15 Numbers That Add Up to an Age of Insecurity
Once upon a time, I studied the Chinese martial art of Tai Chi -- until, that is, I realized I would never locate my "chi." At that point, I threw in the towel and took up Western exercise. Still, the principle behind Tai Chi stayed with me -- that you could multiply the force of an act by giving way before the force of others; that a smaller person could use the strength of a bigger one against him.
Now, jump to September 11, 2001 and its aftermath -- and you know the Tai Chi version of history from there. Think of it as a grim cosmic joke -- that the 9/11 attacks, as apocalyptic as they looked, were anything but. The true disasters followed and the wounds were largely self-inflicted, as the most militarily powerful nation on the planet used its own force to disable itself.
Before that fateful day, the Bush administration had considered terrorism, Osama bin Laden, and al-Qaeda subjects for suckers and wusses. What they were intent on was pouring money into developing an elaborate boondoggle of a missile defense system against future nuclear attacks by rogue states. Those Cold War high frontiersmen (and women) couldn't get enough of the idea of missiling up. That, after all, was where the money and the fun seemed to be. Nuclear was where the big boys -- the nation states -- played. "Bin Laden determined to strike in U.S....," the CIA told the President that August. Yawn.
After 9/11, of course, George W. Bush and his top advisors almost instantly launched their crusade against Islam and then their various wars, all under the rubric of the Global War on Terror. (As Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld pungently put the matter that September, "We have a choice -- either to change the way we live, which is unacceptable, or to change the way that they live; and we chose the latter.") By then, they were already heading out to "drain the swamp" of evil doers, 60 countries worth of them, if necessary. Meanwhile, they moved quickly to fight the last battle at home, the one just over, by squandering vast sums on an American Maginot Line of security. The porous new Department of Homeland Security, the NSA, the FBI, and other acronymic agencies were to lock down, surveill, and listen in on America. All this to prevent "the next 9/11."
In the process, they would treat bin Laden's scattered al-Qaeda network as if it were the Nazi or Soviet war machine (even comically dubbing his followers "Islamofascists"). In the blinking of an eye, and in the rubble of two enormous buildings in downtown Manhattan, bin Laden and his cronies had morphed from nobodies into supermen, a veritable Legion of Doom. (There was a curious parallel to this transformation in World War II. Before Pearl Harbor, American experts had considered the Japanese -- as historian John Dower so vividly documented in his book War Without Mercy -- bucktoothed, near-sighted military incompetents whose war planes were barely capable of flight. On December 8, 1941, they suddenly became a race of invincible supermen without, in the American imagination, ever passing through a human incarnation.)
When, in October 2001, Congress passed the Patriot Act, and an Office of Homeland Security (which, in 2002, became a "department") was established, it was welcome to the era of homeland insecurity. From then on, every major building, landmark, amusement park, petting zoo, flea market, popcorn stand, and toll booth anywhere in the country would be touted as a potential target for terrorists and in need of protection. Every police department from Arkansas to Ohio would be in desperate need of anti-terror funding. And why not, when the terrorists loomed so monstrously large, were so apocalyptically capable, and wanted so very badly to destroy our way of life. No wonder that, in the 2006 National Asset Database, compiled by the Department of Homeland Security, the state of Indiana, "with 8,591 potential terrorist targets, had 50 percent more listed sites than New York (5,687) and more than twice as many as California (3,212), ranking the state the most target-rich place in the nation."
In the administration's imagination (and the American one), they were now capable of anything. From their camps in the backlands of Afghanistan (or was it the suburbs of Hamburg?), as well as in the murky global underworld of the arms black market, al-Qaeda's minions were toiling ferverishly to lay their hands on the most fiendish of plagues and pestilences -- smallpox, botulism, anthrax, you name it. They were preparing to fill suitcases with nuclear weapons for deposit in downtown Manhattan. They were gathering nuclear refuse for dirty bombs. Nothing was too mad or destructive for them. Every faint but strange odor -- the sweet smell of maple syrup floating across a city -- was a potential bio-attack. And everywhere, even in rural areas, politicians were strapping on their armor and preparing to run imminent-danger, anti-terror campaigns, while urging their constituents to run for cover. Meanwhile, that former Sodom of the New World, New York City, had somehow been transformed into an I-heart-NY T-shirt-and-cap combo.
