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Too Many Overseas Bases
In the midst of an economic crisis that's getting scarier by the day, it's time to ask whether the nation can really afford some 1,000 military bases overseas. For those unfamiliar with the issue, you read that number correctly. One thousand. One thousand U.S. military bases outside the 50 states and Washington, DC, representing the largest collection of bases in world history.
Officially the Pentagon counts 865 base sites, but this notoriously unreliable number omits all our bases in Iraq (likely over 100) and Afghanistan (80 and counting), among many other well-known and secretive bases. More than half a century after World War II and the Korean War, we still have 268 bases in Germany, 124 in Japan, and 87 in South Korea. Others are scattered around the globe in places like Aruba and Australia, Bulgaria and Bahrain, Colombia and Greece, Djibouti, Egypt, Kuwait, Qatar, Romania, Singapore, and of course, Guantánamo Bay, Cuba - just to name a few. Among the installations considered critical to our national security are a ski center in the Bavarian Alps, resorts in Seoul and Tokyo, and 234 golf courses the Pentagon runs worldwide.
Unlike domestic bases, which set off local alarms when threatened by closure, our collection of overseas bases is particularly galling because almost all our taxpayer money leaves the United States (much goes to enriching private base contractors like corruption-plagued former Halliburton subsidiary KBR). One part of the massive Ramstein airbase near Landstuhl, Germany, has an estimated value of $3.3 billion. Just think how local communities could use that kind of money to make investments in schools, hospitals, jobs, and infrastructure.
Even the Bush administration saw the wastefulness of our overseas basing network. In 2004, then-Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld announced plans to close more than one-third of the nation's overseas installations, moving 70,000 troops and 100,000 family members and civilians back to the United States. National Security Adviser Jim Jones, then commander of U.S. forces in Europe, called for closing 20% of our bases in Europe. According to Rumsfeld's estimates, we could save at least $12 billion by closing 200 to 300 bases alone. While the closures were derailed by claims that closing bases could cost us in the short term, even if this is true, it's no reason to continue our profligate ways in the longer term.
Costs Far Exceeding Dollars and Cents
Unfortunately, the financial costs of our overseas bases are only part of the problem. Other costs to people at home and abroad are just as devastating. Military families suffer painful dislocations as troops stationed overseas separate from loved ones or uproot their families through frequent moves around the world. While some foreign governments like U.S. bases for their perceived economic benefits, many locals living near the bases suffer environmental and health damage from military toxins and pollution, disrupted economic, social, and cultural systems, military accidents, and increased prostitution and crime.
In undemocratic nations like Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Saudi Arabia, our bases support governments responsible for repression and human rights abuses. In too many recurring cases, soldiers have raped, assaulted, or killed locals, most prominently of late in South Korea, Okinawa, and Italy. The forced expulsion of the entire Chagossian people to create our secretive base on British Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean is another extreme but not so aberrant example.
Bases abroad have become a major and unacknowledged "face" of the United States, frequently damaging the nation's reputation, engendering grievances and anger, and generally creating antagonistic rather than cooperative relationships between the United States and others. Most dangerously, as we have seen in Saudi Arabia and Yemen, and as we are seeing in Iraq and Afghanistan, foreign bases create breeding grounds for radicalism, anti-Americanism, and attacks on the United States, reducing, rather than improving, our national security.
Proponents of maintaining the overseas base status quo will argue, however, that our foreign bases are critical to national and global security. A closer examination shows that overseas bases have often heightened military tensions and discouraged diplomatic solutions to international conflicts. Rather than stabilizing dangerous regions, our overseas bases have often increased global militarization, enlarging security threats faced by other nations who respond by boosting military spending (and in cases like China and Russia, foreign base acquisition) in an escalating spiral. Overseas bases actually make war more likely, not less.
The Benefits of Fewer Bases
This isn't a call for isolationism or a protectionism that would prevent us from spending money overseas. As the Obama administration and others have recognized, we must recommit to cooperative forms of engagement with the rest of the world that rely on diplomatic, economic, and cultural ties rather than military means. In addition to freeing money to meet critical human needs at home and abroad, fewer overseas bases would help rebuild our military into a less overstretched, defensive force committed to defending the nation's territory from attack.
In these difficult economic times, the Obama administration and Congress should initiate a major reassessment of our 1,000 overseas bases. Now is the time to ask if, as a nation and a world, we can really afford the 1,000 bases that are pushing the nation deeper into debt and making the United States and the planet less secure? With so many needs facing our nation, it's unconscionable to have 1,000 overseas bases. It's time to begin closing them.
- Posted in



43 Comments so far
Show AllMore than half a century after World War II , , , we still have 268 bases in Germany . . .
We must be ever watchful of Albania which has colonial ambitions to conquer Western Europe. Ditto for the Czechs and the Slovaks.
