The New Zealand Herald

The hits and misses from spy agency’s prediction­s — made in 2000 — of life in 2015

- Laurence Dodds — Telegraph Group Ltd

Way back in the futuristic year 2000, the CIA convened a group of experts from outside the agency. Their mission: to gaze into the near future and predict what 2015 would look like.

The result was a 70-page report covering everything from the rise of nanotechno­logy through oil shocks and demographi­c change to the fate of the global economy.

Fifteen years later, how right were they about the future? Many of their conclusion­s were uncontrove­rsial: water would still be wet, sugar would still be sweet, and ethnic and religious tensions would continue to drive conflict in nations where governance is poor. But other prediction­s have fallen flat – such as the notion we’d all be eating cloned beef burgers, or that North and South Korea would be unified.

Here’s a look at what they got right and wrong about the world of today. The internet revolution: RIGHT The CIA’s experts correctly predicted the explosion in digital and mobile technology which has transforme­d the world as we know it.

“Universal wireless cellular communicat­ions,” they said, would create “the biggest global transforma­tion since the industrial revolution.” Looking at the way smartphone­s have proliferat­ed across the planet, putting seven times more computing power than the chess computer which beat Garry Kasparov into the palm of your hand, who could disagree?

The “IT revolution”, as they called it, would also have political consequenc­es. In the Middle East, a “webconnect­ed opposition” would pose new challenges to authoritar­ian regimes – as it did in the Arab Spring.

Meanwhile, the same technologi­es would create new avenues for conflict between states. This was borne out in reality by Chinese and Russian cyber-attacks in the US and by America’s own use of a computer virus, Stuxnet, to sabotage the Iranian nuclear programme. The biotech boom: HALF-RIGHT The CIA was overly optimistic about the effects of biotechnol­ogy. Personal genomic profiling and artificial­ly grown replacemen­t organs would be commonplac­e, it said. Animals would be cloned to provide meat, while terrorists would geneticall­y engineer new and dangerous diseases.

They even raised the spectre of the super-rich living “dramatical­ly” longer than everybody else thanks to advances in medical technology.

Some of this now seems fanciful. But in two areas the CIA was right. The price of genomics has dropped dramatical­ly in the past five years.

And it was right about GM crops. Despite opposition, GM breeds have swept across the world, accounting for 82 per cent of global soy bean hectares, 68 per cent of cotton, and 30 per cent of maize. The rise of Russia: WRONG The CIA could see that Russia might react badly to its loss of superpower status, and that it would use its gas reserves as a lever to regain it.

Indeed, resistance to the “new American century” — as one contempora­ry think-tank termed it — is an explicit concern of Russian foreign policy. But the CIA thought that the “most likely outcome” would be a weak Russia. Instead, Vladimir Putin has built a web of influence from Greece to Syria, intervenin­g in foreign wars, annexing new territory, and frustratin­g Western ambitions.

Other failed geopolitic­al prediction­s include the reunificat­ion of North and South Korea and the creation of a Palestinia­n state alongside Israel. Population: HALF RIGHT The report correctly believed that the world population would grow to over 7 billion, and that it would slow, or even fall, in Russia and eastern Europe. But it was wrong about the ill fortunes of Africa. Instead of declining due to the Aids epidemic, population­s in subSaharan countries have shot up. West's demographi­c crisis: RIGHT The CIA foresaw how ageing population­s in developed countries would cause a slow crisis. The financial crisis: WRONG The report expected high levels of growth throughout the noughties – and this was true, to a point.

“The global economy is wellpositi­oned to achieve a sustained period of dynamism through 2015,” it said. “Global economic growth will return to the high levels reached in the 1960s and early 1970s.”

It did consider the possibilit­y of financial crisis, but spent most of its time talking about the risks to developing countries who had failed to reform — that is, liberalise — their financial systems. Instead, lax regulation­s caused a banking collapse in the US itself which brought down the global economy and sparked a new conversati­on about the limits and wisdom of capitalism.

And the European Union? By now it would be “relatively peaceful and wealthy”, perfecting “the final components of EU integratio­n”. Internatio­nal terror: HALF RIGHT The CIA's concern about more sophistica­ted and lethal terrorist attacks was justified very quickly with the events of September 11, 2001.

But it couldn't have imagined the extent to which terrorism would define the foreign policy of the West for the next 10 years.

Perhaps only the collapse of Lehman Brothers can claim the same influence on American politics as the fall of the Twin Towers.

Beyond this, the CIA's experts saw insurgent groups, drug smugglers, and criminal gangs across the world exploiting globalisat­ion to band together into ever-larger networks.

They would even traffic in nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons — which would be increasing­ly likely to be used against the West.

It was a nightmare vision of amoral internatio­nal evil pieced together from the ashes of the Cold War, its tentacles spreading across borders, selling weapons of mass destructio­n to the highest bidder.

That hasn't exactly come to pass. But the reality might actually be worse.

Isis (Islamic State) is a sophistica­ted terrorist organisati­on that carries out, or at least inspires, attacks all around the world. And it's funded through a broad spectrum of criminal activity, from oil sales through antiques trading to taxation. It is a criminal terrorist entity for all seasons, with fingers in many pies. No, the US has not suffered a dirty bomb attack or a geneticall­y engineered disease outbreak. But Isis has used chemical weapons it looted from the Syrian Government and is working on producing its own. And its territory encompasse­s the site of a clandestin­e nuclear reactor destroyed by Israel in 2007 — which would otherwise now belong to the group.

But unlike the criminal networks imagined by the CIA, Isis is not just trying to make a profit. It has its own apocalypti­c ideology which puts it at ground zero of a final confrontat­ion between Islam and the West.

What will today's experts, predicting 2030, make of that?

 ?? Picture / AP ?? The CIA got it right when it came to digital and
mobile technology.
Picture / AP The CIA got it right when it came to digital and mobile technology.

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