So, thank you, Osama bin Laden for expediting the Department of Homeland Security, glutting an already bloated Pentagon with even more money, ensuring that all those "expeditionary forces" would sally forth to cause havoc and not find victory in two hopeless wars, enabling the establishment of a vast offshore prison network (and the torture techniques to go with it), and creating a whole new global "security" industry to "thwart terrorists" that was, by 2006, generating $60 billion a year in business and whose domestic wing was devoted to locking down America.
When the history of this era is finally written, based on the Tai Chi Principle, Osama bin Laden and his scattering of followers may be credited for goading the fundamentalist leaders of the United States into using the power in their grasp so -- not to put a fine point on it -- stupidly and profligately as to send the planet's "sole superpower" into decline. Above all, bin Laden and his crew of fanatics will have ensured one thing: that the real security problems of our age were ignored in Washington until far too late in favor of mad dreams and dark phantoms. In this lies a bleak but epic tale of folly worthy of a great American novelist (wherever she is).
In the meantime, consider the following little list -- 15 numbers that offer an indication of just what the Tai Chi Principle meant in action these last years; just where American energies did and did not flow; and, in the end, just how much less safe we are now than we were in January 2001, when George W. Bush entered the Oval Office:
536,000,000,000: the number of dollars the Pentagon is requesting for the 2009 military budget. This represents an increase of almost 70% over the Pentagon's 2001 budget of $316 billion -- and that's without factoring in "supplementary" requests to fund the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as the President's Global War on Terror. Add in those soaring sums and military spending has more than doubled in the Bush era. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, since 2001, funding for "defense and related programs... has jumped at an annual average rate of 8%... -- four times faster than the average rate of growth for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid (2%), and 27 times faster than the average rate for growth for domestic discretionary programs (0.3%)."
1,390,000: the number of subprime foreclosures over the next two years, as estimated by Credit Suisse analysts. They also predict that, by the end of 2012, 12.7% of all residential borrowers may be out of their homes as part of a housing crisis that caught the Bush administration totally off-guard.
1,000,000: the number of "missions" or "sorties" the U.S. Air Force proudly claims to have flown in the Global War on Terror since 9/11, more than one-third of them (about 353,000) in what it still likes to call Operation Iraqi Freedom. This is a good measure of where American energies (and oil purchases) have gone these last years.
509,000: the number of names found in 2007 on a "terrorist watch list" compiled by the FBI. No longer, in George Bush's America, is a 10 Most Wanted list adequate. According to ABC News, "U.S. lawmakers and their spouses have been detained because their names were on the watch list" and Saddam Hussein was on the list even when in U.S. custody. By February 2008, according to the American Civil Liberties Union, the names on the same FBI list had ballooned to 900,000.
300,000: the number of American troops who now suffer from major depression or post-traumatic stress, according to a recent RAND study. This represents almost one out of every five soldiers who served in Iraq or Afghanistan. Even more -- approximately 320,000 -- "report possible brain injuries from explosions or other head wounds." This, RAND reports, represents a barely dealt with "major health crisis." The depression and PTSD alone will, the study reported, "cost the nation as much as $6.2 billion in the two years following deployment."
51,000: the number of post-surge Iraqi prisoners held in American and Iraqi jails at the end of 2007. In that country, the U.S. now runs "perhaps the world's largest extrajudicial internment camp," Camp Bucca, whose holding capacity is, even now, being expanded from 20,000 to 30,000 prisoners. Then there's Camp Cropper, with at least 4,000 prisoners, including "hundreds of juveniles." Many of these prisoners were simply swept up in surge raids and have been held without charges or access to lawyers or courts ever since. Add in prisoners (in unknown numbers) in our sizeable network of prisons in Afghanistan, at Guantanamo, and in our various offshore and borrowed prisons; add in, as well, the widespread mistreatment of prisoners at American hands; and you have the machinery for the manufacture of vast numbers of angry potential enemies, some undoubtedly willing to commit almost any act of revenge. Though there is no way to tabulate the numbers, hundreds of thousands of prisoners have certainly cycled through the Bush administration's various prisons in these last seven years, many emerging embittered. (And don't forget their embittered families.) Think of all this as an enormous dystopian experiment in "social networking," the Facebook from Hell without the Internet.
