Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Give It Back, Dick: A Modest Proposal Concerning Money, War and Politics
Indulge me for a moment, wouldya?
Let's mull over a few related facts and see where it takes us.
Fact #1: With the possible exception of George W. Bush, no one in the world is more responsible for launching the war in Iraq than is Dick Cheney.
Fact #2: Mr. Cheney still retains a substantial financial interest in Halliburton, the corporation he used to head as CEO.
Fact #3: Mr. Cheney knows that he still possesses that financial interest (this is not a blind trust arrangement).
Fact #4: Halliburton has received multi-tens-of-billion dollar contracts to provide services in the post-Iraq war occupation.
Fact #5: Halliburton received these contracts without having to competitively bid for them.
Fact #6: The Department of Defense received instructions from the Vice President's office to arrange these highly lucrative contracts, and to do so on these highly unusual terms.
Fact #7: Halliburton subsidiary KBR charged the government a record-breaking 55 percent overhead on its contracts.
Fact #8: KBR hid its schemes by marking the entirety of all information it gave to the government as "proprietary", taking advantage of a contract provision meant to protect companies from unfair competitor advantage, and instead used it to block oversight and investigation.
Fact #9: A (Republican) auditor who uncovered Halliburton fraud in Iraq had his position and office terminated by a clause slipped overnight into war funding legislation passed by the GOP Congress and signed by George Bush.
Fact #10: A Halliburton employee was fired for informing her managers that the company was fraudulently overcharging the American government in billing against its contracts.
Fact #11: Abundant evidence exists suggesting that Halliburton is guilty of myriad contracting crimes in Iraq.
Fact #12: In 2005 the GOP controlled Senate blocked the establishment of a special committee to investigate Iraq war contracting irregularities. Every single Republican senator except Lincoln Chafee and one other who missed the vote - 53 in all - voted against investigating these crimes, despite the party's endless claims of impassioned concern for both the taxpayers and the troops.
Fact #13: Halliburton, now headquartered in Dubai, continues to make tens of billions of dollars from the Iraq war.
Fact #14: Therefore, so does Dick Cheney, chief driving force behind the Iraq war.
You know, I'm not always crazy about the prospect of getting older and grayer, but there are also other days when I'm glad to have been around for a little while. This is one of them. Politics have been so ugly in America, and have so distorted reality, since the regressive right came to power twenty-five years ago, and especially since the Bush nightmare began, that I worry if someone younger than I could have the perspective provided by first-hand experience to recognize just how bad things are. I wonder if later generations understand that there was a time when politicians would never have allowed even the appearance produced by the above litany of facts to exist. And I wonder, as well, if they know that had any government figure ever dared do something so callously brazen as what Cheney has done here, he or she would have been politically lynched by an angry mob of voters. The Vice President making millions off a war he launched? You're joking, right? Not today. Not anymore.
(And if I'm right to wonder these things, then I must also wonder what happens if we're subjected to another four or eight years of Cheneyism, under Giuliani, Thompson or, gulp, Cheney himself. Will there, at some point before too long, be anyone left who remembers the better days of American democracy? Will there be anyone left who knows for sure, because they've actually lived it themselves, that an alternative to this nightmare isn't just some Pollyannish dream? If ever I think we're seeing the worst of this nightmare, that scenario chills me even deeper. As in Orwell, when the memory fades, so does the hope.)
The concept that wars have been fought, in part or in whole, to benefit those who are enriched by them is not a new one. Going back at least to the "merchants of death" thesis offered as an explanation of World War I and up through present concerns about oil motives, many have pointed to an apparent connection between war and profit (a connection which was considerably more overt in centuries prior to the era of modern democracy). Perhaps for that very reason, there came a time when scenarios such as that described in the list of facts outlined above would not have been permitted to occur because they would have seemed incredibly unseemly even in appearance, not to mention undermining of public support for the government's war policy at any given time.
But today, of course, nothing is any longer sacred. Having shredded the Constitution itself in so many ways, and having lied profusely to take the country to a disastrous war, very little remains unimaginable from the lot controlling American government, even that they might have gone to war for personal profit.
