The Business of America Is War
by Stephen Lendman
The
People's Voice
Recently
by Stephen Lendman: America's
Student Loan Racket: Soaring Default Rates
Noted trends
analyst Gerald Celente said it, and it's true. In fact, America's
business is war, more war, multiple wars, permanent wars, pillaging
one nation after another for wealth, power, and dominance, while
homeland needs go begging.
America never
was and isn't now the "land of the free and home of the brave."
In fact, it's become a "Let 'em eat cake" society.
Whether or
not Marie Antoinette actually said it, France's 1789-99 revolution
was very real, delivering guillotine justice, not promised "Liberte,
Egalite, and Fraternite," a status now destroying what's left
of American freedom, heading for the trash bin of history if not
already there.
Earlier articles
discussed Washington's wars against Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Libya and Yemen, as well as numerous proxy ones in Africa, Asia,
Central and South America, and at home against Muslims, Latino immigrants,
and working households.
Combined, they
represent a shocking contempt for rule of law justice, democratic
values and humanity, notions now mere artifacts long ago abandoned
to advance America's imperium.
As previous
articles explained, out-of-control imperialism is heading America
for tyranny and ruin. In her 1951 book, "The Origins of Totalitarianism,"
Hannah Arendt said it's "never content to rule by external
means, namely, through the state and a machinery of violence; thanks
to its peculiar ideology and the role assigned to it in this apparatus
of coercion, totalitarianism has discovered a means of dominating
and terrorizing human beings from within."
She called
it dictatorship based on:
"(1) an
elaborate ideology;
(2) a single
mass party;
(3) terror;
(4) a technologically
conditioned monopoly of communication;
(5) a monopoly
of weapons; (and)
(6) a centrally
controlled economy."
Duplicitously
called a democracy, today's America nearly qualifies:
(1) Its ideology
is concentrated wealth and power.
(2) It's governed
by a two-party duopoly the money or property party, excluding
alternative choices.
(3) It's the
world's leading purveyor of state terrorism, waging global wars
against nations, groups or individuals, including targeted assassinations
of its own citizens.
(4) Major media
managed news gives it dominant (not monopoly) communication control,
but efforts to subvert Internet discourse and debate may undermine
its free and open content.
(5) Corporate-run
society makes it centrally controlled for bottom line priorities,
excluding other choices.
In her book,
"Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil,"
Arendt said crimes of state aren't committed by fanatics or sociopaths,
just "terrifyingly normal" (people)....neither perverted
or sadistic....who accepted the premises of their superiors and
their state" to continue current and/or longstanding policies.
In his book,
"On the Justice of Roosting Chickens," Ward Churchill
agreed, explaining what he called the "technocrats of empire,"
functioning as "little Eichmanns," banally serving imperial
interests, no matter how lawless or evil. They could say "no,"
of course, but go along to get along, including at the highest levels.
For them, it's to share spoils, no matter the harm or human misery
globally.
Churchill's
many books and writings discussed 500 genocidal years against America's
indigenous peoples, as well as its global imperial apparatus. Touching
the right nerves persuasively, the University of Colorado disgracefully
fired him in summer 2007, a pattern repeated elsewhere against other
activist professors, notably targeting Israeli critics like Norman
Finkelstein, Joel Kovel, Denis Rancourt, and Sami Al-Arian among
others.
Al-Arian was
also lawlessly arrested, tried, acquitted, imprisoned, brutalized,
then freed, but remains under house arrest awaiting dismissal of
spurious charges against him.
Imperial
America's War Machine
The empire
never sleeps or tolerates anti-war activism, threatening its quest
for unchallengeable "full spectrum dominance" over all
land, surface and sub-surface sea, air, space, electromagnetic spectrum
and information systems with enough overwhelming power to fight
and win global wars against any adversary, including with nuclear
weapons preemptively.
September 11,
2001 served as pretext to consolidate power, destroy civil liberties
and human rights, and wage permanent wars against invented enemies
for global dominance over world markets, resources, and cheap labor notably at home and throughout
Eurasia, Europe,
the Middle East, North Africa and Asia at the expense of democratic
freedoms and social justice.
