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Bush's Plan to Spend Away the Terror
Planned US spending on the "global war on terror" is set to rise sharply in the coming year despite claims by President George Bush that al-Qaida is on the run in Iraq. A funding request sent to Congress this week seeks $196.4bn (£95.8bn) for counter-terrorism in 2007-8, $25bn up on this year. The Pentagon's separate budget request amounts to an additional $481.4bn.
Justifying these whopping increases, Mr Bush repeats a favourite mantra that "America is safer but not yet safe", implying that absolute safety is attainable at some point in the future. In a speech this week, Vice-President Dick Cheney was franker. He said the US was engaged in an ideological struggle amounting to war without end.
Details of the spending request reveal how the war is steadily expanding in terms of aims and geography. Iraq and Afghanistan apart, counter-terror funds are earmarked for US allies in Pakistan and Palestine, for de-nuclearising North Korea, and for fighting drug cartels in Mexico and Central America.
Further escalation came this year with the Pentagon's creation of Africa Command, tasked with tracking down militant Islamists from Somalia to the Maghreb and the Sahel. Mr Cheney says the threat is ubiquitous and pressing. "The extremists in the Middle East... are trying to seize power by force, keep power by intimidation, and build an empire of fear."
Critics say fear is also being used to keep American citizens and taxpayers in line. Unveiling the updated National Strategy for Homeland Security this month, the White House claimed, without producing new evidence, that al-Qaida was actively trying to infiltrate the US.
"Although we have discovered only a handful of individuals in the US with ties to al-Qaida senior leadership, the group likely will intensify its efforts to place operatives here in the homeland," the report said.
The assessment appeared at odds with statements by US commanders and Pentagon planners that the al-Qaida network has been "significantly degraded" in Iraq and elsewhere. But fearfulness is catching. Sir Ian Blair, the British Metropolitan police commissioner, warned Britons this month that the number and scale of terrorist conspiracies and conspirators was increasing, even though fewer cases were actually under investigation.
Experts in international security law such as Philip Bobbitt of Columbia Law School, New York, deny suggestions the global threat is being exaggerated and conflated for political and geo-strategic ends. Speaking in London, Professor Bobbitt said three overlapping, truly global wars on terror were being waged. One was the fight against "21st century networked terror"; the second was a war to prevent rogue regimes or terror groups obtaining weapons of mass destruction; the third was against genocide and ethnic cleansing, as in Darfur.
But other influential voices are increasingly questioning the purpose and the conduct of terrorism policy, suggesting it will not outlive the Bush era. Syndicated columnist William Pfaff wrote recently that fear generated by the 9/11 attacks had been externalised, with official and rightwing media connivance, "into paranoid fantasy of foreign enemies". Terrorism had become almost anything the Bush administration said it was. And in an interview with GuardianAmerica yesterday, Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton suggested Mr Bush's for-us-or-agin'-us approach was self-defeating.
"We've got to do a better job of clarifying what are the motivations of terrorists," Ms Clinton said. "I think one of our mistakes has been painting with such a broad brush, which has not been particularly helpful in understanding what it is we were up against."
Professor Sir Lawrence Freedman of King's College said Mr Bush had consistently failed to define what he meant by the "global war on terror". There were many forms of terrorist, including jihadis, Hamas, the IRA, and state terrorism of the kind practised by Stalin or Burma's generals, he said in a recent discussion.
US presidents were over-fond of declaring war on phenomena, such as drugs or poverty and now terror. "An enemy can surrender but phenomena cannot," Prof Freedman said. Mr Bush should spend more time "thinking about who we're fighting and why".
In a new book published in the US, Less Safe, Less Free: Why America is Losing the War on Terror, David Cole and Jules Lobel argue that Mr Bush's catch-all, bulldozer approach has increased worldwide hostility to the US and its citizens, dismayed minority communities at home, alienated America's friends and emboldened its enemies.
While the military had gained bumper budgets, the American nation had forfeited moral legitimacy, they say. "The resentment provoked by these measures is the greatest threat to our national security and the most likely source of the next attack." For that reason if no other, any Bush successor would have to change tack.
--Simon Tisdall
© 2007 The Guardian
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9 Comments so far
Show AllSUPPLY PUSH WAR
Among 60 to 80 nations considered to contain terrorists in 2002, Iraq was not one of them. Many experts immediately after 9-11 poured across the tv screen to emphasize that terrorism was not the phenomenon of a nation state and the same could not be attacked to stop or reduce terrorism, even the 60-80 nation states that contained them.
Over four years after he started it, the cheerleader at Yale is still correcting his biggest mistake of all with other people's money ... whoops, not enough troops ... that must have been it ... whoops, stop attacking the insurgents and embrace the political community instead to do it ... whoops, whoops, whoops ... ok, here's the next cheer from a "good man" who "works hard" ...