And maybe it's not true. You know, maybe it just happens to look bad, even though the underlying truth is all copacetic. I'm sure Tony Snow, the White House wizard of blizzard, would argue that, though only if he was asked twice. The first time he would go completely apoplectic, and say that he wasn't going to dignify a question in such poor taste with an answer.
Perhaps he's on to something there. After all, while hippies and liberals had better things to do in the Sixties than going to Vietnam, Dick Cheney was waist deep in the jungle, serving his country like a true patriot. Since then, this great American was twice legitimately elected Vice President of the United States. He has upheld his inaugural oath to "preserve, protect and defend the Constitution" at every turn. With a lesbian daughter of his own, he stood up in principle and made sure his party didn't attack gays for purposes of crass electoral gain. And he helped arrange for Valerie Plame to be liberated from the drudgery of a career as an undercover spy for the CIA that she no longer wanted.
All of which is true, except for the part that isn't. Which turns out to be every bit of it. Let's not kid ourselves about the extent to which this guy represents everything that is evil, illegal, unconstitutional and ugly in a society attempting to sustain democracy, good governance and a mature and moral politics. Once we understand who we're dealing with here, it's less of a leap - but still a jaw-dropping one nonetheless - to arrive at this inescapable conclusion: Cheney is profiting handsomely from a war he created and the illicit contracts he arranged to be signed, and that he has since protected from being investigated.
'Obscene' is too nice a word for something that ugly. 'Harrowing', 'nauseating' or 'hideous' don't do it justice. Thinking of the dead and the maimed and the shattered strewn across Mesopotamia, my thesaurus is groaning in sympathetic heartbreak at something so literally inhuman that mere words can no longer adequately symbolize the concepts. What kind of monster impersonating a human being can cause this much destruction to occur and walk away from it with a personal profit?
Nowadays, regressives and progressives can find little upon which to agree, including even stipulating which basic descriptive facts accurately describe our condition - let alone preferred national policies. But couldn't we all simply concur that making money from other people's death is completely beyond the pale? Can't we agree that no one should ever be in a position to profit from the decisions they make in government, especially those concerning war?
Maybe the fact that military conflict can be so profitable for people who tend to be very well connected to policy-makers has never in history actually had anything to do with a country going to war. Maybe. But, just in case, I have a modest proposal I'd like to make: How about if we collectively decide that never again will profits be made on an American war? Simple as that. How about if we decide that all weapons and military materiel shall be either government produced or provided on a break-even, non-profit basis?
"Ridiculous and absurd", I can hear my regressive friends squealing in high dudgeon. "We need the engine of profit to motivate private industry to develop our weapons systems and supply our armed forces, especially nowadays, when war is a high-tech affair".
To which I'd like to respond, "Really?"
Funny, they all seem so patriotic and driven by the national interest when you listen to their rhetoric. Surely they don't need the profit motive to do their very best to outfit our soldiers, do they? Surely they'd rather see that money go to the purchase of additional armor and more weapons to keep our military personnel safe, wouldn't they? Surely, with troops in the field making the supreme sacrifice every day, such rah-rah patriots of the weapons industry would agree that sacrificing their personal jet or their second yacht to pitch-in for the national defense is the least they can do, right?
I'm not arguing that defense industry workers should have to donate their time. They shouldn't, any more than should letter carriers. And I'm not arguing that all weapons and equipment should be made only by government-owned industries. If the private sector wants to accept contracts from the government to produce weaponry, that's fine and let's make sure everyone receives a fair (but only fair) salary for their contributions - as long as it happens without profits being made, hidden or overt. Indeed, I think it would be no less equitable to require a profitless defense industry of corporations than it is to have a draft (like the one Mr. Cheney got five deferments from) in order to fill the ranks of an army. Not that such patriots would object, of course - since they're not in it for the money - but why not require them to contribute to the national defense as a cost of being a chartered American corporation, just like the rest of us contribute via taxes or conscription?