In its 2006
Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), the Pentagon called it the "long
war." Dick Cheney said wars won't end in our lifetime, and
former CIA Director James Woolsey said America "is engaged
in World War IV, and it could continue for years....This fourth
world war, I think, will last considerably longer than either World
Wars I or II did for us."
In his 1990
address to a joint session of Congress, GHW Bush called it a "New
World Order," preparing the public for Operation Desert Storm
and years of war and occupation of Iraq, perhaps knowing Serbia/Kosovo,
Afghanistan, and other targeted states would follow.
Obama is America's
latest warrior president, succeeding numerous past ones, including
Washington, Madison, Jackson, Lincoln, T. Roosevelt, Wilson, F.
Roosevelt, Truman, Johnson, Nixon, Reagan, GHW Bush, Clinton, and
GW Bush preceding him.
Today's stakes,
however are far greater and riskier because of Pentagon grand plans,
including militarizing space as a platform for future wars. A previous
article explained, accessed
through this link.
It discussed
plans to position nuclear, other state-of-the-art weapons, and delivery
systems to wage multiple wars from space anywhere on short notice.
Under Obama, the policy remains in place. His May 2010 National
Security Strategy:
"reserve(s)
the right to act unilaterally if necessary to defend our nation
and our interests." In other words, to wage preemptive wars,
using first-strike nuclear and other destructive weapons "to
keep the American people safe (and advance the nation's) values
and ideals," pursuing unchallengeable global/space dominance,
ruling by intimidation and war, making the world safe for capital.
During the
Cold War, MAD (mutually assured destruction) held both sides at
bay. Today's strategy includes "more flexible options (for)
a wider range of contingencies (with weapons) to optimize performance."
It means destroy an adversary's capabilities preemptively, then
target others to eliminate all challenges to US dominance.
With America
on a nuclear hair-trigger, it reinvented MAD in new form, threatening
potential global nuclear winter, defined as "a long period
of darkness and extreme cold that scientists predict would follow
a full-scale nuclear war, a layer of dust and smoke in the atmosphere
cover(ing) the earth and block(ing) the rays of the sun, (causing)
most living organisms (to) perish."
Anti-nuclear
expert Helen Caldicott says "one single failure of nuclear
deterrence could end human history (quickly). Once initiated, it
would take one hour to trigger a swift, sudden end to life on this
planet." Only nuclear disarmament and abolition of nuclear
weapons can stop it, what's never discussed or considered.
On January
17, 1961, Dwight Eisenhower coined the phrase "military industrial
complex" in his farewell address, saying:
"....we
must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military industrial complex. The potential
for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist."
As he prepared
to leave office, he could hardly imagine the difference 50 years
would make, transforming fortress America into a colossus, waging
permanent global wars, spending unconscionable amounts on militarism
and threatening planetary survival in the process.
On April 17,
2010, Independent Institute analyst Robert Higgs said annual "defense-related
spending greatly exceeds the amounts budgeted by the Department
of Defense," presenting FY 2009 data, the most recent figures
available.
The official
$636.5 billion spent way understated a growing annual total even
Higgs can't fully identify, given enormous black budgets and hidden
add-ons, likely totaling hundreds of billions of dollars. What's
known for FY 2009, however, in billions of dollars includes the
following:
- Department
of Defense: $636.5
- Department
of Energy (nuclear weapons and environmental cleanup): $16.7
- Department
of State: $36.3
- Department
of Veterans Affairs: $95.5
- Department
of Homeland Security: $51.7
- Department
of the Treasury (for Military Retirement Fund): $54.9
- Half of
NASA's budget: $9.6
- Net interest
attributable to past-debt-financed defense outlays: $126.3
Total: $1,027.5
trillion
Moreover, the
National Priorities Project's analysis of FY 2010 discretionary
spending showed 62% spent for military-related purposes, including
4% for veterans' benefits.
For FY 2012,
the House approved $690.1 billion, an 8.4% increase (though below
the $725 FY 2011 budget, a temporary drop, likely compensated for
with add-ons). The Senate will approve a similar amount. If the
entire $1,027.5 trillion increases by the same amount, it raises
known FY 2012 defense-related spending to $1,113.8 trillion.
In fact, with
supplemental and hidden add-ons, as well as Pentagon, intelligence,
and other unknown amounts, the grand total likely exceeds $1.5 trillion,
a figure rising most years while popular needs go begging.
