access to different political, economic, and human networks therefore creates a strategic advantage and offers a viable alternative to countries whose sovereignty is under threat from authoritarian states.

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While interest in water strategy has been growing since 2008, a new development involves infrastructure projects that link democratic states and the private sector to promote trade and human security while offering an alternative to the BRI. Parallel to a domestic focus on infrastructure investment in 2021, the administration under U.S. president Joseph Biden announced the Build Back Better World (B3W) initiative, which became the Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment (PGII) in 2022. The effort called for aligning foreign policy and sustainable development through projects that address climate change, health security, digital innovation and access, and gender equality. These pillars act as focal points for investments by G7 nations and create new opportunities for public-private partnerships.

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In other words, to counter the $1 trillion China has invested in the BRI, the Biden administration would create a rival infrastructure network that links free states and private companies. This approach is consistent with the network theory of victory, articulated above, wherein power stems from greater participation in one network over another. In 2022 the G7 committed to investing $600 billion dollars in public-private sector initiatives by 2027. PGII investments, in addition to the B3W pillars, would be guided by transparency, good governance, and respect for human rights, thus providing an alternative to the BRI and authoritarian overreach.

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These efforts reflect an increased focus on economic corridors as a central pillar of strategy in the Biden administration. These corridors combine public-private sector investments in transportation infrastructure (rail lines, riverine ports, and roads) with investments in clean energy and information and communication technology (ICT). The result is hubs that promote food security and access to healthcare as much as economic growth. For example, the Lobito corridor in southern Africa will link the Democratic Republic of Congo, Zambia, and Angola, creating the network of rail lines, economic hubs, and ports required to develop the region and ensure access to key minerals for a clean energy transition.

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In many respects, the strategic vision articulated in both the PGII and 2022 Global Water Strategy builds on USAID and U.S. allied water programs in the Mekong River Basin. The U.S. International Development Finance Corporation (DFC) is investing in infrastructure projects, many of which also complement G7 partner initiatives. For example, the Japan-U.S.-Mekong Power Partnership (JUMPP) funds projects that combine regional trade integration with energy security.

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From this perspective, the Mekong River offers an ideal regional case study for refining the complementary strategic initiatives envisioned by the Biden administration to counter the BRI. The challenge is to develop new policy playbooks that help visualize and describe a regional strategy for countering malign influence by the CCP while helping populations most affected by forces like climate change.

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Using Tabletop Exercises to Refine Water Strategy

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Because water and infrastructure projects are, by definition, interagency concerns, they create coordination challenges. These challenges are exacerbated by the focus on public-private partnerships in PGII and emphasis on combining diverse stakeholders specified in the 2022 Global Water Strategy. As a result, policymakers need creative forums to conduct stress tests and refine their strategy to bridge traditional governmental divides. Because strategy involves competing interests and uncertainty, these forums must include modeling how rival states like China and local spoilers might respond. Water strategy must find a way to combine development and deterrence, so PGII should complement broader theater campaign plans and efforts to deny malign Chinese influence. It is difficult to create a viable long-term strategy without illustrating how conflicting interests create alternative futures and shift the logic of programmatic investments over time. A TTX can help flesh out these types of programmatic uncertainties.

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TTXs, alongside crisis simulations and gaming in general, are tailor made for strategic problems like the challenge of advancing a water strategy that addresses human security and counters malign authoritarian influence. These forums allow expert players to simulate the fog, friction, and uncertainty at the heart of great power competition. This experience, in turn, promotes critical analysis and reflections on how to refine strategies that advance U.S. interests. Because strategy involves thinking about the clash of interests over time and space, it requires thinking about alternative futures and red teaming the different pathways to those futures.

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To this end, CSIS constructed a series of water security TTXs that focused on WASH and WRM efforts in the face of great power competition. The first iteration explored the Sahel and how a mix of political and public health shocks interacted with climate stress in the region. Players aligned PGII investments and water security to counter these crisis events.

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Based on the findings, CSIS built a second TTX that shifted the geographic focus to the Mekong River Basin and transformed the game design from crisis response to competitive strategy. The scenario explored how rival groups of players with a mix of military and development experience set strategic priorities and developed plans around water and infrastructure investments in the Mekong River Basin.