Bush is like the crazed mayor of Jackson Mississippi, Frank Melton, who straps illegal weapons to his body and roams around the town conducting illegal, random searches of houses, vehicles and individuals. Oblivious to any law except his own - except when caught in the headlights - he has access to endless funding to finance his PERSONAL fantasies of protecting the world from evil.
Yesterday I rode the bus which was filled with people from a local home for mentally handicapped persons. They are happy with a sunny outlook, loving and care for each other. I was a welcome rider with each and everyone offering me a seat. The thought crossed my mind: what would happen if these individuals were to be exchanged with the lunatics running the asylum in Washington. These simple people are not fooled by persons wanting to take advantage of them. They are pure in heart would not want to hurt anyone, let alone kill them. Humanitarian priorities are lacking from our government. It appears to be pretty much every man for himself and hang the rest of the world, including our own children. Something is wrong with this picture. I think I will just stay on the bus. It is saner there.
Cheney is right about one thing: We are in an ideological struggle in a war without end. But of course as a soldier on his side in that war he wants to misdirect and misinform the other side to confuse and weaken them.
Cheney's side in this war is the international corporate oligarchy and the other side is the rest of us. He wants to distract and confuse us so we will not be able to defend ourselves from the attacks by his side. Cheney is a vicious and competent warrior, and we should never sell him short. However, we can win if people on our side connect to as many others as they can and awaken them to the war and the dangers it poses for our future and the future of our children.
Unfortunately most of the US electorate won't get it until they are living under a bridge. At that point they will look up at the underside of the bridge they are living under and notice that it is collapsing. The funds that were once used to maintain that bridge were long ago diverted to the miltary industrial complex oligarchy who don't need bridges because they travel in their personal yachts, jets and helicopters.
Your premise needs revision. He's not planning to spend away the terror. He's planned the terror to spend away.
ezeflyer... that sums it up precisely!
Bu$hCo has planned the terror 'facade' and 'con job' to hide the real agenda..the greatest scam/heist in the History of America..
The wars, according to the CBO, will cost America about $2.4 trillion. Wouldn't it have been cheaper simply to buy Iraq-Nam and Afghanistan?
It seems there are those who see spending the country so far into debt that only corporations will be able to produce what people need as part of the privatization/deregulation strategy. Look at this article from common dreams.
http://www.commondreams.org/views05/1011-22.htm
Bush and Congress are waging class warfare against the American people and are engaged in war crimes against the devoloping world.
The "The War On Terror" is a method of fleecing the masses via public debt for private profit while attempting to expand the American corporate empire.
But the decline of the dollar and other signs of inflation indicate this system is collapsing.
Enjoy:
http://existentialistcowboy.blogspot.com/2007/08/war-on-iraq-threatens-us-economy-as.html
" The War In Iraq Threatens US Economy As Mass Murder Ceases To Be Profitable."
" Bone headed GOP "trickle down economics" and imperial oil theft abroad threatens an economic train wreck, indeed, democracy itself. A new study confirms that military spending is an economic albatross, a depressing drag on the economy, that will increase joblessness, deprive millions more of an education. Military spending and Pentagon waste soak up federal monies better spent on education, infrastructure, and job creation. Pentagon waste takes monies out of circulation and depresses the economy. Only a tiny part of the economy will benefit --the filthy rich already bought and paid for by Bush's unfair, inequitable tax cuts for what he called "his base". Wealth does not trickle down."
War , Inflation, Dollar Decline:
http://inflationdata.com/inflation/Articles/Inflation_War.asp
" During a war, however, things are produced but... they are not productive things but destructive. The money is spent to destroy things. Often this is combined with an increase in the money supply in order to pay for the destruction."
http://www.alternativeinsight.com/War_Cometh_Before_A_Fall.html
" The War on Terror is nothing other than a massive, albeit obviously transparent, smokescreen for the real war: the war for resources and the economic survival of the United States as a global power."
However:
" The Iraq war has exaggerated the problem (declining American economy). Instead of appropriations for programs that reduce deficits, increase exports and increase productivity, funds are wasted on military programs that yield wounded bodies and destroyed production."
http://dir.salon.com/story/opinion/feature/2004/04/20/war_inflation/
" Historically, war causes inflation. The Bush administration's myopic deficit spending will only make matters worse."
http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070625/miller
" If our military cannot secure oil by force, and if oil is destined to cost us more and more of a declining currency to buy what is available, then "brand USA" is in trouble. When Bush leaves office, this country will have to begin the difficult task of reversing some very bad trends in the military, fiscal, monetary and energy areas. The pollution of his legacy transcends mere politics."
http://globalpolicy.igc.org/socecon/crisis/tradedeficit/2007/0427dollardrop.htm
" The strength of the dollar is more than just a matter of bragging rights. Experts say the consequences of its long-term decline could have deep significance - for average Americans and for the country's position as an unrivaled global power. Over time, the forces behind its decline could further marginalize the United States on the world stage, lower its standard of living and tie its hands in responding to crucial security issues or financial crises."