The top threat to American national security is American politics, former Obama deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes told an 17³Ō¹Ļ audience April 18 as part of the Collegeās Barack Obama Scholars Program Speakers Series.
āIf you donāt think thatās true, Iām here to tell you what happens when an election doesnāt go the right way,ā Rhodes said in response to a question from interlocutor Rob McKay ā86, former chairman of the Democracy Alliance.
āYou can have best designed plans, a bunch of scholars can design the way to fight climate change, but if the president of the United States doesnāt believe climate change exists, it doesnāt matter,ā said Rhodes, author of the bestselling White House memoir, The World As It Is.
Climate change is by far the greatest threat we face, he continued. āEverything we care about in the world, from migration, famine, the collapse of states, to the rise of terrorist groups, are all exacerbated by climate change. ⦠We should be treating climate change as the organizing principle of our national security policy.ā
The rise of authoritarianism is another major threat, he said. Outside of Russia and China, we have seen the alarming rise of authoritarianism in the west, with leaders such as Netanyahu in Israel, Erdogan in Turkey, Bolsonaro in Brazil, and Orban in Hungary. āThe reason this matters so much is authoritarian nationalism always leads to conflict,ā he said. āThere is not a time in history when you had a collection of nationalist leaders in competition with each other, that that didnāt lead to a war.ā
But even in the face of such challenges, never underestimate the power of effective storytelling to make a difference, said Rhodes, who abandoned his plans to be a writer and turned to politics after being an eyewitness to the destruction of the World Trade Center on 9/11.
Late in Obamaās second term, when staff cynicism was running high, the president āwould always say to me, think of that girl in Laos,ā Rhodes said. This was a reference to a Laotian student Rhodes met who had come to the United States to study waste management and had intended to stay until āshe heard Obama talk about community organizing and giving back to the community. Then she moved back to Laos, and she was setting up a network of villages along the Mekong River, figuring out ways to ways to have clean water and sanitation.
āAnd he said to me, āIf thatās the impact we had on that on that one girl, think about how many people there are like that.ā ⦠Itās a different view of politics than just the scorecard on the policy sheet. Which is, how do you tell a story that makes people feel as if they are part of something bigger than themselves?ā
Obama first felt part of something bigger as a student at Oxy, Rhodes said, a story he first heard in 2013 when the president was set to travel to South Africa to pay tribute to Nelson Mandela, who had just died.
āHe said, āIām going to start this speech at 17³Ō¹Ļ, and Iām going to describe how I was just this kid hanging out at my dorm, an academic underachiever, until I started to read up on Mandela and the African National Congress. It was the first time I really cared about something bigger than myself,āā Rhodes said.
āThen he went to this [anti-apartheid] rally on the steps where he had to pretend to be arrested, because he was playing the part of an ANC member, and he gave this speech and found he had a voice,ā Rhodes continued. āThe point is that Barack Obama would not have been president of the United States if he had not been inspired by Nelson Mandela and didnāt go to that rally at Oxy.ā