And, ahem, we happen to be talking about a lot of contribution here. In 2006 alone, 'defense' industry firms did very nicely, thank you very much. (And they should thank you, of course, since you paid for it.) Pentagon spending has never been higher, well over $600 billion, including spending for Iraq and Afghanistan, and not even counting DOE nukes and the VA. The United States now literally spends more on its military than the entire rest of the world combined. Just the last year alone has been quite lovely for those in the armaments business. Lockheed Martin, America's largest military contractor, began 2006 with its stock trading at around $62 per share. It ended the year at about $92 a share. Boeing, in the number two position, went from about $66 per share to nearly $89, Raytheon from $39 to more than $53, and General Dynamics from the high $50s to almost $74 during the same period. Oh, and Halliburton? It's stock was trading at around ten or twelve bucks a share when the war was launched in 2003. Since then, it has climbed up to $40 per share, as the company has raked in more than $20 billion in Iraq. Wow, those are some pretty heady numbers. I wouldn't mind getting my own little piece of that! What's that you say? People have to die to drive up those stocks values? Shoot, that takes the fun entirely out of it. Couldn't I just pretend it's all to defend our country against bad foreign people?
Right now, the burdens for conducting the war in Iraq fall upon a sadly narrow segment of the American population. Nobody's getting drafted. Nobody has to give up shopping or Happy Meals or anything. Nobody's even paying extra in taxes. In fact, right in the middle of a war (actually two), Americans have been handed what they think is a tax cut! (Wait till they have to pony up, with interest, their share plus the share of the wealthy who got most of the cut, all of which was borrowed and must be repaid. But that's another story.) It's a completely free ride except for the few hundred thousand troops stuck with Iraq duty, plus their loved ones, who are carrying the entire burden for a society of three hundred million people.
If we are to have any shred of pretense to fairness whatsoever, it strikes me that the very minimum we can do as a people is to take a definitive stand against any sort of profits being made from war, to the greatest extent we can. Perhaps, when fewer people stand to benefit from organized violence, this will mean less war. But even if it does not, even if the merchants of death theory is incorrect, isn't this the most basic statement of morality that we as a society can make? If we ultimately conclude that wars must be fought, can we not stand for the principle that the burden shall be shared to the extent possible, and that - also to the extent possible - nobody should benefit?
Indeed, right here, right now, perhaps our good friends at Lockheed, Raytheon, General Dynamics, Boeing and Halliburton would like to make a bold gesture. Perhaps our seemingly so patriotic Vice President and all the strato-burghers in his neighborhood would join them in demonstrating their true commitment to the nation and the soldiers fighting on their behalf by donating every cent in profits made from the Iraq war to our underpaid military personnel, and to the families of those troops consumed by the military adventure Mr. Cheney's ordered.
If we cannot do anything else as a people, can we not agree that no person, no company, no vice president, should ever be making profits while these poorly-paid and poorly-equipped soldiers are rotting away in the middle of the 130-degree civil war shooting gallery that is today's Iraq?
How unbelievably sick is that?
David Michael Green is a professor of political science at Hofstra University in New York. He is delighted to receive readers' reactions to his articles (mailto:dmg@regressiveantidote.net), but regrets that time constraints do not always allow him to respond. More of his work can be found at his website, www.regressiveantidote.net.

21 Comments so far
Show AllWhen Bush was elected the first time, it was a no-brainer that stocks like Lockheed, Raytheon, General Dynamics, and Boeing would be profitable investments, but of course those profits would be tainted with blood. I tried to argue with friends who were investors not to take that path, but to no avail. Isn't there a passage in the Bible to the effect that: "What benefits a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul"? Even as an agnostic I can appreciate that as I substitute conscience or sense of self for soul.
Isn't making money from killing/death just a step up/down from getting rich from disease/sick people. Just good business--a sure bet --can't lose. Hopefully this will be the first and last G...d.......ned MBA president and whatever you call his cohort.
Scum of the Earth; is the only vision of Cheney and both of his supporters that ever comes to mind. I know of no one more evil and disgusting as this thing.
This article is so right on, I think everyone should read it.
This could be a test to see if you understand the situation that we are in.
If you are outraged by this series of events and the "fix is in" mentality that created them, then you understand well.
without a briefcase full of bullets how can US business compete in the world??