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The TTX started with an orientation that helped players understand prevailing water security issues in the region. The purpose was to illustrate the convergence of infrastructure investments and environmental insecurity with great power competition in the Mekong River Basin. The orientation included the following data:

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    whether the country is part of the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF), a large U.S. trade initiative in the region

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    existing USAID water-related needs score by country

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    Freedom House trends for each country (2022 Global Freedom index)

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    China’s trade and debt trap diplomacy metrics, including countries’ imports from China and debt held by Beijing

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    U.S. foreign aid obligated and dispersed by country

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    resilience indicators including the Fragile States Index and Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative (ND-GAIN) Index, which evaluates how well states can adapt to climate change

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The scores helped participants understand water and infrastructure issues as they relate to foreign policy across the region. The USAID WASH Needs Index ranks countries in terms of their overall lack of access to clean water. The higher the score, the less access to reliable, safe water. In the Mekong, Thailand has the most reliable access to water, while Cambodia has the worst. By way of comparison, China ranks 61 with an index score of 0.31. Over 80 million people lack basic water access, and over 100 million lack basic sanitation. The score does not directly address issues related to climate change, such as growing salinity due to rising sea levels, changing weather patterns, and dam construction, and their combined effect on food security.

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The ND-GAIN Index addresses vulnerability to climate change and how well prepared states are to respond in terms of institutional readiness. The higher the score, the more prepared states are to adapt to the reality of climate change. As Table 1 shows, multiple countries (red highlighted cells) along the Mekong River Basin are rated as highly vulnerable to future climate shocks. Combined with foreign aid and trade data, the orientation helped players understand the growing influence of China in the region alongside the deterioration of freedom and growing state fragility, such as due to climate-induced stress.

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After the orientation, the U.S. team was briefed that additional funds were available to combine interagency efforts to counter BRI activities in Southeast Asia with a focus on the Mekong River Basin. The teams had to articulate a larger competitive strategy and three water security projects (WASH, WRM, WP) for the region as part of the larger PGII.

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To frame this strategy, the U.S. team was briefed that the strategic end state, according to guidance developed through the National Security Council (NSC), was to sustain U.S. and partner nation access and influence in Southeast Asia, consistent with the vision of a rules-based international order. The two principal objectives to achieve this end state were (1) promote PGII initiatives focused on water security and (2) reassure U.S. partners and allies. In other words, the TTX asked U.S. players to think about how development merges with deterrence in modern great power competition. To that end, the U.S. players filled out Table 2 to prioritize water security investments. Players could nominate three water programs (WASH, WRM, WP); each had to align with at least one PGII pillar and country. Based on the enhancement, players rated the extent to which the new water program would increase the access of the United States and its democratic partners to the region while denying China access and influence. For example, a player could propose a WASH initiative in Vietnam to counter increased water salinity owing to climate change and its effect on food security as one of the three expanded water programs.

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In other words, the TTX asked U.S. players to think about how development merges with deterrence in modern great power competition.

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The U.S. team then revealed its plans and discussed its strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats with a team playing the CCP. This action-reaction dynamic helped facilitate dialogue about the opportunity costs inherent in using water security programs and larger infrastructure projects to compete with China. Overall, players saw water strategy as a viable tool for countering the BRI but found that it required better integration with other instruments of power to support long-term competition.

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U.S. players tended to take a mixed approach to the region with two major strategies and one minority opinion. Two teams focused on Thailand and Vietnam — the countries they thought the most accessible and open to countering the CCP. The third team focused its efforts on the countries with higher WASH needs scores: Cambodia and Laos.

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The Thailand group proposed focusing on cultivating public-private partnerships to make Thailand the focal point for regional projects. These projects were concentrated in the digital and gender pillars of the PGII. The theory of competition was that creating new technical skills and increasing female employment in key sectors would benefit Thailand while creating a regional champion for water security projects.

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Since Thailand had the best WASH scores in the region, the group proposed investing in water-related businesses based in Thailand that could access Cambodia and Laos, which are closer to Beijing. The idea was to promote a new cadre of local businesses, including increased opportunities for more diverse workplaces that could build water projects across the region. The U.S. players rated this approach as likely to draw both G7 interest and private sector capital.

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The red team replicating the CCP noted that while Beijing would not challenge Thai businesses directly, China maintains indirect economic mechanisms it could use to counter a U.S.-led initiative. For example, one red player noted China could apply economic pressure by curtailing the number of tourists that travel to Thailand, a practice it used against South Korea in 2017. The red team also saw opportunities to use low-level cyber operations and propaganda, consistent with political warfare, to undermine trust and confidence in U.S.-backed businesses. In other words, U.S. efforts to work through a local partner to promote water security could be effective but would not remove all the ways and means Beijing has to apply pressure to states in the Mekong River Basin.

