Monopolizing
War? What America Knows How to Do Best
by
Tom Engelhardt
TomDispatch
Recently
by Tom Engelhardt: The
Best Laid Plans
It's pop-quiz
time when it comes to the American way of war: three questions,
torn from the latest news, just for you. Here's the first
of them, and good luck!
Two weeks
ago, 200 U.S. Marines began armed operations in,,,?:
a)
Afghanistan
b) Pakistan
c) Iran
d) Somalia
e) Yemen
f) Central
Africa
g) Northern Mali
h) The
Philippines
i) Guatemala
If you opted
for any answer, "a" through "h," you took a
reasonable shot at it. After all, there's an ongoing
American war in Afghanistan and somewhere in the southern part
of that country, 200 armed U.S. Marines could well have been involved
in an operation. In Pakistan, an undeclared, CIA-run air war
has long been underway, and in the past there have been armed
border crossings by U.S. special operations forces as well as
U.S. piloted cross-border
air strikes, but no Marines.
When it comes
to Iran, Washington's regional preparations for war are staggering.
The continual build-up of U.S. naval
power in the Persian Gulf, of land forces on bases
around that country, of air
power (and anti-missile
defenses) in the region should leave any observer breathless.
There are U.S. special operations forces near
the Iranian border and CIA drones
regularly over that country. In conjunction with the Israelis,
Washington has launched a cyberwar
against Iran's nuclear program and computer systems. It has
also established fierce oil and banking sanctions,
and there seem to have been at least some U.S. cross-border
operations into Iran going back to at least 2007. In addition,
a recent front-page New York Times story on Obama administration
attempts to mollify Israel over its Iran policy included this ominous
line: "The administration is also considering... covert
activities that have been previously considered and rejected."
So 200 armed Marines in action in Iran not yet, but don't
get down on yourself, it was a good guess.
In Somalia,
according
to Wired magazine's Danger Room blog, there have been
far more U.S. drone flights and strikes against the Islamic extremist
al-Shabaab movement and al-Qaeda elements than anyone previously
knew. In addition, the U.S. has at least partially funded,
supported, equipped, advised, and promoted proxy wars there, involving
Ethiopian
troops back in 2007 and more recently Ugandan
and Burundi troops (as well as an invading Kenyan army).
In addition, CIA operatives and possibly other irregulars and hired
guns are well
established in Mogadishu, the capital.
In Yemen, as
in Somalia, the combination has been proxy war and strikes by drones
(as well as piloted planes), with some U.S. special forces advisors
on
the ground, and civilian
casualties (and anger at the U.S.) rising in the southern part
of the country but also, as in Somalia, no Marines. Central
Africa? Now, there's a thought. After all, at least
100 Green Berets were sent
in there this year as part of a campaign against Joseph Kony's
Ugandan-based Lord's Resistance Army. As for Northern Mali,
taken over by Islamic extremists (including an al-Qaeda-affiliated
group), it certainly presents a target for future U.S. intervention
and we still don't know what those three
U.S. Army commandos who skidded off a bridge to their deaths
in their Toyota Land Rover with three "Moroccan prostitutes"
were doing in a country with which the U.S. military had officially
cut its ties after a democratically elected government was overthrown.
But 200 Marines operating in war-torn areas of Africa? Not
yet. When it comes to the Philippines, again no Marines, even
though U.S.
special forces and drones
have been aiding the government in a low-level conflict with Islamic
militants in Mindanao.
As it happens,
the correct, if surprising, answer is "i." And if
you chose it, congratulations!
On August 29th,
the Associated Press reported
that a "team of 200 U.S. Marines began patrolling Guatemala's
western coast this week in an unprecedented operation to beat drug
traffickers in the Central America region, a U.S. military spokesman
said Wednesday." This could have been big news.
It's a sizeable enough intervention: 200 Marines sent into action
in a country where we last had a military presence in 1978.
If this wasn't the beginning of something bigger and wider, it would
be surprising, given that commando-style operatives from the U.S.
Drug Enforcement Administration have been firing weapons and killing
locals in a similar effort in Honduras, and that, along with
U.S.
drones, the CIA
is evidently moving ever
deeper into the drug war in Mexico.