Here, here! Cheney is a criminal, as bad, as bad, as bad as they come. But Cheney is part of an Alliance that is far bigger than himself. We must prosecute, punish, and take whatever action against Cheney is necessary and appropriate to serve justice, but our democracy still remains in danger of the larger Alliance. Check out my article, "The New Feudalism of the Republican Alliance," at http://hankedson.squarespace.com
Good writing. Good rundown on the situation. Thank you. Please keep writing and putting it out there. That's the only way this is going to change. I've been in alternative journalism for 35 years. I'm disabled now and can't work much (environmental illness - pesticides got me) but I try to put some positive ideas out there from time to time on my blog http://goodwordswan.wildflowerstew.org and pass on articles like this one. I demonstrated against Brown&Root - a subsidiary of Halliburton (KBR) 30 years ago when they were building the South Texas Nuclear Power Plant - that fiasco of over-runs and incompetence. These people have been raping and pillaging for a long time. We did bring the building of nuclear power plants to a stand-still in this country. We got rid of Nixon and we can get rid of these clowns too. We're not dead yet . . . .
Yes it is time to put the boots to these war profiteers,,,,security is from good police work not massive robbery of the treasury, In the Gospels, John the Baptist, tells the Roman Centurian, "Not to Extort the people.." seems as though that is the threat, better give up your right and all your treasury to pay us to extort you...!!!
kivals,
The verse you're thinking of is Mark 8:36, straight out of Jesus' mouth. Jesus would have a lot of other choice words for BushCheney et al, too, like "What you have failed to do for the least of these, you have failed to do for me... depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire... " (Matthew 25:41-45)
All the billionaires who have profited so nicely from the Bush presidency should have to pay for the harm they have caused. The rebuilding of the 35W bridge, as well as compensation to the families of the victims, should come straight out of Carl Pohlad's pocket, who managed to get the state of Minnesota to build him a new ballpark at the same time the Gov. Pawlenty was vetoing new funds for highway repair.
The French Revolution is starting to look more appealing every day.
How come the only politician who says things like David Michael Green, that should be apparent to anyone with an ounce of sense, is that guy from Cleveland, Dennis Somebody?
In response to good wordswan. I really hope waht you say is true, but all I see is the greed pigs getting stronger and stronger, and everybody else getting shunted off farther to the side.
The only positive thing to come out of this administration is that-
after they are out of office the both of them will never be free to walk this planet as other x leaders do. Their 1 appointed body guard will not be enough, even 8, 10, 15, 25 will not protect them from their hard earned enemies.
They have essentially given themselves a life sentence to their prospective corners. Maybe this is why Shrub wants to put buildings on the moon? It would be the only safe place for him and the heartless bird hunter. Maybe.
Why ask a criminal when a trial is needed?
starislon, you're funny. Dennis from Cleveland will be on ABC's This Week on Sunday.
Nice idea you had, David Michael Ggreen, no war profits. But we don't get to live in a perfect world. At this point, not even in a decent one. I do see more movies about September 11 being a setup however. Wonder where that's going to go. I can see why they want to do away with net neutrality, too hard to hide the truth. Information really flies around the internet. And that UTube. Can destroy a political career in one videotaped macaca moment. I'm sure there are those who think there should be a law against it.
What we should push for is computers in every home and free internet access. Give every schoolchild who doesn't have one a computer. Then maybe we can have an informed citizenry. Obviously our MSM isn't up to the job. In the former Soviet Union, the schools provided skis and hockey skates for every schoolchild. If they could do that, we can do this.
Once fascism made alliances with corporations and financiers. A 'strong man' led group did the ruling while big business provided the backing. Now remove the strong man dictator and his group and what are you left with in the equation? Just the big business backers. Cheney believes in a corporate fascism. Direct corporate control (rule) as opposed to behind the scenes backers. Cheney cut out the middleman...the fascist ruling elite ...and would substitute direct corporatized - privatized government. Haliburton? Cheney's personal profit? Hey...no middleman! Direct corporate rule...well now you know what it would look like. Think back to cheney's still secret meetings with energy companies. What would that be called? Hmmmn? We need to think of a new name... historical fascism makes one think of jackboots and well...cheney would look silly in in storm trooper uniform. No! No jackboots, we need to call what cheney is doing something else beside the generalized term - fascism. Perhaps we should just say it like it really is. Privatised Fascism! That's it. Privatised Fascism.