I did not get the full gist of the book , giving it only a cursory glance while browsing, but there a new one out by some self proclaimed Intellectual that claims that the United States will have to compete with the new Super Powers of Poland Mexico and Turkey by 2060.
Best Ramp up that defense spending! There are enemies EVERYWHERE!
Don't forget the threat from the mighty Uzbek navy...
I hear they just got spanked by the Turkmenistan Navy, no need to worry about THAT threat anymore ;)
As money for the more mondane things in life is scarce, maybe it's time to spend less money on wars and more on schools, hospitals and other stuff that makes life more enjoyable for people. I don't know if I would feel less safe without those bases in Germany.
DC Lobbyists don't just lobby for domestic pork barrel projects. They also work for foreign business interests that have a vested interest in keeping the overseas bases open.
Every one of those overseas bases has a constituency that spends big bucks on lobbyists to assure that their base stays open.
Follow the money to find the facts !!!!
I like the focus of this article questioning the need for 1,000 US bases overseas, rather than scaling back upon the Pentagon's budget in the abstract, or closing stateside military installations (which of course would trigger inevitable partisan backlash for ideological and localized economic reasons).
Vine is right on his policy recommendations of course. But everybody should acknowledge up front that shrinking the sprawling, global US military/national security paramilitary presence will require political courage, since any such effort to reassert responsible civilian control over the MIC/spy bureaucracy steps into a minefield tailor made to ignite the worst possible forms of fear mongering demagoguery from right wingers and assorted neo-liberal hawks.
Tradition economic analysis often couches decision making as a question of guns versus butter. Progressives can build upon that framing of the basic issue.
If the goal is to put an end to the waste, corruption, hubris and fantasy-filled overstretch of empire Americana (along with its related sabre rattling militarism), then talking about closing bases overseas in order that the money can get invested instead into infrastructure development here at home makes perfect sense.
Whether we like it or not, millions of ordinary American citizens do love both butter and guns. Butter is disappearing fast from those middle class kitchen tables courtesy of the global financial crisis (fueled in major part by the Bush regime's global war on terror policies). Out on Main Street, maybe even Bubba and Lurlene can be persuaded to at least temporarily downsize the family arsenal (rather than going deeper into debt to upgrade it), if the choice is whether to keep the cupboard and refrigerator stocked.
Bill from Saginaw
Bill--I agree that the politics of base closing is a road lined with IEDs and cemented with myth. But as the First Depression spawned deep introspection by most of the USA, I expect the Second to prompt a similar reckoning. Many important strides toward the elimination of militarism in the USA were made during the 1930s, and without WW2 we would have a starkly different world today--a world where the Kellog-Briand Treaty reigns supreme and no MIC or National Security State exists.
Any overseas base is an obscenity, as it means that the US is violating another country's sovereignty.
Close all US bases outside its borders.
Now.
How many foreign powers have bases in our country?
all failed empires left relics behind as a remider of their past presence. it is long time for us to leave these countries and the bases. any one ever notice we never leave once we go in.
That is probably why the Kyrgyz government just 86'ed us out of Manas Air Base...they don't want to get stuck with permanent "visitors".
tomhairless President Obama and the Wall Street Journal agree that we are broke.
Overseas bases cost money. Close ALL of them. We can not afford them. In 1940 we had only
three: Philippines, Hawaii, and Guantanamo in Cuba but together with USSR and our other
allies we won World War II. We could actually raise some money selling the bases to host
countries.
Those were three places where we had many bases. Only Gitmo qualifies as just one base. I doubt we would gain any money through land sales as most bases are leased from the occupied country.
Thank you for mentioning Diego Garcia. The U$A got that base by committing crimes against humanity. Those crimes continue today.
ALL foreign bases should be shut down and reparations paid to the people who have suffered under U$A occupation - especially the people who have been expelled from Diego Garcia.
"lord_buckley February 26th, 2009 3:31 pm
Don't forget the threat from the mighty Uzbek navy..."
A navy, Uzbekistan?
QUOTE:
Navy (Uzbekistan), Navy
Assessment
Uzbekistan has no formal navy. The country is landlocked, although it does have a border on the Aral Sea. No immediate plans for building a military navy are in place.A small riverine force tasked with patrolling Uzbekistan's river frontier with Afghanistan is being developed under the authority of Uzbekistan's Border Guards. Fourteen boats have been promised by the US military, and plans are in place to procure four Russian-made armed high-speed boats. In October and November 2004, Uzbekistan received two new Gyurza class River Armoured Gun Boats (RAGBs) through financial aid from the US State Department. Primarily aimed at countering drug smuggling on the country's waterways, particularly the Amu Darya river along the border with Afghanistan, the boats are operated by the Uzbek Border Guards.