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A separate strategy that emerged focused on combining water projects with food security efforts to build resilience to climate shocks. The focus was on the climate pillar. This group assessed the magnitude of the climate challenge confronting Vietnam. Countries critical to regional food supplies, like Thailand, justified the focus, as Thailand and Vietnam two of the three top rice exporting countries in the world. The group also recommended a water-related project linked to agriculture and climate stress in Thailand. The focus of these efforts was more on mitigating future food security issues than on addressing current challenges. The team also assessed that these water programs could complement recent U.S. military outreach to Vietnam. Furthermore, given the size of the population and economic growth trends, the players rated projects in Vietnam as very attractive to both G7 and private sector partnerships.

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The red team noted that while these issues would produce regional benefits in the long run, they were unlikely to shift the U.S.-Vietnam relationship to a strategic partnership in the short term. Beijing would still retain the ability to drive a wedge between Washington and Hanoi. China retains significant military, economic, and ideological instruments to influence Vietnam, despite long-standing differences between the two countries.

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This discussion led to a debate about the balance of U.S. foreign assistance and how much should be linked to larger interagency strategies to counter China. Some saw addressing climate change and increasing water security as goals in themselves. The majority assessed that the United States, especially if its foreign assistance budgets increased, could integrate a focus on engaging local government and civil society, foreign assistance linked to poverty reduction and environmental growth, infrastructure-linked economic development, and governance programs with long-term competition without falling victim to the traps of the Cold War.

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These practitioners highlighted a need to refine interagency coordination along these lines and run periodic TTXs as a form of further calibrating regional strategies. These events would have to integrate multiple Biden administration strategies like the Indo-Pacific Strategy with PGII and the 2022 Global Water Strategy. In fact, the myriad of strategies published by the Biden administration led one player to express a need for more dynamic interagency coordination than traditional NSC meetings. Participants viewed the TTXs as a way of investigating opportunities to achieve the objectives in multiple strategy documents and avoid policy fratricide. One participant noted that this effort would also need to include integrated country strategies to balance regional, functional, and country-specific aspects of foreign policy. Another participant noted that while there is an agency strategic planning process in the U.S. Department of State and USAID, as well as different interagency coordination processes, efforts tended to have too many objectives to easily prioritize. This participant saw the focus on water security, infrastructure, and integrating development with deterrence as a way to synchronize and prioritize objectives.

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The third strategy to emerge from the TTX — and the minority perspective — was to focus on Cambodia and Laos, the countries with the worst WASH scores and projects linked to the health and digital pillars. Specifically, the players wanted to invest in low-cost internet of things (IoT) networks linked to local cellular service for remote monitoring — an opportunity to use ICT for WASH. The team assessed that they could address local needs in these countries in a way that offset some of the negative effects of Chinese dam construction on water and food security. One participant discussed how changing water flows were disrupting local economies and leading to migration. Another participant noted that despite Laos’s high dependence on China, the relationship between water governance and agriculture in Laos created a way to both address water security and show the population the negative effects of the Chinese authoritarian development model. Other players noted that this messaging could be enhanced by coordinating with elements like the Global Engagement Center (GEC). The player wanted to use the GEC’s data-driven approach to studying the information environment to tailor messages about the water security programs while monitoring for China’s efforts to undermine confidence in U.S. and allied water and infrastructure investments.

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The red team responded that while the effort might increase WASH scores in both countries, it would not significantly alter the influence of the CCP. Cambodia and Laos depend heavily on the Chinese economy. Furthermore, China could use its own propaganda and concepts like “Three Warfares” — influence operations that combine psychological and legal warfare with traditional propaganda — to promote rival narratives about the importance of each country’s relationship to Beijing. One red team member even said China could use this construct to take credit for Western money invested in water security while pinning the negative effects of its dam construction on foreign (G7) business interests.

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The discussion around the third strategy again highlighted the need to coordinate different agency planning processes with a focus on the information environment. One player suggested a need for an interagency competition manual similar to the recent U.S. Department of Defense Joint Concept for Competing. The group agreed the interagency collaboration needed a framework for conceptualizing long-term competition beyond deterrence and departmental interests. The challenge was how to develop this framework and balance military strategy with diplomacy and development. One player asked bluntly, “Who owns competition?” While the U.S. Department of State has processes to advance U.S. foreign policy objectives at the country and regional levels, it was not clear these formed critical components of major U.S. Department of Defense campaign plans that focus on competition. This insight brought some of the players back to recommending additional interagency TTXs to visualize and describe how to synchronize and prioritize objectives across multiple government agencies oriented toward long-term competition.

