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Guns, Butter, and Obama
Over the next several months there will be a battle for hearts and minds, but not in Iraq or Afghanistan. The war will be here at home, waged mostly in the halls of Congress, where grim lobbyists for one of the top 15 economies in the world are digging in to preserve their stake in the massive U.S. military budget. With the country in deep recession and resources dwindling for the new administration's programs on health care, education, and the environment, the outcome of this battle may well end up defining the next four years.
But coming to grips with the issue, as one military analyst noted, is likely to resemble the worst of World War I trench warfare. "It will be like the British Army at the Somme," Winslow Wheeler of the Center for Defense Information (CDI) told the Boston Globe, "you will just get mowed down by the defense industry."
Up Against the Industry
For starters, there are 185,000 corporations behind those metaphorical machine guns, and a few are formidable indeed: Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, Alliant Techsystems, United Technologies, Textron, Teledyne, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman, and Texas Instruments, just to name a few.
The World Policy Institute found that dozens of high Bush administration officials were former arms company executives, consultants, or shareholders, and that this network of influence reaches deep into Congress. The combination of lobbying and PAC money that pours into election coffers every two years gives the arms industry enormous influence over the actions of the executive and legislative branches.
The reason is simple: the money at stake is staggering, although nailing down exactly what this country spends on the military is extremely difficult. "Figures on defense spending are notoriously unreliable," defense expert Chalmers Johnson points out. "All numbers released by the Pentagon should be regarded as suspect."
While the "official" 2009 U.S. military budget is $516 billion, that figure bears little resemblance to what this country actually spends. According to CDI, if one pulls together all the various threads that make up the defense spending tapestry - including Home Security, secret "black budget" items, military-related programs outside of the Defense Department, the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and such outlays as veterans' benefits - the figure is around $862 billion for the current fiscal year. Johnson says spending is closer to $1.1 trillion.
Even these figures are misleading, since it does not project future costs. According to Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph Stiglitz, when the economic and social costs of the Iraq War are finally added up - including decades of treatment for veterans disabled by traumatic brain injury and post traumatic stress disorder - the final bill could reach $5 trillion.
Cuts in the Offing?
Given the current economic crisis, even the defense establishment recognizes that some cuts are inevitable. A recent study by a Pentagon advisory group, the Defense Business Board, says that current defense spending is "not sustainable" and recommends scaling back or eliminating some big-ticket weapon systems.
Canceling Lockheed Martin's F-22 stealth fighter and F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the Virginia Class submarine, the V-22 Osprey, the Zumwalt Class destroyer, and Boeing and Raytheon's missile defense system, combined with some judicious reductions in other budget items, would save $55 billion annually, according to FPIF's Unified Security Budget.
The problem with U.S. military spending isn't just expensive weapons, but the underlying philosophy that the use of force is a valid policy tool. And on that question, the incoming Obama administration has yet to break from the past.
While Obama has pledged to stress diplomacy over warfare, he has also promised to "maintain the most powerful military on the planet" and to increase the armed forces by some 90,000 soldiers. According to the Congressional Budget Office, that will cost at least $50 billion over five years.
The most disturbing initiative, however, is a recent push to "reshape" the armed forces. A recent Defense Department directive elevates "IW" (irregular warfare) to a level "as strategically important as traditional warfare," arguing that for the "foreseeable future, winning the Long War against violent extremists will the central objective of U.S. policy."
This concept is no different than the "hearts and minds" counterinsurgency strategy that failed so disastrously in Southeast Asia two generations ago. The directive assumes that military disasters result from impatience and poor tactics. If you're willing to fight a "Long War," don't kick in too many doors, lunch with the locals, and hand out lots of candy to the kids, you win.
Occupational Hazards
But the key to understanding why the U.S. and NATO are losing in Afghanistan and Iraq is the word "occupation."