5,700: the number of trailers in New Orleans -- issued by the Federal Emergency Management Agency as temporary housing after Hurricane Katrina -- still occupied by people who lost their homes in the storm almost three years ago. Such trailers have also been found to contain toxic levels of formaldehyde fumes. Katrina ("Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job") was but one of many security disasters for the Bush administration.
658: the number of suicide bombings worldwide last year, including 542 in Afghanistan and Iraq, "more than double the number in any of the past 25 years." Of all the suicide bombings in the past quarter century, more than 86% have occurred since 2001, according to U.S. government experts. At least one of those bombers -- who died in a recent coordinated wave of suicide bombings in the Iraqi city of Mosul -- was a Kuwaiti, Abdallah Salih al-Ajmi, who had spent years locked up in Guantanamo.
511: the number of applicants convicted of felony crimes, including burglary, grand larceny, and aggravated assault, who were accepted into the U.S. Army in 2007, more than double the 249 accepted in 2006. According to the New York Times, between 2006 and 2007, those enrolled with convictions for wrongful possession of drugs (not including marijuana) almost doubled, for burglaries almost tripled, for grand larceny/larceny more than doubled, for robbery more than tripled, for aggravated assault went up by 30%, and for "terroristic threats including bomb threats" doubled (from one to two). Feel more secure yet?
126: the number of dollars it took to buy a barrel of crude oil on the international market this week. Meanwhile, the average price of a gallon of regular gas at the pump in the U.S. hit $3.72, while the price of gas jumped almost 20 cents in Michigan in a week, 36 cents in Utah in a month, and busted the $4 ceiling in Westchester, New York, a rise of 65 cents in the last year. Just after the 9/11 attacks, a barrel of crude oil was still in the $20 range; at the time of the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, it was at about $30. In other words, since 9/11, a barrel of crude has risen more than $100 without the Bush administration taking any serious steps to promote energy conservation, cut down on the U.S. oil "addiction," or develop alternative energy strategies (beyond a dubious program to produce more ethanol).
82: the percentage of Americans who think "things in this country... have gotten pretty seriously off on the wrong track," according to the most recent Washington Post-ABC News poll. This is the gloomiest Americans have been about the "direction" of the country in the last 15 years of such polling.
40: the percentage loss ("on a trade-weighted basis") in the value of the dollar since 2001. The dollar's share of total world foreign exchange reserves has also dropped from 73% to 64% in that same period. According to the Center for American Progress, "By early May 2008, a dollar bought 42.9% fewer euros, 35.7% fewer Canadian dollars, 37.7% fewer British pounds, and 17.3% fewer Japanese yen than in March 2001."
37: the number of countries that have experienced food protests or riots in recent months due to soaring food prices, a global crisis of insecurity that caught the Bush administration completely unprepared. In the last year, the price of wheat has risen by 130%, of rice by 74%, of soya by 87%, and of corn by 31%.
0: the number of terrorist attacks by al-Qaeda or similar groups inside the United States since September 11, 2001.
So consider "the homeland" secure. Mission accomplished.
And if you doubt that, here's one last figure, representative of the ultimate insecurity that, by conscious omission as well as commission, the Bush administration has left a harried future to deal with: That number is 387: Scientists at the Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii just released new information on carbon dioxide -- the major greenhouse gas -- in the atmosphere, and it's at a record high of 387 parts per million, "up almost 40% since the industrial revolution and the highest for at least the last 650,000 years." Its rate of increase is on the rise as well. Behind all these figures lurks a potential world of insecurity with which this country has not yet come to grips.
Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com, is the co-founder of the American Empire Project. His book, The End of Victory Culture (University of Massachusetts Press), has been updated in a newly issued edition that deals with victory culture's crash-and-burn sequel in Iraq.
Copyright 2005 Tom Engelhardt
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24 Comments so far
Show AllYou want to meet the 30% that still support Bush ~KENDPOTTER ~ Go to an Evangilical church Sunday.
Rebel Farmer May 15th, 2008 1:27 pm
I'm feeling more secure with every passing minute!
How's that impeachment thing going?