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The discussion led one player to note the missing role of the U.S. Congress in the debate. Congressional action led to prioritization of water security, and Congress must be brought into any discussion about increasing the foreign assistance budget. The participant noted increasing signs that Congress was interested in TTXs and creative forums for analyzing policy, though the initial forays focused on military matters. The player proposed designing the TTXs on long-term competition in a manner that allowed congressional staffers — and, if possible, entire committees — to play, building on recent efforts by the House Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the United States and the Chinese Communist Party. The player advocated starting a new series of congressional games that touch multiple committees, including the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and House Armed Services Committee.

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Connect the World to Compete with China

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Modern competition is about more than military balances. It extends to development projects and building a network that connects people and creates conditions for solving collective action problems plaguing the twenty-first century: climate change, water access, food insecurity, and poverty. In the process, it also creates a new positional advantage that prevents authoritarian states from co-opting economic corridors. It is a new great game that must be played with a different set of rules than the cold wars of old.

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The more the Biden administration can synchronize its development and diplomacy with theater strategy, the more likely it will be to gain an enduring advantage in long-term competition with China. This advantage starts with visualizing and describing regions in terms of people’s needs, likely environmental shocks, and transportation corridors to identify clusters of projects that offset authoritarian overreach while helping local communities address core human security challenges.

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    Calibrate regional strategies. The United States should look for opportunities to better align foreign assistance and defense budgets. Unfortunately, aid budgets are unlikely to grow in the near term based on the budget deal and election cycle. As a result, USAID — along with the Millennium Challenge Corporation and the DFC — will need to work with Congress and interagency partners to identify how best to align existing programs and resources. Based on standing legislation, USAID will continue to spend on water projects. These efforts could be coordinated with less confrontational defense dollars linked to efforts like the Pacific Deterrence Initiative and ongoing theater campaigns. The net results would be a two-level prioritization framework that better aligns ends, ways, and means. USAID should prioritize projects likely to draw the most traction across agencies as a means of making each development dollar go further and extend U.S. strategic interests.

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    Conduct stress tests and refine regional strategies through TTXs. USAID and other interagency partners will need to augment traditional approaches to long-term planning to embrace more dynamic methods aligned with understanding the new era of competition. Turning traditional war games into peace games and TTXs is the first step and will help leaders analyze complex interactions almost certain to accompany water and broader infrastructure projects. These games should occur at three levels. First, they should be part of program design and help identify opportunities for interagency as well as private sector partnerships. Second, they should be conducted through existing interagency processes and evaluate how guidance ranging from the Indo-Pacific Strategy to integrated country strategies align with PGII and the 2022 Global Water Strategy. Third, the games must involve Congress and bring a mix of staffers and elected representatives into the dialogue. Too often, U.S. strategy — whether defense or development — has been stovepiped and segmented by branch and agencies, producing unhealthy tension and friction. Games offer a means to overcome these self-imposed barriers that help different stakeholders develop a common understanding of modern competition. These congressional games should also focus not just on optimal resourcing but also on authorities and how best to tailor the interagency framework to support long-term competition. If twenty-first-century competition is as much as about development as deterrence, the United States needs to ensure it has both the ways and means to gain an enduring advantage.

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    Amplify regional strategies. In a connected world, the message matters as much as the facts. Efforts to better integrate water projects with public-private sector infrastructure initiatives and theater strategy require global messaging that counters authoritarian influence campaigns. This messaging campaign should be integrated with existing initiatives like the GEC and embassy-level outreach and should be built into programmatic requirements for the network of vendors that support modern development. The messages should be tailored to audiences across diverse regions and retain the ability to counter malign foreign influence campaigns. The result is not propaganda but ensuring affected populations can cut through the noise to understand why the U.S. government, alongside its partners and the private sector, is investing in water infrastructure.

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Benjamin Jensen is a senior fellow for future war, gaming, and strategy in the International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, D.C.

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Daniel F. Runde is a senior vice president, director of the Project on Prosperity and Development, and holds the William A. Schreyer Chair in Global Analysis at CSIS.

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Thomas Bryja is a program coordinator in the Project on Prosperity and Development at CSIS.

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Integrate Offence And Defence

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Lessons from the Israeli Experience

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Sidharth Kaushal, et al. | 2023.10.11

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This article articulates pathways forward in a future operating environment dominated by stalemates and threats to national homelands.

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A core challenge that is likely to be presented by the future operating environment is the combination of stalemates at the front with threats to national homebases. Not only will this strain militaries, but it will also generate organisational competition between those responsible for defensive tasks and those responsible for manoeuvre at the front.

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One way of overcoming these contradictions is through a concept which adopts elements of strike, Integrated Air and Missile Defence (IAMD), and manoeuvre. This is the goal envisioned under Israel’s Operational Victory Concept. Per this concept, which heavily emphasises multidomain integration, close coordination must be achieved between air and missile defences, strike and ground forces.