Writing almost a century ago, T.E. Lawrence laid out what he called the algebra of occupation: "Rebellion must have an unassailable base...it must have a sophisticated alien enemy, in the form of a disciplined army of occupation too small to dominate the whole area. It must have a friendly population...sympathetic to the point of not betraying rebel movements to the enemy. Granted mobility, security...time and doctrine...victory will rest with the insurgents, for the algebraical [sic] factors are in the end decisive."
Lawrence was writing about the British occupation of Iraq, but he might as well have been channeling the future. His conclusion should give the Obama administration pause about its plans for a "surge" of troops into Afghanistan: "Against them [the algebraic factors], perfections of means and spirit struggle quite in vain."
History is replete with examples of Lawrence's formula too numerous to list. Indeed, the few examples of successful counterinsurgency - the Americans in the Philippines and the British in Malaya - were the result of unique historical factors that that have never transferred well.
The occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan has been a financial and diplomatic disaster for the United States, devastated the countries we invaded, and is spreading the war to Pakistan and India. The recent terrorist assault on Mumbai was very similar to the September bombing of the Islamabad Marriott Hotel, both of them almost certainly "blowback" from the growing involvement of Indian forces in southern and eastern Afghanistan, and the Pakistani Army in the northwest frontier and tribal territories.
Won't adding 90,000 troops trained in counterinsurgency warfare create pressure to use those troops in places like the Sudan, Somalia, the Gulf of Guinea, Colombia, or any number of regions where U.S. interests collide with local aspirations?
In an article in the most recent Foreign Affairs, Defense Secretary Robert Gates lays out his roadmap for a new U.S. military: "What is dubbed the war on terror is...a prolonged, worldwide irregular campaign - a struggle between the forces of violent extremism and those of moderation. Direct military force will continue to play a role in the long-term effort against the terrorists and other extremists. But over the long term, the United States cannot kill or capture its way to victory."
Gates' strategy embodies the possibility of both hope and disaster. If the United States chooses to keep the military on its current footing - including adding more troops and focusing on the use of "direct military force" - then future wars and occupations will almost certainly torpedo Obama's plans to deliver a more equal and humane society.
If, however, diplomacy and negotiations takes the place of F-16s and Special Forces, then there is yet hope that the world can take a step back and look for alternatives that avoid Lawrence's grim calculations.
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28 Comments so far
Show AllThis country needs a Department of Peace. Americans need to learn how to achieve and keep peace. Growing up war was something that happened in history books every couple hundred pages. Today wars influence our daily lives, even and especially in America. A Department of Peace would be much better than guns or butter. We’re already fat enough.
Hoa binh
Great post!
Probably because of our "Judeo-Christian heritage", peace is the last thing on our minds. Combat is the first thing, followed by domination.
Unlike peaceful cultures like Islam, Hinduism, Japanese emperor worship, and atheistic communist personality cults, where PEACE is always uppermost in their minds?
Gates: "What is dubbed the war on terror is...a prolonged, worldwide irregular campaign - a struggle between the forces of violent extremism and those of moderation." As the head of the forces of violent extremism, Gates was breathtakingly honest in that assessment.
"If, however, diplomacy and negotiations takes the place of F-16s and Special Forces"
Only a fool would believe that this would work.
Diplomacy without the force of those F-16's and Special Forces behind it is just empty words. Even Jimmy Carter found that out.
"the underlying philosophy that the use of force is a valid policy tool"
Untill we reach that Utopian era that this gentleman is thinking of, that is always your lasst recourse. Simple reality in our world.
"Won't adding 90,000 troops trained in counterinsurgency warfare create pressure to use those troops in places like the Sudan, Somalia, the Gulf of Guinea, Colombia, or any number of regions where U.S. interests collide with local aspirations?"
Not at all. But it is a good idea to be prepared.
Obviously I find this analysis faulty and its conclusions naive.
"Diplomacy without the force of those F-16's and Special Forces behind it is just empty words. Even Jimmy Carter found that out."
