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''Intelligence Challenges for the Next Generation''
http://www.odci.gov/cia/public_affairs/speeches/nic_speech_100898.html

                           [Public Affairs Logo]
Speech 10/08/98

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                         Remarks by John C. Gannon
                  Chairman, National Intelligence Council
                                  to the
                           World Affairs Council
                               of St. Louis
                              October 8, 1998
            ''Intelligence Challenges for the Next Generation''

Thank you. It is a special pleasure for Mary Ellen and me to come back
to
Saint Louis, where we lived six wonderful years in the 1970s as I
pursued
doctoral studies at Washington University and she worked in the Burn
Unit
at Barnes Hospital. Our two sons, Jonathan and Mark, were born at St.
Mary's Hospital in Richmond Heights and St. John's Mercy in Creve Coeur,
respectively. I have pushed strollers and walked toddlers endlessly on
every sidewalk and through every playground in Clayton and University
City.
Make no mistake about it, I know precisely where I am in Clayton
tonight.

I will make the point tonight that the world as this century closes is
growing more complex, threats to US interests are becoming more diverse
and
dispersed, and the job of the CIA is getting tougher.

Intelligence officers, of course, are much harder to discourage.

   * Sure, the timing of the Indian nuclear test on May 11 got ahead of
us.

   * Yes, North Korea's effort on August 31 to put a satellite in space
     surprised us.

   * True, some of us are still waiting for our invitations to the
Helmut
     Kohl victory dinner.

   * And we, too, were caught off guard when that electrical fire on
     September 28 put the St. Louis Gateway Arch out of commission for a
     month - just when Mary Ellen and I were coming to town for the
first
     time in 20 years.

   * But, I am proud to say, we did call the biggest recent shot heard
     round the world - the breaking on September 8 of Roger Maris'
homerun
     record by Mark McGwire. A truly great city owes this guy, who with
a
     little help from the information revolution, put the name of Saint
     Louis in Internet lights that have pulsated across the globe for
the
     past two months. Saint Louis does well with exposure. And, God
knows,
     you've had it big time with Mark McGwire in your midst.

Turning to my job today, I also want to acknowledge that the Saint Louis
community gave CIA its first and 14th directors, RADM Sidney W. Souers,
who
ably launched CIA in 1946, and Judge William H. Webster, who worked so
skillfully to restore our stature and direction between 1987 and 1991.
We
also recall the Judge fondly for his tireless efforts to implement
progressive gender and diversity policies at CIA, an investment that
continues to benefit us today. Finally, you should know that our current
Deputy Director of Central Intelligence, Air Force General John Gordon,
is
a proud Jefferson City native and a University of Missouri-Columbia
alumnus. Missouri has been good to CIA, and we are grateful.

In recent days, we've been busy back at CIA Headquarters. We've been
focusing on the conflict in the Serbian Province of Kosovo, where the
Serbs
once again seem to have the upper hand but face a possible riposte from
NATO; we're analyzing evidence that North Korea has made strides in its
missile programs; and we're carefully following the new turmoil in
Moscow
that seems to confirm the view of many that Russia has some of the same
economic and political problems as a garden-variety Third World state,
albeit one with nuclear arms. Meanwhile, what we only recently called
''the
Asian financial crisis'' is now destabilizing markets around the world.

And I've been reading dire forecasts, as you probably have, raising the
specter of a significant slowdown in global growth, if not an outright
meltdown. I see reports of real and looming conflicts in Africa and of
Saddam's Husayn's latest machinations as he maneuvers to get UNSCOM
inspectors out of Iraq and to obtain sanctions relief on his terms. All
in
all, this is fairly depressing stuff, and I have not even alluded to
other
gloomy issues, such as weapons proliferation, terrorism, and
humanitarian
concerns, that cross CIA's screen. There obviously is a lot on the
Intelligence Community's plate these days--everything from how foreign
governments are dealing with the so-called ''Y2K'' problem to global
warming.

In considering the world today, with its good news and bad, challenges
and
opportunities, and statesman and dictators. . .if we don't exercise
vigilance, consider all options, and help our government to react
quickly,
the Saddams, Qadhafis, Milosevic's and Kim Chong-ils of the world are
likely to surprise us.

Tonight, I want to spend most of my time exploring the world as we are
likely to find it a decade or so from now�for convenience, let's say in
2010. This is more my personal view than that of the National
Intelligence
Council, though we have consulted experts from inside and outside of
government and done some collective thinking on the subject. The world
of
2010 will present new opportunities and risks both for the United States
as
a nation and for our intelligence services. In some cases, we will find
ourselves navigating in uncharted waters.

