“We
can only see a short distance ahead, but we can see plenty there that needs to
be done”.
Alan
Turing
Alphen, Netherlands, 24
February. Alan Turing is the father of the computer. He also established the
Turing Test. To pass the test a machine would need to fool a human that it was
in fact another human; the imitation game.
His idea of a ‘thinking machine’ was designed to free humans to think more
widely, more accurately, and above all more laterally to enable intelligent humans
to do what they do best; understand complexity through analysis, knowledge and
instinct. To Turing the purpose of ‘thinking machines’ was to crunch immense and
complex series of data to establish accurate patterns which humans could then
act upon.
It has been a funny old
week. A moment of profound strategic importance to the transatlantic relationship
took place and yet passed with barely more than a comment. A German Chancellor
effectively told an American President that in spite of being the leader of a
country full of citizens that had grown rich under the armed protection of the
citizens of another country and at great cost to the latter over many years,
she was in fact thinking about reneging on a formal NATO commitment that her
taxpayers would spend roughly half the amount the latter’s taxpayers pay for the
security and defence of her own country. Even though political reality is being
warped in Germany by September’s federal elections the rejection of President
Trump’s perfectly reasonable call for Germany and other Europeans to fully
commit to spend 2% GDP on defence represents a real threat to the future of
NATO and the transatlantic relationship.
My own week has been
spent drafting a major high-level report into the strategic adaptation of NATO.
As I was drafting this report I was struck by the growing
strategic-philosophical divide within the Alliance. This split brings me back
to Alan Turing’s genius. Turing’s aim was to transform complexity into clarity
upon which sound decisions of policy and strategy could then be made. Turing’s
work on “Computing Machinery and Intelligence” was an extension of his work on
the famous ‘Bombe’; the pioneering computer Turing built at Bletchley Park during
World War Two which helped to break the German “Shark” naval code. Turing, the
Bombe and the Bletchley code-breakers played a crucial role in helping the
Allies defeat the U-boats during the critical Battle of the Atlantic, a battle
which Churchill said was the only one that really frightened him.
My sense is that the West’s
leaders are today in a pretty similar position to Churchill and other Allied
leaders in the early years of World War Two; grasping around to properly
understand what is happening and in the absence of any real understanding
profoundly unsure about what if any action to take, or investments to make. The
situation is made worse by the huge number of think tanks and university
departments that have proliferated over recent years, particularly in Europe,
and which add little real strategic value. Too often universities refuse to
undertake hard analysis of events and processes for fear it offends
reality-bending political correctness. Too often think tanks in search of money
stop thinking and simply tell power what it wants to hear, or retreat into a parochial,
partisan agenda-pumping that offers leaders no chance to understand and thus little
rationale to act.
The result is what passes
for security and defence policy in Europe today; powerful institutions such as
states, the EU and NATO that taken together COULD be adapted to both understand
and the meet the risks, challenges and threats of the twenty-first century if
properly organised and co-ordinated. However, precisely because there is no
real understanding about the nature of threats and thus agreement what to do
about them, these same states and institutions look ever more out of sync with
the missions with which they are charged; the twenty-first century security and
defence, protection and projection of the West’s citizens. In the absence of
understanding the preservation of the institution becomes more important than
the efficient and/or effective application of those institutions (which are
means not ends) in pursuit of their respective missions.
What is needed is a new ‘Bombe’
that could help identify the patterns and linkages inherent to complex,
globalised insecurity; between emerging state threats, global-reach terrorism
and criminality, the emergence of mass disruptive and mass destructive
technologies, how to understand them, and above offer critical paths to predict,
adapt, stop, cope, and recover. In other words a new kind of transformative imitation
game is needed if the West, of which Europe will always be a part, is to be
secured. Or, to put it another way, a thinking policy and strategy ‘machine’
full of brilliant people charged with ‘computing’ the many threats faced by the
citizens of Atlanticism and freed to make any recommendation the evidence
suggests to leaders.
The road-block? The lack
of transformative thinking at the elite, establishment level. Unfortunately, only
the shock of disaster or war is likely to shake our leaders out of their politics
before strategy torpor. Worse, most establishment careers are not built by
speaking truth to power, and those of us who try to speak truth to power are by
definition outside the establishment and can thus be dismissed as cranks when
sound strategic analysis clashes with political expediency. It is precisely that
clash which explains the mess the all-powerful West is in, and why our citizens
feel far less secure and far more uncertain than they should be. It is
precisely this clash which explains why the short-term and reaction reigns
supreme over the long-term and the strategic.
Merkel’s side-stepping of
Trump’s demand to ‘show me the money’ over NATO is thus in fact about far
deeper issues than defence investment, burden-sharing, and the need for Europe
to get its collective or common act together over defence. What we need is a new
kind of security imitation game but what Chancellor Merkel revealed this week
is that all we are likely to get is more of the limitation game.
Until…
Julian Lindley-French
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