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As described by one of the authors in a previous article, this approach would involve three things. The first is the integration of sensors used for offensive and defensive tasks, and the use of the same capabilities to enable both strikes and interceptions. This integration can enable responsive fires. Instead of depending almost solely on an attempt to deliver a knockout blow at the outset of a conflict, this approach would also seek to create a blanket of sensor coverage to ensure that any projectile fired creates a risk of unmasking the launcher. Defensive forward-based intercepts can be followed up with strikes on launchers. As demonstrated by the updating of defensive radar systems such as the AN/MPQ-64 to extrapolate a launcher’s location from a missile’s trajectory, this is technologically viable today. The second element of the approach is strike capabilities with the range and speed to engage targets before they move or even complete a multi-rocket firing sequence. Precisely what this range and speed requirement is depends on the target. Over longer distances, one might need recourse to tools such as longer-range missiles or loitering munitions. It is also possible to create dual-purpose interceptors which can serve both air defence and strike missions, as illustrated by the US Navy’s SM-6. Though this entails costs, an integrated system is arguably cheaper than two separate lines of effort to support strike and defence. If operated in proximity to the enemy, as in the context of offensive manoeuvres, short-range strike-intercepting munitions might even be cheaper than descent-phase interceptors. The final component of this model is ground forces that manoeuvre to support strike by infiltrating an opponent’s lines, unmasking targets and forcing them to move, as well as engaging targets of opportunity. Sufficiently small and distributed ground formations networked with a wider force could serve as force multipliers for strike.

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The costs of deflecting Iran’s proxies in the early stages of a conflict with Tehran could leave Israel exhausted in the event of direct Iranian intervention later on

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In effect, this approach still maintains a focus on manoeuvre, presenting an opponent with multiple dilemmas and preventing them from acting in a coherent manner. However, physical manoeuvre is in this context a supporting element in a system based on dislocation by fire. In effect, manoeuvre, fire and defence must be balanced in a system which integrates their effects.

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Lessons from the Israeli Example

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The Israeli experience is instructive here. Israel faces the prospect of a multi-front war with Iranian proxies and Iran itself, in which there is a considerable risk that its air defence capabilities will be exhausted by the sheer volume of fire that it faces. Moreover, the state faces a prioritisation issue – the costs of deflecting Iran’s proxies in the early stages of a conflict could leave it exhausted in the event of direct Iranian intervention later on. It would seem, then, that seeking efficiencies by integrating offence and defence is an essential task.

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That being said, there exist considerable points of friction within the IDF. One criticism of the argument that fires and defences should be better integrated – advanced by the supporters of both manoeuvre and defence – is that a new investment in offensive ground capabilities in general, and in particular in an offensive forward-interception and launch-suppression layer, will draw from the resources the IDF requires in order to continue to strengthen and develop its existing multi-layer interception system. Dividing force design efforts would, in practice, be to Israel’s detriment. Given the relative effectiveness of Israeli defences thus far, there is an understandable conservatism regarding change. Phrases often heard in the corridors of the General Staff include: “don’t change horses midstream” or “don’t change a winning team”.

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However, if we examine the IDF’s last modernisation process in the 1990s, when the Syrian armour threat was regarded as a key strategic issue, Israel did not refrain from building a combat system that enjoyed five to six separate layers of response. Fighter plane interdiction capabilities were not considered an alternative to building a new cutting-edge fleet of remotely piloted aircraft. The plethora of aerial capabilities did not make redundant the long-range precision-guided munition squads deployed in the ground divisions, along with the Northern Command’s rocket and missile artillery division. All the while, the IDF continued to build and upgrade the Armoured Corps, supplying it with advanced tanks to help deal with forward enemy forces, and it would later control Syrian territory through improved capabilities. Thus, the decision to invest in another combat layer at the cost of a few billion NIS should not be seen as threatening other layers of defence. Put simply, the cost of layered and potentially redundant systems is outweighed by both the military and material costs of a single-vector solution. A failure to overwhelm a missile-centric adversary will surely prove to be more expensive in blood and treasure, as well as in strategic outcomes.

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In addition, many of the improvements in areas such as ISR that could enable a strike-based concept could also improve IAMD. For example, new and comparatively cheap UAVs and nano-satellites could enhance both the tracking of certain targets and the interception of ascending missiles and active launchers. Integrated systems such as the US Navy’s Naval Integrated Fire Control-Counter Air and the US Army’s Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System have already shown how non-dedicated ISR assets like the F/A-18 and F-35 can enhance missile defence, as well as how air defence radar can provide data to enable subsequent strikes.

