Speech and book reviews, expert interviews and news you can use on cyber-security, U.S. national security and global security matters from Lisa Bernard, President of Lisa Bernard's SecuritySpeak, LLC - a private consulting firm and speakers bureau.
I asked Dr. Paul Bracken, author of the tour de force book, The Second Nuclear Age: Strategy, Danger and New Power Politics, for a comment. He replied:
The pace of military technology has reached a level not seen since the cold war in the 1950s. Drones, cyber-war, targeted killings, anti-satellites weapons, hypersonic missiles are coming into the forces not just of the United States but of many countries.Add to this atomic weapons, and soon, hydrogen bombs for India, Pakistan, Israel, and North Korea.We are entering a new world of technology, yet the old political order of nation states remains essentially unchanged.The 2016 Nuclear Security Summit shows the growing tension of a political order that is out of phase with technology advances.Something has to give, and I don't think it's going to come from a slowdown in technology.
Scroll down for video of Dr. Bracken speaking to the North Korean missile program, STEM, emerging technologies and other key topics in security.
It was grey and cold outside when I arrived at Yale
University to sit in on Dr. Paul Bracken’s class, Strategy, Technology & War, but illuminating and warm in his classroom.There, eighty-five coeds and grad students from around the world (selected
from hundreds who seek registration) engaged in a back and forth about strategy
and the function of nuclear weapons from the Cold War into this “the second nuclear
age.” That is also the title of Dr.
Bracken’s tour de force book, The Second Nuclear Age:Strategy, Danger and the New Power Politics,
a clarion-call for policymakers, technologists, investors and industrialists about this precarious
era of nuclear proliferation. It was just a few days after the North Korean
missile launch when I arrived at the School of Management and I was percolating
with questions for Dr. Bracken which he graciously addressed in our interview
after class.I am happy to bring the highlights
to you in this space.
Lisa Bernard:Just
this weekend, North Korea successfully launched a long range missile – a provocation
deemed so serious that the United Nations Security Council convened an
emergency session.In what context can we understand this?
Lisa Bernard:A
recent article in the Wall Street Journal, The Other Dangers from That North
Korean Nuke Test, by Messrs. Gilinsky and Sokolski, describes a frightening development,
namely, the increasingly available advanced technologies and materials for hastened
and state-of-the-art nuclear weapons development. What
does this mean, practically speaking, for the proliferation of WMD - weapons of mass destruction?
Lisa
Bernard:We are coming upon the
twentieth anniversary of STEM and the tenth anniversary of President George W. Bush’s
American Competitiveness Initiative to bolster STEM.With a B.S. in Engineering, a Ph.D. in
Operations Research, as a Professor of Political Science and Business and a consultant
to various branches of the U.S. government, you are uniquely positioned to view
the impact of these efforts.Professor
Bracken, what do you see?
Lisa Bernard: Paul, you
speak and write so insightfully about the symbiotic relationship between Silicon Valley and the
Pentagon. Given the dynamics of
national security today, what do you think might we see come out of Silicon Valley in the
next chapter of their connection?
Lisa Bernard:The gravity of these matters is sobering - even overwhelming. Thank you for helping me help my audience gain some perspective on the news we
hear and the realities we face.Your
time andsharing of your expertise is very
much appreciated.
Would you like to host Paul Bracken and
continue this conversation at your organization?Call me at (203) 293-4741 or email LisaBernard@SecuritySpeak.net.I’d be happy to help you through the particulars and arrangements.