Higgs also
cites the unreliability of official numbers. He believes it's more
accurate to take the Pentagon's basic budget and double it because
as much as 40% of it is black or hidden. Moreover, as Pentagon power
grows, more spending accrues to congressional districts. As a result,
Congress willingly goes along as jobs are allegedly created. In
addition, generous campaign contributions follow bribes to keep
funding the war machine.
Congressional
Affirmation of Permanent War
The current
House bill, HR 1540 includes a worrisome/duplicitous Sec. 1034:
Affirmation of Armed Conflict with Al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and Associated
Forces, affirming:
"(1) the
United States is engaged in an armed conflict with al-Qaeda, the
Taliban, and associated forces and that those entities continue
to pose a threat to the United States and its citizens, both domestically
and abroad;
(2) the President
has the authority to use all necessary and appropriate force during
the current armed conflict with al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and associated
forces pursuant to the Authorization for Use of Military Force (Public
Law 107-40);
(3) the current
armed conflict includes nations, organization(s), and persons, who
(A) are part
of, or are substantially supporting al-Qaeda, the Taliban, or associated
forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States
or its coalition partners; or
(B) have engaged
in hostilities or have engaged in hostilities or have directly supported
hostilities in aid of a nation, organization, or person described
in subparagraph (A); and
(4) the President's
authority pursuant to the Authorization for Use of Military Force....includes
the authority to detain belligerents, including persons described
in paragraph (3), until the termination of hostilities."
In September
2001, Congress approved the Authorization for Use of Military Force
(AUMF) for "the use of United States Armed Forces against those
responsible for the recent attacks launched against the United States."
Still in force today, it began the "war on terror," giving
George Bush carte blanche authority to wage global wars in violation
of international and constitutional laws. A 2002 AUMF against Iraq
followed.
The House (and
likely the Senate) FY 2012 Defense Authorization bill affirms that
authority, letting Obama as commander and chief, wage wars anywhere
at his discretion. He's taking full advantage, duplicitous congressional
posturing notwithstanding.
On June 24,
in fact, House Republicans and 70 Democrats rejected support for
Obama's Libya war, but defeated a measure to defund it. In other
words, they authorized war at the same time symbolically rejecting
it, exposing their gross hypocrisy.
America's
Permanent War Agenda
In inflation
adjusted dollars, annual defense spending more than doubled under
George Bush and keeps rising under Obama despite growing budget
cutting pressures, given a much greater national debt burden than
reported.
Officially
it's nearly $14.3 trillion (headed for an estimated $15.5 trillion
by September 30), exceeding 100% of GDP at that time. Omitted, however,
is another $7.6 trillion owed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and other
government agencies, besides future trillion dollar or more amounts
added annually.
It hardly matters,
given the military/industrial complex's power to demand what it
wants and get it. Today, in fact, it comprises:
- defense,
technology, energy, financial, private military contractor (PMCs),
and other corporate interests;
- Congress;
- America's
media;
- prominent
think tanks and other pressure groups;
- various
others benefitting from militarism; and
- the Pentagon
colossus, a frightening power unto itself, threatening humanity's
survival.
The Defense
Department's FY 2010 Base Structure Report shows how large it's
become, even with important information omitted:
DOD is the
world's largest landlord with over 539,000 facilities (buildings,
structures, and linear structures) located on nearly 5,000 sites,
covering more than 28 million acres and over two billion square
feet of space in America, its territories and overseas. In fact,
these numbers way understate much higher totals as many Pentagon
facilities are secret and/or unreported.
They include
over 1,000 overseas bases in 150 or more countries, as well as additional
secret ones shared with or leased from host countries. As of April
2009, Congressional Research Service data includes 1,402,000 total
active duty US military personnel worldwide, 73,000 National Guard,
and 208,000 Selected Reserves, for a 1,683,000 total.
Add to them
America's private military contractor (PMC) army, corporate mercenaries
profiting from US imperialism. They perform a wide range of functions
from combat to consulting to logistics, virtually anything once
done by the Pentagon. Moreover, America's intelligence agencies,
State Department, Homeland Security, and other branches also use
PMCs.