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Developing a significant forward fighting layer that can engage ballistic and UAV threats is a crucial component in fulfilling Israel’s goal of moving from responding to initiating

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Moreover, the ability to engage targets with comparatively short-range capabilities including strike platforms and interceptors that rely on semi-active homing can free up more expensive assets for longer-range missions. Greater awareness about which missiles are likely to hit targets and new modes of intercept based on directed energy weapons (lasers) can also support this aim, though the latter will mature over the long term. As examples of the capabilities currently diverted from more strategically decisive missions, we might consider Israel’s “long arm” strategic strike capabilities and its next-generation Iron Dome (together with Arrow and David Sling). Both the air assets needed for strategic strike and the defensive capabilities of Iron Dome would be necessary for a conflict with Iran. However, if they are currently pinned down defending against more proximate threats, they will not be available for this role.

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General Principles for Defence in an Age of Protracted Conflict and Missile Threats

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There are a number of lessons that can be derived about the relationship between strike and defence, both in an Israeli context and more broadly:

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    The principles of the challenge facing multiple countries are quite similar. Protracted indecision in long multi-front wars disadvantages democracies with capital-intensive militaries. The need to defend civilians and critical national infrastructure, moreover, creates real opportunity costs in other areas. Countries that must defend against large numbers of cheap capabilities – from multiple-launch rocket systems (MLRS) to UAVs and even some missiles – will have to strip formations at the front of much-needed ground-based air defence (GBAD), unless they can find solutions. A combination of strike and defence can achieve this.

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    It is possible and necessary to strive towards short wars and to remove the threat to the home front. Preserving routine in major cities, and especially the security of civilians, is of primary importance. The continuity of everyday life, education and the economy must be maintained.

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    Future wars have the potential to become multi-arena scenarios, and as such it will be critical to achieve a decisive victory vis-à-vis proximate threats in order to free up resources deal with more distant ones.

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    Strengthening intelligence, aerial strike and multi-layered defence components is crucial; however, it is not sufficient. Focusing on these components forces Israel into an attrition war and a strategy that serves its adversaries. Engaging MLRS, UAVs or missiles emanating from an area like Kaliningrad or southern Lebanon with aircraft or expensive GBAD and counter-rocket, artillery and mortar assets will both expend resources at unsustainable levels and draw assets from the offensive military actions needed to decide a war. For Israel, this would be long-range strike, while for NATO it might be supporting ground manoeuvre formations.

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    Developing a significant forward fighting layer that can engage ballistic and UAV threats is a crucial component in fulfilling Israel’s goal of moving from responding to initiating. The ability to strike a launcher as it is embarking munitions, or to destroy a missile with a short-range interceptor that does not rely on an expensive seeker, will be crucial to thinning out threats. As much as possible, these systems should be able to leverage each other’s sensors.

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    It is vital to prioritise research, planning, development and production of sophisticated responses to advanced weapons systems that will emerge in the coming years, such as hypersonic missiles, tactical nuclear weapons, cruise missiles and other capabilities.

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    Without this, many of the cutting-edge capabilities and combat methods developed by militaries such as the IDF, including those incorporated in Momentum and the next multi-year plan, will end up amounting to only tactical improvements – which, important as they are, will not flip the script.

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In effect, then, responding to the twofold challenges of a positional battlefield and adversaries with superior mass will require a synthesis of capabilities. Single-vector solutions, be they based on manoeuvre, fires or active defence, will likely be found wanting. An integrated solution that seeks to leverage synergies between fires, manoeuvre and active defence is likely to be costly, organisationally difficult and applicable only in comparatively small theatres. However, the efficiencies that such a solution provides are a prerequisite for operating in the future combat environment.

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Sidharth Kaushal is the Research Fellow of Sea Power at RUSI. His research covers the impact of technology on maritime doctrine in the 21st century and the role of sea power in a state’s grand strategy.

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Eran Ortal is the current commander of The Dado Center for Interdisciplinary Military Studies. Ortal is also the founder of the Israel Defense Force Dado Center journal, dedicated to Operational art and military transformation.

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Ran Kochav is an Israel Defense Forces brigadier general who has served as the commander of the Israeli Air and Missile Defense Forces. General Kochav has held a number of command roles within the IDF, including as the commander of the 66th battalion the divisional anti-aircraft officer of the 91st Division before the 2006 Lebanon war and head of the special forces section in the Air Group of IAF (2005-2006).