What are you nuts ?!? And where do you get the money for all those F-16s and Special Forces from? Either you slash the public infrastructure critical budgets or borrow from China and it just so happens both are happening. Maybe diplomacy ain't such a bad idea. Besides, how many more civilians and soldiers do you want losing their lives or part(s) there of ?!?
Diplomacy is an excellent idea. I don't want any losing their lives, thats why we should maintain a strong military.
Read what I said again, diplomacy without the force to back it up is simply empty rhetoric. Thats the truth.
We've already got the money for all the military we need. In fact we can slash our current budget and still have enough money to fund the extras troops we need to replace contractors and bring troop levels up to the numbers we need.
I find your own conclusions even more naive. This violence as usual mentality when it HAS NOT WORKED for the past 50 years.
F4s and all those bombers dropping bombs on Laos and Cambodia DID NOT WORK In Vietnam.
What would have worked is staying out of there in the first place as witnessed by Vietnam now being a large trading partner with the United States of America.
Blowing up villagers in Pakistan with Predator drones or f16s DOES NOT WORK.
Israel has been using f16 diplomacy for the past 40 years and has gotten nowheres.
Tell me do you really think Jimmy Carter would have been further ahead by making war on Iran and just how WERE those hostages released...was it by Military force?
When you say violence never settled anything in effect I'd suggest thats naive. Lets go meet the City Fathers of Carthage and see what they have to say about it. Or lets visit the Library in Alexandria, oops, its not there, etc, etc.
"Tell me do you really think Jimmy Carter would have been further ahead by making war on Iran and just how WERE those hostages released...was it by Military force?"
If Jimmy Carter had told them to release them or else...yes we could have avoided much of what has come since. If he hadn't cut the Shaw's throat and reduced our commitment gradually, it wouldn't have happened in the first place. Jimmy Carter didn't get them out, old Raygun did. And why all of a sudden were they released do you think? Because Raygun wasn't Carter.
"F4s and all those bombers dropping bombs on Laos and Cambodia DID NOT WORK In Vietnam.
What would have worked is staying out of there in the first place as witnessed by Vietnam now being a large trading partner with the United States of America.
Blowing up villagers in Pakistan with Predator drones or f16s DOES NOT WORK."
I'm not speaking of this at all. Obviously we agree on Viet Nam and Laos, Cambodia, Iraq, Afganistan and Pakistan.
Please read what I said, not what you think I said.
In the end perhaps I am not as trusting of these "peaceful" countries as you are. In our favor though, remember we haven't invaded Canada yet!
>>In the end perhaps I am not as trusting of these "peaceful" countries as you are. In our favor though, remember we haven't invaded Canada yet
What do you mean you have not invaded Canada yet? You tried several times by Military force and failed.
PK
Ah! But we didn't send Marines.
Only because you needed to spare them the embarassment.
"The combination of lobbying and PAC money that pours into election coffers every two years gives the arms industry enormous influence over the actions of the executive and legislative branches."
Let the people decide what the military budget will be instead of the M/I/I complex.
Referendum on the Military Budget as Percentage of GDP:
70%_____
60%_____
50%_____
40%_____
30%_____
20%_____
10%_____
1%______
At the moment its around 4%, I'd suggest 3.25 to 3.5%
With Gates and Jones ready to call the shots, Obama will simply shift some of the troops in Iraq to Pakistan and Afghanistan as I see it. The US is falling faster than the Roman empire because of manufacturing more WMDs and pushing for more hostile takeovers and occupations. Oh, and we're borrowing money from China to do this.
"winning the Long War" - oh, goody. now it has yet another name. Let's see, we have:
war on terror
war on terrorism
global war on terror
long war
(my suggestion) 'forever global war against future terrorism'
---
"What is dubbed the war on terror is...a prolonged, worldwide irregular campaign" --- (I add) that keeps America in a state of war and involved in a global military effort that cannot achieve victory, as even Gates admits ("...the United States cannot kill or capture its way to victory").