Overall, they're
unregulated, unaccountable, and often out-of-control, involved in
some of the most controversial aspects of war from over-billing
to ritual slaughter of unarmed civilians. Yet they're not prosecuted,
convicted or imprisoned, just rewarded with fat contracts costing
far more for services military personnel once performed. Moreover,
the more they're used, the greater they influence war making, sustaining
their bottom line priorities at the expense of a free society and
vital homeland needs.
America's
New Military Industrial Complex
On March 1,
2003 Business 2.0 magazine writers Ian Mount, Matthew Maier and
David Freedman headlined, "The New Military Industrial Complex"
for digital age war, describing the Pentagon's "revolution
in military affairs (RMA)," comprised of "faster, lighter,
smarter" cutting-edge technology warfare. Readying for it,
they're building an unchallengeable high-tech arsenal, more advanced
now than then.
The old one
remains and gets huge contracts for new and more traditional weapons.
The result is an influential "iron triangle" of Congress,
the Pentagon and defense industry. Besides major media support,
conservative think tanks also like:
- the Project
for a New American Century (PNAC); its "Rebuilding America's
Defenses" scheme promotes US global hegemony;
- the Center
for Security Policy (CSP) headed by super-hawk Frank Gaffney endorses
a policy of "Peace through Strength" and perpetual wars
for perpetual peace;
- the Committee
on the Present Danger (CPD) composed of hard right leaders and
members, "fighting terrorism and the ideologies that drive
it;"
- the National
Institute for Public Policy (NIPP), focusing on defense issues,
tied to the nuclear weapons industry; and
- the Center
for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), emphasizing national
security and "advancing (US) global interests;" specializing
in crisis management, it's connected to the highest levels in
government and the Pentagon.
The nation's
16 intelligence agencies, including CIA, NSA, DIA (Defense Intelligence
Agency), FBI, Army, Navy and Air Force Intelligence, DHS (Department
of Homeland Security), and Department of State comprise another
component destroying a free society. They comprise a multi-billion
dollar funded, largely off-the-books, clandestine anti-democratic
network. Interconnected with thousands of private contractors, they're
tied to world governments and their intelligence services.
Moreover, they
comprise a government/military/industrial/intelligence service/media/think
tank colossus, waging global wars, bankrupting the nation, wrecking
the remnants of a free society. Plagued by the same dynamic that
doomed past empires unwilling to change, they also pursue the misguided
notion that militarism sustains growth.
In fact, it
erodes it by sacrificing industrial America, shifting production
and other high-paying service operations abroad to focus on war
making. As a result, essential homeland needs go begging, including
healthcare, education, job creation, and the nation's infrastructure,
crumbling from years of neglect.
In his farewell
address, Eisenhower said:
"Every
gun that is made, every war ship launched, every rocket fired signifies,
in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed,
from those who are cold and not clothed."
In his November
2003 Harper's article titled, "The War Business,"
Chalmers Johnson said:
"(M)unitions
and war profiteering have (become) the most efficient means for
well-connected capitalists to engorge themselves at the public trough."
Even Wall Street profits hugely. "To call these companies 'private,'
though, is mere ideology. (Weapons and) munitions making in the
United States today (and related industries profiting from them
are) not really private enterprise. It is state socialism."
They also destroy
constitutional freedoms, what George Washington in 1796 warned about,
saying "overgrown military establishments (are) inauspicious
to liberty." Johnson called it America's future, now more the
present, saying, "When war becomes the most profitable course
of action, we can certainly expect more of it," sacrificing
a free society for private interests reaping short-term gains.
In his book
titled, "Washington Rules: America's Path to Permanent War,"
Andrew Bacevich discussed America's "trinity," its global
military presence, power projection, and intervention, creating
a "permanent national security crisis....propell(ing) the United
States into a condition approximating perpetual war." However,
"(no) evidence exists none to suggest that US efforts advance
the cause of global peace," just the opposite. As a result,
"(o)ver the horizon, a shipwreck of epic proportions awaits."
It's coming
perhaps when least expected. Nations that live by the sword, die
by it. America is no exception, nor any other.
Reprinted
with permission from The
People's Voice.
July
11, 2011
Stephen
Lendman [send him
mail] lives in Chicago. Listen to cutting-edge discussions with
distinguished guests on the Progressive
Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at
10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs
are archived for easy listening. Visit
his blog.
Copyright
© 2011 The
People's Voice
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