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Which New War To Fight?
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: Hysteria
Over Kim’s Nukes
In the colorful,
pithy Scottish language, there’s a delightful expression, "greet
an’ gurn." Which means to loudly moan and groan.
That’s what’s
happened this week across the United States as the fiscal Ides of
March grow close. On March 1, unless Congress and the White House
come to an agreement on cutting taxes and/or spending the dreaded
"Sequestration" takes effect.
According to
this plan promulgated by President Barack Obama, automatic federal
spending cuts over 10 years of $1.2 trillion will take effect,
with $85 billion hitting in 2013.
Listening to
all the special interests moan and groan, one would think it’s the
end of the world for poor America – a giant leap backwards into
the Stone Age. Everyone agrees the dangerous US budget deficit must
be cut – provided cuts come out of someone else’s hide.
Claims are
made that al-Qaida will attack Kansas City if military spending
is cut, or the Chinese will seize Hawaii. Consumer spending will
fall, warn critics, sending the US economy backwards – even though
the respected Congressional Budget Office estimates the total sequester
will only cause a small .6% drop in consumer spending.
America will
grind to a halt, claim doom-sayers.
Granted, $1.2
trillion is a lot of money, even by Washington’s standards. But
it’s not as catastrophic as the huge number suggests. The Federal
Budget is $3.6 trillion and GDP $16 trillion annually. The $85 billion
in cuts mandated for 2013 are not a big percentage of the huge US
economy. The Pentagon’s total combined budget alone is around $1
trillion annually.
Most Americans,
grown deeply cynical by the cowardice and doubletalk of their politicians,
expect a last-minute deal between the president and Congress to
kick down the road really painful spending cuts. The axe won’t fall
until they are long gone from office.
The loudest
cries of anguish are coming from Washington and its suburbs where
the so-called "Beltway Bandits" – the colonies of private
contractors and intelligence agencies, and America’s military-industrial
complex that feed off government. There may actually be some real
cuts in America’s military spending, which accounts for almost 50%
of world military spending.
Horror-stricken
military contractors are waiting to see where the axe will fall:
the impossibly expensive F-35 fighter, new navy carriers and surface
ships, ground forces, anti-missile systems – the list is endless.
Military cuts
raises a key strategic question: for what new war should the Pentagon
prepare? The old Cold War plan of the US being able to fight 2.5
wars simultaneously, is gone for good. The choice facing the Pentagon
is: to plan and equip for more colonial-style energy wars in the
Muslim world, or to get ready to confront China in the Pacific.
No two conflicts could be more different.
Before World
War I, the British Empire’s colonial armies were trained and armed
to put down "native" uprisings. They were very good at
this. But when Britain’s colonial troops had to face German regulars
in Flanders, they were slaughtered and nearly defeated.
The US faces
this same problem. Ground and air units configured to hunt guerillas
in Afghanistan and Iraq will be useless in a Pacific conflict. All
the tens of billions poured into anti-guerilla arms and equipment
will be useless. Confronting China will mean more $25 billion-apiece
aircraft carriers and surface battle groups, more drones and satellite
systems, more Marines and Pacific air bases.
So
the Pentagon and intelligence agencies, whose budgets doubled after
the 9/11 attacks, face a serious diet; and they must decide on which
war to plan for.
Having just
been defeated in the $2 trillion Iraq and Afghanistan wars, the
Pentagon may actually be relieved to go back to conventional warfare
against Chinese targets they can identify.
But if the
choice is China, the Pentagon will need 5-10 years to re-equip and
rearm its forces for the Pacific. And, of course, trillions in new
spending. Military competition with increasingly high-tech China
in its backyard will prove ruinously expensive. What’s more, American
forces have become too costly to use in war, as Iraq and Afghanistan
showed. The US has grown soft and flabby fighting small nations
with no air power: China will prove a very different story.
February
25, 2013
Eric
Margolis [send
him mail] is the author of War
at the Top of the World and the new book, American
Raj: Liberation or Domination?: Resolving the Conflict Between the
West and the Muslim World. See his
website.
Copyright
© 2013 Eric Margolis
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