END QUOTE
That's from evidently a book, "Sentinel Security Assessment - Russia And The CIS", published Jan. 15, 2009.
http://www.janes.com/articles/
Janes-Sentinel-Security-Assessment-Russia-And-The-CIS/Navy-Uzbekistan.html
===================================
"rosemarie jackowski February 26th, 2009 3:27 pm
Thank you for mentioning Diego Garcia. The U$A got that base by committing crimes against humanity. ..."
WHOLLY agree with that, except the USA got that base from the UK, i.e., England, after it had already committed the genocide there, the expulsion, removal of the people of Diego Garcia; according to what I've read about this and I believe certainly John Pilger has mentioned this ... enough times.
===============================
"Bill from Saginaw February 26th, 2009 11:29 am
I like the focus of this article questioning the need for 1,000 US bases overseas, rather than scaling back upon the Pentagon's budget in the abstract, or closing stateside military installations (which of course would trigger inevitable partisan backlash for ideological and localized economic reasons)."
1,000? 700 to 800 is the official count, (editing, I see David Vine says the new, present official count is 865) but many analysts of evidently respectable reputation also say that the real number is in the vicinity of 1,000. Either way though, we can now count an additional ... several new bases since the start of the Bush-Cheney regime in 2000. (EDIT: And I don't mean the bases in Iraq and Afghanistan, but the Black Sea area countries.) The following article considerably describes these several new bases; six or seven of them (editing, including in Georgia, Romania, Ukraine, Poland, and maybe another one or two countries). I have already provided a link to the article a few times over the past week, but didn't specify that it tells readers of the several new bases, so will link it again while adding mention of the new bases topic.
"Black Sea: Pentagon's Gateway to Three Continents and the Middle East",
by Rick Rozoff, Stop NATO, Feb 22 2009
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=12400
It's an important article.
Bill from Saginaw:
"Vine is right on his policy recommendations of course. But everybody should acknowledge up front that shrinking the sprawling, global US military/national security paramilitary presence will require political courage, since any such effort to reassert responsible civilian control over the MIC/spy bureaucracy steps into a minefield tailor made to ignite the worst possible forms of fear mongering demagoguery from right wingers and assorted neo-liberal hawks."
MIGHT BE more or worse than only "the worst possible forms of fear mongering demagoguery from ..."; it might possibly include another dead, assassinated president, even. When we consider the official project of the U.S. govt and military for [full spectrum dominance], then we should realise that the top people behind this definitely don't care about shedding other people's blood, i.e., lives.
The above article by Rick Rozoff definitely fits for reading or keeping in mind when we consider the topic of full spectrum dominance.
The kind of elites behind such projects will stop at ... nothing.
Edit: I see David Vine referring to the U.S. now having as many as 100 (or more) new bases in Iraq and over 80 in Afghanistan. Nightmare. Full spectrum'ing the situation increasingly is.
Weren't nukes supposed to keep us safe without having to occupy countries?
No, it's the other-way-round: The nukes were needed to keep US troops safe in the countries they occupied.
quoting rumsfeld is not helping the cause....
i read somewhere, on counterpunch i believe, that post ww2 the military industries made sure they had some kind of industry/facility/employer in every county in the u.s. they wanted to make sure they were as deeply enmeshed in as much of the economy as possible.
we would still have to find something to do w/all the personnel (military & civilian) dependent on bases overseas. if you just reincorporate them into the military structure in the u.s., are you really addressing the bloated militarism of the u.s.?
by all means decommission all bases overseas. but do the same at home as well, or before you know it, they'll be back overseas. w/canada and mexico as neighbors, what do we need even a defensive military for anyway?
David Vine says, "
David Vine says, "In undemocratic nations like Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Saudi Arabia, our bases support governments responsible for repression and human rights abuses. In too many recurring cases, soldiers have raped, assaulted, or killed locals, most prominently of late in South Korea, Okinawa, and Italy".
Uzbekistan was supposed to have given the U.S. the boot treatment in I believe 2005, so there should no longer be a U.S. base there today. Maybe a course reversal happened since 2005.
Kyrgyzstan's leadership spoke of U.S. soldiers seriously abusing locals and I believe having killed or shot one, if not more, in the leadership's recent announcement that the U.S. base will need to end. This violence on the part of U.S. troops might not have been the sole cause for terminating the U.S. base, although I haven't read of the formal announcement having been made yet and the leader said that only when this happens will the U.S. need to withdraw within 180 days. Well, I believe he said that this violence certainly contributed to closing the U.S. base there; that the abuse of the Kyrgyz population couldn't be tolerated any longer.
David Vine added, "The forced expulsion of the entire Chagossian people to create our secretive base on British Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean is another extreme but not so aberrant example".
