Major National Security Issue CNN Didn’t Raise During GOP Debate
Though the candidates would likely disparage the deal, the issue didn’t even come up during the debate that lasted more than two hours and largely focused on the candidates’ strategy to defeat ISIS and to block refugees and immigrants from entering the country.
Appalling failure of CNN not to ask
1) Is climate change a national security issue?
2) If not, why did ~200 nations sign treaty on it?— Clara Jeffery (@ClaraJeffery) December 16, 2015
Few of the Republican candidates have spoken out about the agreement, with most choosing to ignore it entirely. Rubio has spoken out against it, calling the whole idea of the global negotiations “ridiculous.”
“This kind of unilateral disarmament in our economy is reckless, and it is hurting the American Dream,” Rubio said in Las Vegas on Sunday.
In a report issued in July, the Department of Defense announced the finding that climate change is a national security risk. “The department must consider the effects of climate change — such as sea level rise, shifting climate zones and more frequent and intense severe weather events — and how these effects could impact national security,” the report said.
The GOP candidates do not agree with the DOD or the nearly 200 countries that decided the issue was important enough to reach an unprecedented international agreement on Saturday. Republican candidate Carly Fiorina has dismissed the idea, saying that President Obama and Hillary Clinton and “anyone else to say that climate change is our near-term most severe security threat” are “delusional.”
“It is ISIS, period, followed closely by Iran and perhaps Russia,” she added in the interview with Fox News last month.
Climate change is often left out of GOP debates, and when it does come up, the candidates often fumble their answers and fail to recognize the threat.