The
End of 'Pax' Americana
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: Is
the Window Closing on Israel?
Observing the
correlation of forces in this city and the intensity of conviction
in the base of each party, the outcome of the ongoing fiscal fight
between Barack Obama and the Tea Party Republicans seems preordained.
Deadlock. There
will be no big jobs-for-taxes deal. The can will be kicked down
the road into the next administration.
A second truth
is emerging. When the cutting comes, as it shall, the Pentagon will
be first to ascend the scaffold.
Why so? Consider.
The Republican
House cannot agree to tax increases without risking retribution
from the base and repudiation by its presidential candidates. All
have pledged to oppose even a dollar in tax hikes for 10 dollars
in spending cuts.
For his part,
Obama has refused to lay out any significant cuts in the big Democratic
entitlement programs of Social Security and Medicare.
As for the
hundreds of billions in Great Society spending for Medicaid, food
stamps, Head Start, earned income tax credits, aid to education,
Pell grants and housing subsidies, neither Harry Reid's Senate nor
Obama, in trouble with his African-American base, will permit significant
cuts.
That leaves
two large items of a budget approaching $4 trillion: interest on
the debt, which must be paid, and national defense.
Pentagon chief
Leon Panetta can see the writing on the wall.
Defense is
already scheduled for $350 billion in cuts over the decade. If the
super-committee fails to come up with $1.2 trillion in specified
new cuts, an automatic slicer chops another $600 billion from defense.
House Armed
Services Committee Chair Buck McKeon has issued an analysis of what
that would mean: a U.S. Army and Marine Corps reduction of 150,000
troops, retirement of two carrier battle groups, loss of one-third
of Air Force fighter planes and a "hollow force" unable to meet
America's commitments.
Also on the
chopping block would be the Navy and Marine Corps versions of the
F-35 Joint Strike Fighter. If the super-committee trigger has to
be pulled, says Panetta, "we'd be shooting ourselves in the head."
That half defense-half
domestic formula for automatic budget cuts was programmed into the
slicer to force Republicans to put tax hikes on the table. They
will refuse. For tax hikes would do more damage to the party than
the slicing would the Pentagon.
Thus America
approaches her moment of truth.
Thanks to the
irresponsibility of both parties, of the Bush as well as Obama administrations,
we are facing unavoidable and painful choices.
We are going
to have to reduce the benefits and raise the age of eligibility
for Social Security and Medicare. Cut and cap Great Society programs.
Downsize the military, close bases and transfer to allies responsibility
for their own defense. Or we are going to have to raise taxes –
and not just on millionaires and billionaires, but Middle America.
And if our
leaders cannot impose these sacrifices, the markets will, as we
see in Europe, where the day of reckoning is at hand. Ours is next.
But if defense
cuts are unavoidable, where should they come? What should our future
defense posture be? Which principles should apply?
Clearly, the
first principle should be that the United States must retain a sufficiency,
indeed, a surplus of power to defend all of its vital interests
and vital allies, though the defense of those allies must be first
and foremost their own responsibility. They have to replace U.S.
troops as first responders.
During the
Cold War, America was committed to go to war on behalf of a dozen
NATO nations from Norway to Turkey. Eastern Europe under Moscow's
boot was not considered vital.
Thus we resisted
the Berlin Blockade, but peacefully. We did nothing to rescue the
Hungarian revolution in 1956, or the Prague Spring in 1968, or the
Polish Solidarity movement in 1981, when all three were crushed.
Now that the
Red Army has gone home, Eastern Europe is free, and the Soviet Union
no longer exists, what is the argument for maintaining U.S. Air
Force, Army and naval bases and thousands of U.S. troops in Europe?
Close the bases,
and bring the troops home.
The same with
South Korea and Japan. Now that Mao is dead and gone and China is
capitalist, Seoul and Tokyo trade more with Beijing than they do
with us.
South Korea
has 40 times the economy and twice the population of North Korea.
Japan's economy is almost as large as China's. Why cannot these
two powerful and prosperous nations provide the troops, planes,
ships and missiles to defend themselves? We can sell them whatever
they need.
Why
is their defense still our responsibility?
In the Persian
Gulf we have a strategic interest: oil. But the oil-rich nations
of the region have an even greater interest in selling their oil
than we do in buying it. For, without oil sales, the Gulf has little
the world needs or wants.
Let the world
look out for itself for a while. Time to start looking out for America
and Americans first. For if we don't, who will?
October
7, 2011
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate
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