Brilliant f**king leadership we have. Fighting a war that can't achieve victory, and being unwilling and unable to do other than more of the same. The only thing they're good at is hiding the mess from the American people.
'Mr. Change' Obama does not appear to be changing anything and that is sad but expected.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates lays out his roadmap for a new U.S. military: "What is dubbed the war on terror is...a prolonged, worldwide irregular campaign - a struggle between the forces of violent extremism and those of moderation. Direct military force will continue to play a role in the long-term effort against the terrorists and other extremists. But over the long term, the United States cannot kill or capture its way to victory."
The real aims of U.S. foriegn policy in the Central Asian and South Asian region is laid out in this brilliant article:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/South_Asia/JL20Df01.html
Ofcourse we will deny it and pretend we are the force of good (a la Thomas More) but the reality is far distanced from what the Pentagon wants us to believe. 'Direct military force' has always been our forte. Empires live and breathe 'direct military force'. Its the reason we are able to maintain our standard of living. No amount of death/slaughter/murder/mayhem can come in the way of our economic progress.
Its nice to be remembered! Thanks!
Sure ... no problem ... Cheney will be remembered too. And that other dickwad Rumsfeld.
Now you've hurt my feelings.
Thanks Gyptian for the article. Hope you are well.
DC always good to see you around here ... the only sane person around !!
This country needs a Department of Peace.
Never happen. There is neither money nor glory in peace. The Death's Head rules the United States and the enormously deep hole we've been told to dig, and have been digging for forty years, has been described by the Death's Head as the foundation of a new and greater empire, when in fact it is our own grave. There is no Lawrence of Arabia for the United States, only Bush of Texas, Cheney of Wyoming and Obama of Illinois.
Sioux Rose
Well, we understand how "Disaster Capitalism" works, and some believe that Bush-Cheney succeeded in terms of WHAT THEY WERE AFTER, regarding Iraq. But there is always that peculiar variable, the law of unforeseen consequences. If the conflict is escalated in Afghanistan because America, and its military industrial providers, NEED A WIN, they are going to stir up a worse hornet's nest than that of Iraq. Since nuclear weapons exist in that region and there are fresh wounds between India and Pakistan over Kashmir, with Afghanistan virtually next door... this is not a zone that warrants anything BUT diplomacy.
U.S. foreign policy these days reminds me of a drunk driver. No sooner does he escape with his own life, having demolished some homes in his path, he gets right back into his tank-like vehicle to do it all over again. Some force will arise to stop him. As other writers have noted, the U.S. is fast losing its status as sole super power as regions rise up united to act as counterbalances. We've noted, too, that any nation that has nuclear capabilities has mysteriously NOT been attacked by the U.S. It's so much easier to go after places that have been crippled by sanctions or bombed back to the proverbial stone age... true rivals, coalitions of another sort of willing, that will present a different game plan. I hope Obama doesn't feel the need to play muscle man or pretend he's macho by using the military for another "theater" of war. The U.S. has so much blood on its hands from Iraq, it's time to really stop, look, and take inventory. It's true that wars have been initiated on slim cause prior to Bush, but the stakes were not the same then as now.
Now humanity faces the very real threat of climate destabilization, shortened growing seasons and diminished water/food supplies. Humanity faces not nuclear de-escalation but its opposite. And instead of teaching tolerance as a world inhabited by 6 plus billion grows smaller for all of us, religions are teaching vengeance and pseudo credos of loyalty. These retrograde behaviors are like a ball and chain when human beings must rise higher to meet the challenges that are no longer in the future. The future IS now.
