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Can Chuck Hagel Stop the Pentagon Juggernaut?
by
Eric Margolis
Recently
by Eric Margolis: Which
New War To Fight?
Secretary
of Defense is the second most important and the toughest job in
the US government after President.
Since the 9/11
attacks, US foreign policy has become highly militarized. The Pentagon
today dominates US relations with the rest of the world, not the
State Department or CIA.
The Pentagon’s
2013 total budget will be $800 billion when all programs, including
"black" projects, are included.
This mammoth
sum represents almost 50% of the world’s total military spending.
Add close US allies in Europe, the Mideast, and Asia, and the figure
is 80%.
Contrary to
what most Americans believe, the US Defense Department is not really
about defense of America’s shores, but about offensive operations
abroad. The US has some 1,000 bases and powerful air, naval and
land forces scattered across the globe enforcing the Pax Americana.
Americans are
relentlessly bombarded by media and Republicans about alleged dire
threats from abroad, conjuring still raw memories of 9/11, though
evidence is scanty or absent.
But something
remarkable has just occurred in Washington, a place that rarely
produces much good news.
President Barack
Obama, now in his last term and freed of many political constraints,
has challenged powerful vested special interests by naming former
US Republican Senator and decorated war veteran Chuck Hagel as Secretary
of Defense. Hagel, wounded twice in Vietnam, is the first former
enlisted man to head the Pentagon.
On taking office,
Hagel called on the US to resume being a "force for good"
in the world and avoid "dictating" to other nations. These
were breathtaking words after all the Republican claims of "American
exceptionalism" – code for world domination.
Washington
is notorious for grinding down men in office and thwarting their
hopes. The nation’s capitol and particularly Congress have been
deeply corrupted by special interest money.
Hagel’s nomination
caused a firestorm among Congressional Republicans who accused Hagel
of everything from being anti-Israel and pro-Iranian to accepting
money from North Korea.
The former
Nebraska senator was slandered, defamed and vilified by fellow Republicans.
It was as sickening a display of hypocrisy and pandering as this
veteran journalist (and army veteran) has seen.
Verbally warlike
senators and congressmen who had dodged national service during
the Vietnam War (we call them "chickenhawks") had the
nerve to accuse decorated veteran Hagel of being unpatriotic for
opposing the disastrous US war against Iraq and for failing to advocate
war against Iran.
Behind all
this, of course, was the hugely powerful pro-Israel lobby. In official
Washington, it is taboo to even say there is an Israel lobby, though
in reality everyone knows it dictates Mideast policy to Congress.
When accused
some years ago of being insufficiently pro-Israel, the tough-talking
Hagel shot back that he was a senator from the US, not Israel. This
flaming heresy forever branded Hagel an enemy to the pro-Israel
lobby and its ardent Republican supporters.
Obama’s appointment
of Chuck Hagel was also a stinging slap in the face to Israel’s
PM Benjamin Netanyahu, who had humiliated Obama and Vice President
Joe Biden on numerous occasions and even worked with Republicans
to defeat Obama in the last presidential elections.
Hagel must
now fend off his foes in Congress and the media while wrestling
with sharp cuts in military spending, layoffs of some of the 800,000
civilian Pentagon employees, and delays or cancellations of sacred
cow weapons programs like the absurdly expensive F-35 fighter, new
aircraft carriers, and anti-missile programs.
The US military-industrial
complex has cleverly put arms plants in most US states, assuring
that cuts in Pentagon spending will produce howls of national opposition
from senators and congressmen.
Still,
Secretary Hagel speaks for many moderate Americans, and even for
members of the Pentagon and CIA, who want to end America’s post-9/11
heavy-handed policies, stop the fear-mongering over so-called "terrorism,"
and use the mighty US armed forces to help people around the world.
That’s the
hope. But slowing down the Pentagon juggernaut will be very difficult.
Reports say US special forces are now entering Niger and planning
to stay on in Afghanistan. Anti-China fever is growing at a time
when the US must work out a way to peacefully manage China’s rising
power.
Secretary Hagel
will have his work cut out for him.
March
2, 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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