Bernie Sanders and Martin O’Malley have argued that climate change is a driver of conflict of all kinds, including the civil war in Syria, the rise of ISIS and the refugee crisis engulfing Europe. Now they’re being joined by Prince Charles, in an interview to air on Monday.
“Some of us were saying 20-something years ago that if we didn’t tackle these issues, you would see ever greater conflict over scarce resources and ever greater difficulties over drought, and the accumulating effect of climate change which means that people have to move,” said Charles, a former member of the Royal Navy and Air Force.
RELATED: Big Oil joins legal fight against little kids over climate change
Conservatives and Republican commentators have mocked this position—”absurd,” “embarrassing,” and “brazenly silly” are typical responses—but the link between climate change, political instability, war and terrorism is well known and widely accepted by the U.S. government, including the highest ranks of the US military.
The heir to the British throne made his remarks in an interview with Sky News which occurred before the November 13 terror attacks in Paris. The comments come a week before the prince is scheduled to deliver a keynote address in Paris, the site of a historic United Nations summit on climate change. But here in the U.S., Democratic presidential candidates O’Malley and Sanders have made similar claims.
Back in July, O’Malley told Bloomberg television: “One of the things that preceded the failure of the nation-state of Syria, the rise of ISIS, was the effect of climate change and the mega-drought that affected that region, wiped out farmers, drove people to cities, created a humanitarian crisis.”
And a day after the Paris attacks, Sanders, speaking at a Democratic debate in Iowa made much the same case: “Climate change is directly related to the growth of terrorism,” he argued.
A day later on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” Sanders doubled down: “When people migrate into cities and they don’t have jobs, there’s going to be a lot more instability, a lot more unemployment, and people will be subject to the types of propaganda that al-Qaida and ISIS are using right now.”
It’s not just political candidates. At a security-related conference in Alaska this summer, President Obama invoked “entire industries of people who can’t practice livelihoods, desperate refugees, political disruptions that could trigger conflicts around the world.”
Secretary of State John Kerry, has previously described climate change as “another weapon of mass destruction, perhaps even the world’s most fearsome weapon of mass destruction.” And at the Alaska conference, he went even further. predicting a wave of new climate refugees forced to abandon homes in search of food or water.