In addition,
there's a history here. After all, in the early part of the
previous century, sending
in the Marines in Nicaragua, Haiti, the Dominican Repubic,
and elsewhere was the way Washington demonstrated its power
in its own "backyard." And yet other than a few
straightforward news reports on the Guatemalan intervention, there
has been no significant media discussion, no storm of criticism
or commentary, no mention at either political convention, and no
debate or discussion about the wisdom of such a step in this country.
Odds are that you didn't even notice that it had happened.
Think of it
another way: in the post-2001 era, along with two disastrous wars
on the Eurasian mainland, we've been regularly sending in the Marines
or special operations forces, as well as naval, air, and robotic
power. Such acts are, by now, so ordinary that they are seldom
considered worthy of much discussion here, even though no other
country acts (or even has the capacity to act) this way. This
is simply what Washington's National Security Complex does for a
living.
At the moment,
it seems, a historical circle is being closed with the Marines once
again heading back into Latin America as the "drug war"
Washington proclaimed years ago becomes an actual drug war.
It's a demonstration that, these days, when Washington sees a problem
anywhere on the planet, its version of a "foreign policy"
is most likely to call on the U.S. military. Force is increasingly
not our option of last resort, but our first choice.
Now, consider
question two in our little snap quiz of recent war news:
In 2011,
what percentage of the global arms market did the U.S. control?
(Keep in mind
that, as everyone knows, the world is an arms bazaar filled with
haggling merchants. Though the Cold War and the superpower
arms rivalry is long over, there are obviously plenty of countries
eager to peddle their weaponry, no matter what conflicts may be
stoked as a result.)
a)
37% ($12.1 billion), followed closely by Russia
($10.7 billion), France, China, and the United Kingdom.
b) 52.7%
($21.3 billion), followed by Russia at 19.3% ($12.8 billion),
France, Britain, China, Germany, and Italy.
c) 68%
($37.8 billion), followed by Italy at 9% ($3.7 billion) and Russia
at 8% ($3.5 billion).
d) 78%
($66.3 billion), followed by Russia at 5.6% ($4.8 billion).
Naturally,
you naturally eliminated "d" first. Who wouldn't?
After all, cornering close to 80% of the arms market would mean
that the global weapons bazaar had essentially been converted into
a monopoly operation. Of course, it's common knowledge that
the U.S. arms
giants, given a massive helping
hand in their marketing by the Pentagon, remain the collective
800-pound gorilla in any room. But 37%
of that market is nothing to sniff at. (At least, it wasn't
in 1990, the final days of the Cold War when the Russians were still
a major competitor worldwide.) As for 52.7%,
what national industry wouldn't bask in the glory of such a figure
a majority share of arms sold worldwide? (And, in fact,
that was an impressive percentage back in the dismal sales
year of 2010, when arms budgets worldwide were still feeling the
pain of the lingering global economic recession.) Okay, so
what about that hefty 68%?
It couldn't have been a more striking achievement for U.S. arms
makers back in 2008 in what was otherwise distinctly a lagging market.
The correct
answer for 2011, however, is the singularly unbelievable one: the
U.S. actually tripled its arms sales last year, hitting a record
high, and cornering almost 78% of the global arms trade. This
was reported
in late August
but, like those 200 Marines in Guatemala, never made onto front
pages or into the top TV news stories. And yet, if arms were
drugs (and it's possible that, in some sense, they are, and that
we humans can indeed get addicted to them), then the U.S. has become
something close enough to the world's sole dealer. That should
be front-page news, shouldn't it?
Okay, so here's
the third question in today's quiz:
From a
local base in which country did U.S. Global Hawk drones fly long-range
surveillance missions between late 2001 and at least 2006?
a)
The Seychelles Islands
b) Ethiopia
c) An
unnamed Middle Eastern country
d) Australia
Actually, the
drone base the U.S. has indeed operated in the Seychelles Islands
in the Indian Ocean was first
used only in 2009 and the drone base Washington has developed
in Ethiopia by upgrading a civilian airport only
became operational in 2011. As for that "unnamed
Middle Eastern country," perhaps Saudi
Arabia, the new airstrip being built there, assumedly for the
CIA's drones, may now be operational. Once again, the right answer
turns out to be the unlikely one. Recently, the Australian
media reported that the U.S. had flown early, secretive Global Hawk
missions out of a Royal Australian Base at Edinburg. These
were
detected by a "group of Adelaide aviation historians."