I won't try to predict events tonight. I will, however, discuss six
global
trends that are at work today and that will influence the world of 2010
and
the work of those in the intelligence business. Then I'll make a few
observations on prospects for specific regions of the world and for a
few
key countries. As I provide this brief tour d'horizon, you might keep in
mind this thought from Arnold H. Glasow: ''The trouble with the future
is
that it usually arrives before we're ready for it.''

First, despite dramatic drops in fertility, by 2010 the world's
population
will have increased by 1.2 billion people, to around 7 billion. About 95
percent of this growth will be in developing countries, and much of this
will be in already overcrowded urban areas. In many of these countries,
a
''youth bulge'' � the burgeoning number of people between 15 and 24
years
old � will strain educational systems, infrastructure, and job markets.
In
some areas, there will be real pressure on basic resources, such as
water
in the Middle East. Meanwhile, in the industrialized world, because of
slow
or negative population growth, governments will have to struggle to
provide
social welfare and health services to aging populations.

Second, despite the disruptions caused by the current global crisis, we
anticipate a continuing integration of global capital markets and that
by
2010 there will have been at least modest real growth in world GDP. We
are
less certain whether per capita income will grow. Many parts of the
world
are likely to be more prosperous a decade or two from now. But the
rising
tides will not lift all boats. Obviously, not every state will benefit
equally, nor will all groups within each state.

Third, developments in the world will be driven as never before by
technology. The continued digital data and communications revolution
will
shrink distances and weaken barriers to the flow of information. At the
same time, rigid and authoritarian governments that resist the flow of
information associated with communications advances will fall further
behind technologically.

To cite a fourth trend, growing populations and increases in world
output
will drive demand for more energy. By 2010, the world's dependence on
OPEC,
and Persian Gulf oil in particular, will have grown significantly.
Technological advances, as well as new sources of oil, will help meet
this
demand. Improvements in the efficiency of solar cells and batteries will
result in greater use of these and other renewable energy resources, but
they are unlikely significantly to affect global reliance on fossil
fuels
in the foreseeable future.

Fifth, the problem of feeding the world's population will persist. The
bottlenecks will not be found in agriculture or science, however, so
much
as in political conditions, transport, and distribution. Indeed, global
food production is likely to keep pace with overall demand. We
anticipate
that genetic engineering will fuel a fourth agricultural revolution. As
in
the past, shortages will be man-made. Serious pockets of poverty will
put
people in developing countries�particularly in Africa�at risk of death
from
disease and starvation.

Finally, we expect advances in precision-guided munitions and
information
technologies to give new impetus to the revolution under way in military
affairs. Other countries will have technologically advanced military
equipment, but no power will be able to match US battlefield
capabilities,
at least not in the next decade or two. And potential adversaries are
not
likely to repeat Iraq's mistake in challenging the United States in
set-piece conventional warfare.

Adversaries' technological inferiority, however, will not mean that they
will acquiesce in American policies or a global ''Pax Americana.'' Some
will try to blunt US military superiority in other ways--for example, by
resort to asymmetric means, such as terrorism and weapons of mass
destruction. A growing number already are developing or acquiring
chemical
and biological weapons. A few even are incurring the high costs of
supporting nuclear weapons programs. In that context, Aldous Huxley
probably had it right when he proclaimed, ''Ye shall know the truth, and
the truth shall make you mad.''

To view matters from a regional perspective, between now and 2010 we
expect
that:

The push of European governments for economic and political union will
proceed, albeit by fits and starts, but with less optimism than when the
Maastricht Treaty was signed in 1992. More generally, as contemporary
events in the Balkans illustrate, Europe is not yet immune to the sorts
of
ethnic, sectarian, and other particularistic divisions that can lead to
civil strife and conflict. Only enlightened leadership, occasional
outside
encouragement, and time will allow the protagonists and antagonists in
places like the Balkans and Northern Ireland to, as we say in
Washington,
take a more ''corporate'' view of matters, that is, act less parochially
and more responsibly.

Russia will remain in a state of profound transformation, the outcome of
which is very uncertain. While a return to Soviet-style Communism is
extremely unlikely, it is not at all clear that Russia will be able to
develop either a liberal, Western-style democracy or a thriving market
economy. The road ahead will be far from smooth. No one expects Prime
Minister Primakov's government to make much headway in coping with
Russia's
immense problems. Russia's ultimate political survivor has taken on the
biggest challenge of his life.

Even if the Russian economy begins to recover, glaring disparities in
income between winners and losers will exacerbate social tensions, and
corruption, if unchecked, will further undercut the legitimacy of
national
institutions. The post-Yel'tsin leadership likely will set the tone for
the
next decade or more. That government on many fronts will pursue policies
at
odds with our own, not because of differing ideologies or personal
antipathies but because of competing interests.