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Israel Confronts Hamas

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For Military Planners, Gaza is Not Unusual

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Jack Watling | 2023.10.16

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The legal and ethical challenges of operating in densely populated areas are going to be a tragic constant of 21st century warfare, with no easy solutions.

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The impending ground invasion of Gaza by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) has raised a range of questions about how military operations should be conducted in densely populated areas. The political context of the Israel–Palestine conflict, and the human tragedy that has engulfed Israeli and Palestinian families, has made the military considerations secondary to a raging political debate. For the military, however, the questions at stake are not exceptional but routine, and will likely define many of the planning considerations for operations throughout this century. Precedents set in Gaza, therefore, may cast a long shadow.

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Israel has declared war on Hamas. Legally, there are two questions that arise: the legality of the war, and the legality of how it is fought. As regards the former, Hamas’s incursion on to Israeli territory, the deliberate massacre of over 1,300 and the kidnapping of hundreds of Israeli civilians undoubtedly counts as an armed attack in response to which Israel has the right of self-defence. Given that Hamas has a stated objective of destroying the Israeli state, took the hostages on to the territory it controls, and is launching rockets and conducting command and control from that territory, it is also legal for Israel to operate against Hamas on the territory of Gaza in response. There is therefore no question as to the legality of the Israeli action, which aims to eliminate the capacity of Hamas to conduct further attacks.

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The difficulties arise as to how such a mission is to be carried out, given that the area of operations comprises densely populated urban terrain with a large proportion of children and non-combatants and very weak critical infrastructure. Under the Laws of Armed Conflict and International Humanitarian Law, Israeli forces are obligated to discriminate military from civilian targets, to restrict their activities to those that are of military necessity, and to exercise proportionality. It is not illegal for civilians to be killed as a result of operations. It is illegal for operations to target civilians or for there to be a lack of proportionality in striking military targets relative to assessed collateral damage.

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Discrimination is simplified by the fact that Hamas systematically uses civilian objects for military purposes. It has dug subterranean infrastructure beneath civilian buildings, including ammunition depots, and has boasted in its own media about using Gaza’s water reticulation infrastructure for manufacturing rockets. When militaries do this, they render such areas military objects that are targetable, which is why – for example – it was legal for coalition forces to strike a hospital in Mosul that had been repurposed for IED manufacture in 2016. The challenge for the attacking force therefore becomes a question of judging the military value of a target against the risk of collateral damage.

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The legal case for striking urban targets is often heavily weighted to the detriment of civilians because of the asymmetry in certainty about targets. If a Hamas command post is communicating from a structure and this is intercepted, if an Israeli ground unit takes fire from a structure, or if rockets are launched into Israel from a site, then there is confirmation that enemy military activity is taking place there. The civilians hiding in the building, trying to sleep or keep out of the line of fire, are invisible, and therefore are not counted in the judgement as to proportionality. This is why the RAF has long maintained that it knows of only one civilian killed in its strikes in Iraq, even though the civilian death toll from the air campaign during the war against Islamic State numbered in the thousands.

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The laws of war are effective when parties view them as viable instructions for how to fight. When they prohibit fighting altogether, they are likely to be ignored

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The campaign to defeat the Islamic State – which involved the assault of several major cities, from Ramadi and Fallujah to Mosul, Tel Affar and Raqqa – was conducted slowly, with painstaking targeting and legal processes to try and mitigate civilian harm. Nevertheless, the cities were laid waste, and thousands of civilians died. The death toll was also high for the attacking force. Iraq’s Counterterrorism Service, one of the most experienced and capable military units in the world at the time, suffered 40% casualties during the assault on Mosul.

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The challenge of how to take urban ground without destroying the city is insurmountable with the tools currently available. Moreover, because there is no prize for second place in war, and because sensor dominance quickly leads to an asymmetry in casualties, weaker forces will retreat into dense, urban terrain. Ukrainian troops did this in Mariupol. British forces expect to have to operate from urban strongholds in future conflict. Hamas and Islamic State’s decision to fall back into urban terrain made sound tactical sense.

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The laws of war are effective when parties view them as viable instructions for how to fight. When they prohibit fighting altogether, they are likely to be ignored. How to craft rules that protect civilians in this context, therefore, requires thoughtful proposals. The proposal advocated by some groups to exclude explosive weapons from urban fighting is a non-starter, as it would confer such an advantage on to the defender as to prevent an attacker from prosecuting operations.

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For Israel, tactical options are constrained by a range of additional factors. Iron Dome – the air defence system protecting Israeli cities from rocket attack – has a finite number of interceptors. Given the massive threat if Hizbullah joins the fray, Israel is keen to limit its expenditure of interceptors by interdicting left of launch. The threat of escalation with Hizbullah also means that Israel feels it necessary to preserve combat power. Both factors lead to an approach to Gaza that is fast and favours firepower. This weights the judgement as to military necessity.