===================================
Haven't you heard yet? "Impeachment is off the table", says the Obama/Clinton party.
I heard one of the 28 percenters on the radio yesterday, a woman who called in to complain about how we're not being respectful enough of Bush. She said he was only human and people make mistakes. He is a good man trying really hard. I hate to say it but although she didn't have a discernible regional accent, she did have trouble saying a complete sentence without making grammatical mistakes.
Come on Vermont, take the Lead and Secede.
"Pearl Harbor. A non-event! Yet Americans go on and on about this non-event, hype it up into some sort of apocalypse."
It sure wasn't a non-event for those that were there and are still there.
"Regarding Rumsfeld's statement, "We have a choice"
Please don't quote the insane when you are making a point. It ruins my day. Thank you. Good point though.
staying_sane_in_an_insane_world;
Come on man, I was trying to be nice. It doesn't happen all the time. That said, I agree with everything you said.
willybill, I heard a statistic that there are more deaths of soldiers from suicide than from the "war" in Iraq. This make me sick. Why is the MSM not reporting this? There is no honor left in "journalism" except for Christiana Amanpor (SP?)--where is she when we need her?
skippyagogo41 writes "...I probably should stress that it's the gov't and the elite of the usa that's doing the destroying of their country, the people (as with people everywhere) just want to live their lives."
This is why America will never change - someone will always make excuses for the American people. Americans supported Bush when he invaded Iraq - polls gave him an approval rating of over 70%.
Americans are only complaining now because the invasion and occupation of Iraq has backfired, and the US economy is suffering.
Americans had no concern that they were going to bomb the hell out of another country, and kill many innocent people.
To this day, Americans take no interest in Iraq, make no effort to find out how Bush is stoking the violence and hatred.
Americans could have easily voted Bush out of office in 2004, but they didn't.
Bush's domestic policies are as bad as his foreign ones, so why was Bush kept in power? Because Americans are hysterical! Americans think terrorists are lining up to destroy the U.S. (a country so large it spans four - technically six - time zones), and all 300 million of its citizens.
Pearl Harbor. A non-event! Yet Americans go on and on about this non-event, hype it up into some sort of apocalypse. Americans claim they were "victims" in the past, and can't allow themselves to be "victims" again, forgetting the context of Pearl Harbor - WW2! Many countries were victims during WW2, and, unlike America, weren't so lucky to get off lightly.
Pearl Harbor hardly deserves mentioning. During WWII, London, England, suffered the Blitz, 11 weeks of bombing, day and night, destroying over 1.4 million homes. If you want suffering, that's suffering!
Yet, the British only mention the Blitz in discussions about WW2 - they do not use it as justification for waging wars, or for playing victim.
It's time to start blaming the American people for the government they have, and slap them out of their hysteria, or nothing will change.
DaveEriqat - Try looking in West Virginia.
Tonight at 9 PM Eastern on airamericaradio.com...The Clout Show...EYE WITNESSES from the Pentagon on 9/11 TELL THE TRUTH....Live stream...
"Obit–Uncle Sam died from self-inflicted gunshot wound to head."
Jeez! I thought Cheney gave up hunting after shooting his "best friend" in the face. Oh yeah, I forgot the guy apologized for getting in Cheney's way. Well, it looks like Cheney is using a high powered rifle thistime instead of a shotgun......
A new definition of insanity needs to be identified, namely, one who still supports the Bush Crime Administration. No rational argument can be presented to support this administration's policies of misery, suffering and death for so many.
DaveEriqat
"It astonishes me to this day that Bush enjoys something like a 30% approval rating! Who are these 30%? I would really like to meet them. Is Faux News their only window on the world?"
I talk to those 30%. I regret having to admit to being a reformed conservative. If it hadn't been for the utter ineptitude of Bush, I probably would still be. But, there are still groups of people (and I am surrounded by them here in Eastern Washington) that believe in him.
No matter how badly he screws the pooch, their mantra is that things would be worse under a Kerry presidency. They have no imperical evidence, it is just a matter of faith. There is no news other than Fox News. They view it as a patriotic duty. You will never change their minds. They lack the capacity for it.
Granting that Osama bin Laden was behind the 9/11 attacks, his grand strategy is increasingly apparent. It is akin to the one he used to bring down the USSR (along with Ronnie Raygun, of course).