As for East Asia, our once lofty expectations have been dampened by the
depth and extent of the regional financial crisis we have watched unfold
over the past year. The sudden and dramatic reversal of fortunes has
already contributed to internal political change and instability in
countries like Indonesia, and we are only beginning to appreciate the
human
toll the crisis is taking throughout the region and the broader
implications for stability and security.

We cannot predict when the crisis will end or whether there will be an
even
more serious economic downturn and contagion, but we believe that the
crisis is likely to generate a variety of new challenges that could
strain
the peace and stability the region has generally enjoyed in the past
decade
or two. We cannot rule out the possibility of geostrategic shifts in
East
Asia as governments recalculate their security interests in a
fundamentally
changed economic environment.

One of the lessons to be learned from the financial crisis, which will
hold
with even greater force in the more economically integrated world of the
future, is that economic developments in one country or region can have
profound implications for another. Another lesson is that economic
globalization is a two-edged sword. It can foster prosperity as well as
decline, instability as well as stability, depending, of course, on the
circumstances.

China, by dint of its population, regional sweep, economic potential,
territorial claims, and aspirations to be a major foreign policy player,
will challenge US policymakers over the next decade and beyond. As
intelligence officers, we can neither assume that China will be an
entirely
benign actor on the world scene, nor should we view prospects for
confrontation as inevitable. There are issues over which China probably
is
willing to resort to force � to head off Taiwan's drive for independence
being one � but how this issue evolves will depend as much on Taipei's
actions as Beijing's.

Looking out a decade in North Korea, our analysts debate the end game
for
the Kim Chong-il regime, but most--perhaps prematurely--assess that it
will
not be long in coming. Whether the North expires with a whimper or a
bang,
one thing is sure: the South will have to pay a heavy price for the
North's
recovery.

In the meantime, as was driven home to us by North Korea's test launch
of a
Taepo-Dong 1 missile on August 30, we cannot relax our guard about the
North's capabilities and intentions. As the testing makes clear,
P'yongyang
intends to pursue high-priority military projects�probably including an
ICBM capability�with little regard for the price. Such efforts in coming
years will threaten security in the region and perhaps well beyond it.

Turning to the Middle East, we expect Iraq's Saddam to be gone by 2010,
though this judgment is based as much on pure speculation on our part as
informed analysis. In the meantime, he will be a thorn in our side, a
threat to regional well being, and a menace to many of his own people.

As for Iran, we anticipate that political change, driven largely by
societal forces, will proceed, particularly as power passes to another
generation of leaders. Tehran's recent test of a medium-range ballistic
missile and its military show of force on the Afghan border suggest that
Iran intends to remain a regional power.

Notwithstanding the results of recent discussions between Prime Minister
Netanyahu and Chairman Arafat, progress between Israelis and
Palestinians
will be uneven and punctuated by occasional violence. We do not expect
the
Middle East to contribute to underemployment in the Intelligence
Community
for many years to come.

In the Middle East today, let me add, low oil prices resulting from the
collapse of international demand, are threatening the economic and
political stability of some of America's closest allies. A protracted
weakness in oil prices would force these governments into tough choices
between military and social spending, increasing the appeal of Islamic
extremism and the risk of political unrest.

Turning to South Asia, the region is likely to remain a source of
concern,
even if a balance of terror restrains India and Pakistan, which earlier
this year tested nuclear weapons, from a nuclear exchange. The potential
for miscalculation, particularly in the highly charged domestic
political
environments of the two countries, is real. More generally, over the
next
decade or two, India will emerge as an economic powerhouse relative to
Pakistan and its South Asian neighbors. And Pakistan's serious economic
difficulties could lead to greater political turbulence there.

As some of you know, we in the Intelligence Community knew that India
was
in a position to test a nuclear device last May, though we did not
predict
the day it was to take place. As intelligence officers would put it, we
provided adequate strategic warning but for various reasons were unable
to
provide timely tactical warning. In the intelligence business, our
challenge is to do better than this. We try to think ''out of the
box''�to
consider alternative hypotheses, consciously eschew mindsets, and to
question preconceived notions about the way things are likely to be.

In South Asia and elsewhere, we must not let our preconceived notions�in
this case that New Delhi would not test at this time�impede our efforts
to
weigh all the options.

Sub-Saharan Africa, while in the aggregate the poorest and least
globally
integrated region, is becoming more differentiated. Southern Africa is
the
region of the continent where conditions are most auspicious, and some
individual African countries�notably Ghana, Mali, Botswana, Mozambique,
and
Uganda--are likely to make significant progress. But Africa is still
wracked by ethnic conflict and will remain so. Whether an African state
''succeeds'' by most conventional definitions will depend more on the
quality of its leadership and the ability of its peoples to work
together
than on its natural endowments.