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In the absence of tools and methods for fighting among the people, advertising intent and clear avenues for civilians to vacate the battlespace is a viable alternative. This is what Israel has done by instructing civilians to move South of the Gaza River, while indicating the routes and times where movement will not be interdicted. The proposed timeframe for evacuation was short, although it has now been extended by delays to the ground operation.

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A policy to permanently drive Palestinians from Gaza would amount to ethnic cleansing and a war crime

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Despite these measures, many civilians – as always in these cases – will choose to stay. Furthermore, in this specific context, many Palestinians fear that Israel is not trying to move them to a safe place, but instead trying to get them to vacate land which will be occupied and eventually settled. Palestinians fear that they will not be allowed to return. This is not the stated policy of the Israeli government. However, given Israel’s past conduct and the statements of several of its current ministers, this fear is understandable. It is also important to note that Israel has a history of valid tactical military justifications being instrumentalised by a minority within its cabinet to radically reshape its policy over time. This is how Operation Peace for Galilee in 1982, authorised by the Israeli cabinet to secure its northern border, was morphed in stages by Defence Minister Ariel Sharon into a siege of Beirut.

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A policy to permanently drive Palestinians from Gaza would amount to ethnic cleansing and a war crime. It is therefore vital that, alongside support to Israel in defending itself, the international community is clear as to its expectations in confirming Israeli intent, and the consequences if that intent morphs into something illegal. One clear test is whether Israel will help to make the area to which people are evacuating safe by allowing food, medicine and clean water to be moved into southern Gaza.

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It is also clear, however, that the international community will lack any credibility or authority on the issue if it simply demands a return to the status-quo ante. For many Palestinians, the progressive erosion of their control of the West Bank was choking off any prospect of a path to peace. For Israelis, the massacre conducted by Hamas on 7 October fundamentally changed their calculus. For years, Israel has been fearful as Iran and Hizbullah have consolidated their hold on Lebanon and Syria, amassing an arsenal of sophisticated weapons. In combination with the training and support to Hamas and the infiltration of Judea and Samaria, the IDF had come to view the status quo – amid increasing US disengagement from the region – as similarly unsustainable.

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The IDF’s assessment today is that if the threat is left to expand, it will eventually threaten the viability of the Israeli state. Thus, their objective in the current conflict is not to simply inflict a dose of pain on Hamas to deter further fighting, but to systematically destroy its military capacity to conduct operations and thereby write down one of the threats. This risks Hizbullah intervening. But given that the Israeli security state fears things getting worse over time, many in the security establishment feel that if a fight must happen, then they would rather have it today.

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For the international community, therefore, while deterring a regional escalation should be an objective, a mere temporary “stability” is unlikely to look attractive to either side. If the international community wants long-term stability, it must be more proactively engaged in exploring a path to peace, rather than pursuing a systematic disengagement that simply cedes the region to Iran, which has characterised Washington’s approach for the last three years. There may emerge, from the ashes of this unfolding tragedy, an opportunity to build a new road to peace, just as there is the risk that the flames will engulf what remains of a rules-based international system that so many words have been pledged to defend.

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Jack Watling is Senior Research Fellow for Land Warfare at the Royal United Services Institute. Jack works closely with the British military on the development of concepts of operation, assessments of the future operating environment, and conducts operational analysis of contemporary conflicts.

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Israel Confronts Hamas

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Jack Watling | 2023.10.16
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The legal and ethical challenges of operating in densely populated areas are going to be a tragic constant of 21st century warfare, with no easy solutions.

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Integrate Offence And Defence

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Sidharth Kaushal, et al. | 2023.10.11
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This article articulates pathways forward in a future operating environment dominated by stalemates and threats to national homelands.

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The Post-October 7 World

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Seller’s Remorse

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Max Bergmann, et al. | 2023.09.18
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Russia’s role as a major global arms supplier is under threat. This report analyzes how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the concomitant Western sanctions have affected the status of its role.

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Degradation Everywhere

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Darya Dolzikova | 2023.09.18
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Situated on the front line of the war in Ukraine, the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant poses ongoing risks. These relate not only to the threat of Russian sabotage, but also to the gradual deterioration of the facility under the extreme operating conditions.

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Arctic Geopolitics

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Andreas Østhagen, et al. | 2023.09.14
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Tensions in the Arctic among great powers have increased since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But the unique status of the Norwegian archipelago Svalbard complicates this broad geopolitical framing of the region.

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