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The end of the Cold War and the shock of 9/11 have
forced defence and security planners to consider the realities of a new
and radically different international security environment. We no longer
face the nuclear threat of theSoviet Union but, instead, new and more insidious
threats, such as international terrorism, now constitute a real danger to
our increasingly interlinked, interdependent society. Governments and
international organisations are urgently reviewing the significance of
this new situation. They recognise that it has created new security
architecture: new enemies, a new battlefield and, most importantly, new
combatants. Security is no longer simply the preserve of the military or
even the nation state. Now it directly involves a broad cross-section of
civil society.
At the
forefront of modern civil society, international business is one of the
most important elements of the new security architecture. Economic damage
is increasingly the main objective of international terrorists and the
inevitable consequence of other threats, such as organised crime. The
interdependent nature of the modern global economy, which in the past has
been the source of our productive strength, is now also a source of
vulnerability. So, business itself is a target but it is also a major part
of the solution to the frightening array of complex new security problems.
Modern
businesses realise that the new security environment has important
consequences for them. They know that, over the next decade, the pattern
of defence spending and procurement will have to change significantly to
reflect the new priorities. Expenditure on 'homeland security' and
'counter-terrorism and resilience' will assume a greater proportion of
overall budgets and traditional areas of defence spending will be
increasingly under threat. The
New Security Programme considers the implications of this rapidly changing
environment for governments, businesses and society. It provides a forum
for dialogue between the public and private sectors and offers a range of
analytical insight and information about the new security conditions. In
doing so, it aims to assist with the development of new security
solutions.
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