I realize that we do not live in a democracy, so there is no need to do the poll that Ezeflyer suggests. No one in power gives a fart about what the people want. But what do they want--the people who run this nation? It is clear that our economy is in a state of collapse. Just read any of the other articles on this site. The top 2% wants it all for themselves for the 'end times' until the Earth dies. Homeland security forces and our army is ready to keep the people down it they try to throw off this gastly government. (Please don't tell me to have 'hope' and that Obama will bring us 'change'.)
Our government is insane. We have to bring it down. And pretty damn quick too.
The Change We Elected In
From I elect.. W to I elect.. O
from irregular warfare to I owe
from ‘underestimated’ to chiseled charm
there won't be no hurry to disarm
from W to O
from Wanker to Hussein
to destination Aufwiedersehen
From the I War to the I Owe
will we all do time for the I crime?
the one that's on our dime
The umbrella pie of empire might
Is that 'nook you ler' or 'new clear'?
A winter to save the assets
with clean neutron o bomb a s?
Do we mortgage our future with blight?
Did Eisenhower have it right?
Is the MIC the crack cocaine of eternal night?
you know the blow back of blow
that's jack led and bottom fed
like the Fed scum squealing at the trough
Even the masters of the universe would like to get off
the Ponzi pile of toxic trash
since belief is on a winter jaunt to tan
...to brown the change
while the bail out state is... in the can of late
the can
in...
'Yes we can'
Guess what Barack Obama's #1 priority is -- SERVING THE INTERESTS OF THE OLIGARCHIC-FEW!!!!
To all those "soft-left" suckers who voted for Barack Obama, instead of supporting a third party movement (Nader, McKinney, or whatever socialist was on your ballot), what the hell did you expect?
America will continue to move to the right, thanks to the con job pulled off by Barack Obama, the DLC and the political establishment as a whole. ...
And it was so damn easy there's no reason to expect that they won't keep doing it election after election. With of course the aid and comfort provided by the soft left.
Question: What is Obama going to do with all those CHANGE signs? ... ANSWER: Change them to AUSTERITY signs.
Imagine how hard it would have been for John McCain to
a.) continue the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan;
b.) start up other wars (Pakistan, Iran);
c.) allow the military the option of using nuclear weapons in Iran;
d.) increase the Pentagon budget;
e.) reinstate the draft;
f.) continue class warfare against the poor, the working poor and the middle class.
But no problem for Con Man Obama. ("Hey, if Obama and his Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, sez we have to nuke/annihilate the Iranians then, gosh, I guess we do.")
Once "our savior," Barack Obama is now (surprise, surprise!) "hitting the ground running" when it comes to bailing out the economic elite and screwing what's left.
And to those trusting souls who think Obama will all of a sudden become a progressive once in office, dream on. ...
-- See "Obama picks Wall Street insider to head main regulatory agency " http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/dec2008/sec-d19.shtml
-- See "Obama, in a ‘slap in the face,’ invites right-wing evangelist to the inauguration" http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/dec2008/warr-d19.shtml
-- See "Obama’s defence appointee signals continuing US belligerence" http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/dec2008/gate-d16.shtmlthe
The chickens have come home to roost and sadly -- pathetically -- the soft-left is, as usual, in denial.
What do you have to say now Katrina Van however-you-spell-your-last-name (editor of The Nation magazine)?
What do you have to say now Norman Solomon, Obama delegate to the Democratic National Convention?
What do you have to say now Tom Hayden, you remarkable phony?
What do you have to say now CommonDreams.org, lover and advocate of the "lesser-of-the-two-evils" con?
DEMOCRATIC PARTY APOLOGISTS UNITE! YOU HAVE NOTHING TO LOSE BUT YOUR SELF-RESPECT!
Then again, no real hardship will befall the likes of those just named -- after all, they're members of the same privileged class Obama is. ... Or hadn't you noticed?
"DEMOCRATIC PARTY APOLOGISTS UNITE! YOU HAVE NOTHING TO LOSE BUT YOUR SELF-RESPECT!"
Dude ... this is seriously funny !!