We need a noun for all those people we use greedy as an adjuctive for. May I suggest Greeders? Anyone else have a suggestion?
Jesus said, "The love of money (greed) is the root of all evil." Don't we know it!
I don't think any of the reporting on this website is as relevant as what the professor just said. The vice president sent Americans to die so he can make a few dollars?? Isn't that treason? Damn right it is!
Can every journalist in America please stop what their doing and focus on this? Every other story thats reported on (warrantless wiretapping, threatening Iran, etc.) is a direct consequence of Cheney sending the country to war to make a quick buck. Everything stems from this. Why talk around the issue?
On balance, I don't think the country gives a rats ass about a few AG's being fired by the most cynical administration. Its expected of them. How is that news?!
The cause of the biggest mess the country faces is Cheneys $elf-intere$t in the continuation of war.
Can Commondreams ask every contributing jouranlist to write an article about
specifically Cheney and his blatant war profiteering? About how he sent Americans to fight and die knowing he would profit from it.
Lets have a Cheney Day and shine a spot light on our new Benedict Arnold.
Great article that skips one big problem: the media. Again, the very possibility for all of this evil is here described as if the 'facts' are out there and we have a 'public forum' where debate occurs so that truth might win out.
Unfortunately, the corporate media, the PROTECTORS, ENABLERS, AND PARTNERS of one evil Dick Cheney have a little box in nearly every single home in the USA. It's called a TV.
In short, we have a monster much, much larger than Dick Cheney. This is not about one person, its about an entire media-military-industrial complex that is UNACCOUNTABLE and operates with a machine-logic that has nothing to do with human ethics or rationality.
US citizens have little recourse and can gauge their failure to affect the situation by the results of the last election. In the end, the last trump card held by the general US population to stop the ruling elites from their warpath is the GENERAL STRIKE.
All true, but Cheney was just hired to do a job. There are many others in on the war crimes and diversion of public money. To get to the bottom of Iraq policy someone needs to accurately document the cash flow in Washington between public officials and Big Oil and the military corporate complex, including private war contractors. This accounting should not only cover campaign donations but also be an audit of any investments public officials hold that are linked to defense related industries or defense contractors as well as the oil industry. Benefits that result from associations prior to serving in office as well as following public office should also be tracked. This must include the White House, Congress and the Pentagon. We might be surprised at how many rats we find by following the paper trial. Every day they drag out the "War On Terror" more money is stolen from the public or in other words, a wealth transfer from the poor many to the rich few. We can no longer afford to "Support The Troops".
STIV WHITMAN & J CONRAD: Excellent points!
All to Relevant Quote:
How is the World Ruled & how do wars start?
Diplomats tell lies to journalists & then believe what they read.
(Karl Kraus, Austrian Press,1874-1936)
General Eisenhower's warnings concerning the dangers of the military industrial complex were preceded by Albert Einstein in 1932 when he cited munition makers as the main thrust for war machines. The need to scrutinize such adventures by the executive branch was cited by John Adams and other constitutional framers.
Unfortunately this war is an example of the neglect and/or ignorance of pertinent history, along with the profiteering motives. Such misguided disasters can occur only when a compliant & apathetic populace allows their legislators to tolerate these types of abuses from arrogant and unlearned administrations guided by special interests.
All to Relevant Quote:
How is the World Ruled & how do wars start?
Diplomats tell lies to journalists & then believe what they read.
(Karl Kraus, Austrian Press,1874-1936)
General Eisenhower's warnings concerning the dangers of the military industrial complex were preceded by Albert Einstein in 1932 when he cited munition makers as the main thrust for war machines. Warnings concerning the need to scrutinize such misadventures by the executive branch had earlier been made by John Adams and other constitutional framers.
Unfortunately this war is an example of the neglect and/or ignorance of pertinent history, along with the profiteering motives. Such misguided disasters can occur only when a compliant & apathetic populace allows their legislators to tolerate these types of abuses from arrogant and unlearned administrations guided by special interests.