Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Profound threat to Earth

- By Lance Clark ▶

Stop ignoring catastroph­ic effects of climate change

Mfather was a young high school teacher on Dec. 7, 1941, in Florida. Following Pearl Harbor, he joined the Army and made it his career, including in Army intelligen­ce assessing future security threats.

I once asked him what he thought, on the day of the Pearl Harbor attack, were our chances of winning the war. His answer was “not good.” He was confident in 1941 that America could build a massive military force, and that our role as the arsenal of democracy could prove decisive. But the key question was whether there was enough time left.

For people of my generation and those younger, World War II looks like a familiar movie about a football team that storms back from a terrible first half to win the big game. The problem is that since we already know that the story has a good ending, we have become dangerousl­y oblivious to the reality that we very nearly lost that war. And there’s an important lesson in that for us today as we face another profound threat to our world, that of climate change.

President Franklin Roosevelt had been trying desperatel­y to get recognitio­n of the tremendous scale of the threats to America, and of the need to join directly into the war against Adolf Hitler even as he tried to buy time to build up our forces facing a possible war with Japan. But isolationi­sts kept hindering such actions, claiming that the threats of Hitler or the Japanese were not clear enough, and denying the seriousnes­s of these threats to the U.S. By the time Pearl Harbor forced us into war, we were at a high risk of losing that war, and without some luck, we probably would have.

The most decisive piece of luck was Hitler’s underestim­ation of the Russians. Hitler was sure his surprise attack in June 1941 would defeat Russia before the snows came, and allow Germany to turn its full might to the western front. He misread Russia’s staying capacity. Estimates are that well more than 16 million Russians died, meaning more than 40 Russian deaths for every American one. More than two-thirds of the German military deaths in World War II were on the eastern front. By the time of the bold invasion of Allied forces at Normandy, we were facing a weakened enemy that still had more than half of its forces fighting the Russians. Indeed, if Russia had collapsed in 1941-42, the delayed U.S. entry into the war until after Pearl Harbor would probably have been too late to be decisive.

This lesson in the peril of failing to confront a grave threat — indeed, to try to deny it altogether — should resonate for us today. Most Americans recognize the reality of climate change. However, they don’t fully understand the truly catastroph­ic impacts it will have unless we make major changes quickly to curb greenhouse gases. There is increasing evidence that the rate of many types of climate change impacts, such as melting polar ices caps and rising sea waters, is accelerati­ng faster than predicted earlier. If we continue to wait for the catastroph­es to be fully upon us, we will likely have waited too long to be able to reverse many of the worst changes.

We need to join all the other countries of the world now, and to bring the full power of the world’s largest economy and its strongest technology developmen­t machine to bear on these threats. We need to rejoin the Paris Agreement, and to lead on the additional actions that are needed to win against climate change.

Those who denied the threats from Nazi Germany and imperial Japan came very close to losing our country and world as we know it. We cannot afford to let denial of science and of the overwhelmi­ng evidence of climate change destroy our world in the 21st century. We are running out of time.

Most Americans recognize the reality of climate change. However, they don’t fully understand the truly catastroph­ic impacts it will have unless we make major changes quickly to curb greenhouse gases.

Lance Clark, of Hague, is a former United Nations official and ambassador. He has worked in Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan, Rwanda, Iraq, Georgia ( former Soviet Union), Bosnia, Serbia, and other countries, including eight years in Islamic countries.

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