In Latin America, prospects appear good in many respects. Democratic
institutions are likely to take firmer root, and key economies are being
reformed in ways conducive to growth. If present trends continue, by
2010
the region will represent one of the largest markets for US trade and
investment. Nonetheless, financial difficulties, which increasingly are
manifesting themselves in Brazil and elsewhere, could lead countries
there
to experiment once again with less orthodox political and economic
prescriptions.

We are watching Brazil, where President Cardoso last weekend won a
renewed
mandate, with particular concern. If the economy of Brazil--the ninth
largest in the world and a country in which US investors have large
exposure�falters, numerous other Latin American countries will feel what
some call the ''samba'' effect. That will include Mexico, which is in
the
midst of a political transition at present to a more pluralistic system
that is positive direction but also carries risks to that country's
political stability. Cuba obviously faces an uncertain future as it
prepares for the post-Castro era. More generally, Latin America, more
than
any other region, will have to contend with narcotrafficking and its
consequences for corruption and political instability.

Viewing the world of 2010 as a whole, no country, no ideology, and no
movement will emerge on a global scale to threaten US interests.
Nonetheless, the regional agendas of some countries will collide with
those
of the United States, and the threat of terrorism directed against US
interests--both at home and abroad--will remain and, quite possibly,
grow.
And dangers posed by the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction
will
only intensify in the future.

Let me make a few points about the threat we face from weapons of mass
destruction, which today is one of our major preoccupations:

   * Many countries now have the technological capability to move
     short-term missiles closer to targets. Adapting missiles for launch
     from a commercial ship could be accomplished covertly, and probably
     with little warning.

   * The medium-range missiles of countries such as Iran and North Korea
     pose an immediate threat, as do existing and emerging ICBM systems.

   * The dangers that arise from the proliferation of such weapons
systems
     and technologies are increasing. Foreign assistance can enable
     recipient countries to save decades of time that otherwise would
have
     to be devoted to development and testing.

   * Within the past few months, for example, Pakistan and Iran tested
     their versions of the 1,300-km range North Korean No Dong missile.

   * An ICBM threat from North Korea is looming. The multi-stage missile
     P'yongyang used in its failed attempt on August 31 to launch a
     satellite could be reconfigured to deliver small payloads to ICBM
     ranges, that is, in excess of 5,500 km, if the North overcame
certain
     technical problems.

   * As the North proceeds with development of its Taepo Dong 1 and 2
     missiles, we assume that it will follow past practice and try to
     market them or, at a minimum, that aspiring recipients will try to
     purchase them.

   * Meanwhile, nonmissile delivery of weapons of mass
     destruction�chemical, biological, and nuclear and radiological
     weapons�already represent a serious and immediate threat to US
     interests at home and abroad.

Returning to the scenarios of the future world I have posited, they by
and
large are the most probable ones as we see matters today. We are
realistic
enough to understand, however, that in our business the only certainty
is
that there are no certainties. The world may well be a far more benign
place than I have portrayed it. Economic growth may be more rapid, for
example, or terrorism could wane if--despite the odds--peace breaks out
in
the Mideast. Alternatively, however, we could be in for a rockier ride
than
I have projected. What if:

   * The international financial crisis deepens and spreads, engulfing
     virtually all regions and countries? This sounded sensationalist
when
     I introduced it in a speech four months ago. Not so today.

   * Russia takes a turn toward authoritarianism domestically and acts
like
     a regional bully or, alternatively, drifts into anarchy and
fragments?

   * China cannot peacefully resolve its differences with Taiwan?

   * North Korea in an act of desperation marches south? Or deploys or
     sells ICBMs?

   * A nuclear exchange occurs in South Asia?

   * Strife in Kosovo or elsewhere in the Balkans leads to a
humanitarian
     crisis of major dimensions and destabilizes the neighborhood?

   * Greece and Turkey come to blows over Cyprus?

   * An information warfare attack on the US grinds major sectors of the
     economy to a halt?

   * Iran or an Arab state, perhaps with the assistance of others, gets
the
     ''bomb?''

   * A failure of the Middle East peace process leads to another
     Palestinian intifada, and Jordan and Egypt are drawn into a
conflict
     with Israel.

   * Foreign terrorists foul our water supplies in a major metropolitan
     area or contaminate the air our military forces abroad breathe with
     toxic chemicals.

   * A government unfriendly to the United States, perhaps operating in
a
     hidden underground facility, makes a major technological
breakthrough
     that has at least the potential to do major damage to US security
     interests.

   * An epidemic breaks out in the Third World for which there is no
ready
     cure.

The list of such ''wildcards'' could go on and on. Fortunately, most of
these tragic scenarios will not unfold in the next decade or two. A safe
bet, however, is that one or more of them will.

To sum up, US intelligence has its work cut out for itself!

Let me stop here. I look forward to your questions and comments.

    ---------------------------------------------------------

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