The Global Hawk, an enormous drone, can stay in the air a long time.
What those flights were surveilling back then is unknown, though
North Korea might be one guess. Whether they continued beyond
2006 is also unknown.
Unlike the
previous two stories, this one never made it into the U.S. media
and if it had, would have gone unnoticed anyway. After all,
who in Washington or among U.S. reporters and pundits would have
found it odd that, long before its recent, much-ballyhooed "pivot"
to Asia, the U.S. was flying some of its earliest drone missions
over vast areas of the Pacific? Who even finds it strange
that, in the years since 2001, the U.S. has been putting together
an ever more elaborate network of its own
drone bases on foreign soil, or that the U.S. has an estimated
1,000-1,200
military bases scattered across the planet, some the size of small
American towns (not to speak of scads
of bases in the United States)?
Like those
Marines in Guatemala, like the near-monopoly on the arms trade,
this sort of thing is hardly considered significant news in the
U.S., though in its size and scope it is surely historically unprecedented.
Nor does it seem strange to us that no other country on the planet
has more than a tiny number of bases outside its own territory:
the Russians have a scattered few in the former SSRs of the Soviet
Union and a single
old naval base in Syria that has been in
the news of late; the French still have some in Francophone
Africa; the British have a few leftovers from their own imperial
era, including the island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, which
has essentially been transformed into an American base; and the
Chinese may be in the process of setting
up a couple of modest bases as well. Add up every non-American
base on foreign soil, however, and the total is probably less than
2% of the American empire of bases.
Investing
in War
It would, by
the way, be a snap to construct a little quiz like this every couple
of weeks from U.S. military news that's reported but not attended
to here, and each quiz would make the same essential point: from
Washington's perspective, the world is primarily a landscape for
arming for, garrisoning for, training for, planning for, and making
war. War is what we invest our time, energy, and treasure
in on a scale that is, in its own way, remarkable, even if it seldom
registers in this country.
In a sense
(leaving aside the obvious inability
of the U.S. military to actually win wars), it may, at this point,
be what we do best. After all, whatever the results, it's
an accomplishment to send 200 Marines to Guatemala for a month of
drug interdiction work, to get those Global Hawks secretly to Australia
to monitor the Pacific, and to corner the market on things that
go boom in the night.
Think of it
this way: the United States is alone on the planet, not just in
its ability, but in its willingness to use military force in drug
wars, religious wars, political wars, conflicts of almost any sort,
constantly and on a global scale. No other group of powers
collectively even comes close. It also stands alone as a purveyor
of major weapons systems and so as a generator of war. It
is, in a sense, a massive machine for the promotion of war on a
global scale.
We have, in
other words, what increasingly looks like a monopoly on war.
There have, of course, been warrior societies in the past that committed
themselves to a mobilized life of war-making above all else.
What's unique about the United States is that it isn't a warrior
society. Quite the opposite.
Washington
may be mobilized for permanent war. Special operations forces
may be operating in up to 120
countries. Drone bases may be proliferating across the
planet. We may be building up forces in the Persian Gulf and
"pivoting" to Asia. Warrior
corporations and rent-a-gun mercenary outfits have mobilized
on the country's disparate battlefronts to profit from the increasingly
privatized twenty-first-century American version of war. The
American people, however, are demobilized and detached
from the wars, interventions, operations, and other military activities
done in their name. As a result, 200 Marines in Guatemala,
almost 78% of global weapons sales, drones flying surveillance from
Australia no one here notices; no one here cares.
War: it's what
we do the most and attend to the least. It's a nasty combination.
This article
originally appeared at TomDispatch.com.
To stay on top of important articles like these, sign up to receive
the latest
updates from TomDispatch.com.
September
15, 2012
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
co-founder
of the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), an alternative history of the mad Bush years. He is also
the author of The
American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s and The
United States of Fear. His latest book is Terminator
Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050 (with
Nick Turse).
Copyright
© 2012 Tom Engelhardt
The
Best of Tom Engelhardt
|