1. Kick the big bully in the nuts
2. Wait for the big bully to respond predictably, as in coming out swinging
3. Get the big bully to walk willingly into the quicksand of an intractable guerrilla struggle
4. Slowly bleed the big bully to death as it spends increasing amounts of money to support an un-winnable "war," because it is too stupid and proud to give up and go home
5. Watch as the newly bankrupted nation sinks into ruin and obscurity.
Hell, it worked great for the USSR. And we're well into step 4 right now. How long until step 5 kicks in? And how will I feed my family once the bully is bankrupted?
Obit--Uncle Sam died from self-inflicted gunshot wound to head.
I think the proper date for this should be 1947, as that was the year the decision was made to launch the Cold War and the National Security State, but the roots for both were already well established.
Rubble of two enormous buildings? There were three. WTC 7 was the third. FEMA's best guess, diesel fuel to power generators in the basement causing fires, was "of low probability" and needed "further investigation." Not hit by a plane, damaged but not significantly so, or significantly on fire, announced to have fallen hours before it actually did fall, straight down, at nearly the speed of gravity, into its own footprint, WTC 7 collapsed in what Dan Rather announced looked just like a controlled demolition. Indeed, its owner Larry Silverstein said it was "pulled" on national TV. And several controlled demolition experts around the world have viewed the video evidence and have concluded the collapse was by no means the random, chaotic, asymmetric collapse of a damaged, burning building. It was brought down by controlled demolition.
Regarding Rumsfeld's statement, "We have a choice — either to change the way we live, which is unacceptable, or to change the way that they live; and we chose the latter." How disingenuous. The way we live has been directly changed as a result. He was, of course, talking about himself. And it has changed not because of bin Laden. The FBI has NO HARD EVIDENCE linking bin Laden to 9/11. It has changed because of the Bush administration's LEGISLATIVE efforts, signing statements, public executive orders, (more numerous) secret executive orders, secret legal opinions, memos, and directives. The administrative changes to our way of life came about not through bin Laden and al Qeada, but through the Bush administration. And it all started under the most dubious of circumstances. Circumstances from which the security, military and all ancillary industries have profited very, very handsomely.
Engelhardt is usually pretty good, but this article is rife with inaccuracies (of the neocon kind).
First major sin is equating OBL with 9/11. Oh? And your evidence is (other than a grainy video of him laughing)? Even the FBI does not believe OBL had anything indictable to do with 9/11. It was a SAUDI operation, Tom, get it?
911 was an inside job. yeesh. Osama had nothing to do with it. They had to blame a boogie man that was 'out there' and 'ungettable.'
The most disturbing passage to me was this:
As Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld pungently put the matter that September, "We have a choice — either to change the way we live, which is unacceptable, or to change the way that they live; and we chose the latter."
We probably need to change the way we live anyway if the human race is to survive. We have to reduce the use of oil and we must retreat from our 700+ bases intended for world domination. Otherwise catastrophic environmental destruction or war, or both, will become inevitable.
What a clever and interesting way to present the present state of affairs: through a list of key numbers. It astonishes me to this day that Bush enjoys something like a 30% approval rating! Who are these 30%? I would really like to meet them. Is Faux News their only window on the world?
Of course, the "war of terror" was never really about halting terrorism. Like the "war on drugs," it was about enhancing the power of the government. So in that regard, the "war of terror" has been fabulously successful, certainly deserving of its "Mission Accomplished" moniker.
Dave
Let us not forget another number...18 SUICIDES PER DAY BY VETERANS. When is enough enough?? And the bush has sacrificed golf. SUCH compassionate, selfless leadership!
Osama really looks like a sucker comparing to Bush, he does not need to do anything now, just sit back and enjoy.
I am curious if Bush gets away with bombing Iran, now that would be a exit for him (And America subsequently).
I'm feeling more secure with every passing minute!
How's that impeachment thing going?
And still those who support bush, and bush himself, think that the terrorists will again attack the usa. Why would they bother? When the usa is doing such a good job at destroying itself. I probably should stress that it's the gov't and the elite of the usa that's doing the destroying of their country, the people (as with people everywhere) just want to live their lives.