As said in my first post in this page at CD, I thought to recall that John Pilger said Britain had removed the Chagossians, or most of them, and only eventually, that is, later, handed the island(s?) over to the U.S. But both evidently happened at the same time, that is, Britain started badly treating the Chagossians when handing the island over to the U.S. became the agenda. That's what I understand from the text with the videos of the documentary by John Pilger at youtube and entitled. It's "Stealing a Nation" and provided with six clips. The text with the video says:
"A report about about the people of diego garcia (a former colony of Britain) and how the 2000 some population of black people was betrayed by its government, the British government.
These people were living a peaceful life when the british government decided to deport them all unconditionally and hand the island over to the USA ..."
That definitely seems to say that Britain was not badly treating those people [until] letting the U.S. have the island; a-la perverted "free trade" concept or method. I thought Britain had started badly treating them considerably before handing the island to the US.
John Pilger's documentary will tell viewers the whole of the facts.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=97aY-UMCNNs
"rush limbaughs taint February 26th, 2009 5:07 pm
quoting rumsfeld is not helping the cause...."
I WAS suprised to see that reference in the article, too, but given it's included I then figured that while Rumsfeld and the others named in the article as having all spoken about the need to reduce U.S. bases overseas, I wonder if they were really honest or just talking in terms to try to please the U.S. population. After all, they, Rumsfeld anyway, were definitely and extremely war hawks.
rush ...:
"i read somewhere, on counterpunch i believe, that post ww2 the military industries made sure they had some kind of industry/facility/employer in every county in the u.s. they wanted to make sure they were as deeply enmeshed in as much of the economy as possible."
Could that be why McDonald's and plenty of other corporations we normally wouldn't think of as war profiteers became that? I wonder, and I believe it was an article from TomDispatch.com posted here at CD that listed numerous enough such corporations profiting from U.S. wars of aggression and, I suppose, U.S. bases overseas. I don't recall that article stating that this was on the U.S. military's invitation, but even if it wasn't, then "door" was still and clearly opened to all of these corporations to enter the "game" of profiteering from U.S. militarism abroad.
I seem to recall that article having been posted here over the past year, perhaps since last summer, but maybe it's a little older than that.
rush ...:
"we would still have to find something to do w/all the personnel (military & civilian) dependent on bases overseas. if you just reincorporate them into the military structure in the u.s., are you really addressing the bloated militarism of the u.s.?"
IN THEORY, it should help to really curb or put some curb on U.S. militarism overseas, so globally, and if this would happen, then the issue of U.S. bases in the USA shouldn't be used as a reason to not close the bases and militarism abroad.
rush ...:
"by all means decommission all bases overseas. but do the same at home as well, or before you know it, they'll be back overseas. w/canada and mexico as neighbors, what do we need even a defensive military for anyway?"
That's DREAMING; a "pipe" dream. NO ONE is ever going to diminish the U.S. military bases to the point of closing a significant number in the U.S., much less closing them all. That isn't going to ever happen, so there's no point in even thinking of trying to be activists aiming to get all of the U.S.-territory bases closed. There'd be major opposition to closing many of the bases in the USA proper. There'd be the political opposition that alone would probably be undefeatable in practical terms, and there'd certainly be opposition with regards to local economies in the U.S. Surely many U.S. military personnel, so including troops, would oppose closing the bases, unless they were provided with an alternative means of adequate and better income, etcetera. Instead of seeing themselves heading for "skid row" with military base closings, which'd come to mean de-enlisting members of the military (I believe), I think they'd want to hold on to whatever they get for income security from the military. We'd need the majority of the soldiers to side with closing the bases.
It ain't ever gonna happen. And it's not likely that many U.S. bases overseas or abroad are going to be closed, ever; not for as long as the U.S. remains the military superpower anyway. Even once that status became obsoleted, the U.S. would surely work to try to keep as many overseas bases as possible under its control or "titleship".
The overseas ones need to be stopped first of all though. They're the bases really used, built up, added to, ... for the purpose of [full spectrum dominance], which of course (I think anyway) means more wars. It's surely due to these many bases that the U.S. can get foreign govts to become very corrupt, oppressive, fascist-corporatist or corporatist-fascist, whatever, and committing genocides directly and through proxy powers.
I believe that's a fair assessment, anyway.
David Vine says, "According to Rumsfeld's estimates, we could save at least $12 billion by closing 200 to 300 bases alone".
Perhaps I'm mistaken, but that doesn't sound like a whole lot of money for 200 to 300 bases. I would've expected their cost to be considerably higher than this. And maybe I'm also mistaken about this, but $12bn seems nearly trivial compared to the U.S. military budget's total. Also, what's the $12bn compared to what goes into the MIC pockets? What about the cost of all of the oil or energy resources the U.S. military burns up, sucks down, ...? Surely much higher than $12bn, right?
$12bn for 300 bases and if there are 1,000, then the cost, assuming the same average cost per base, when the cost per base surely varies enough; for 1,000 it'd be around $40bn. That also is tiny compared to the U.S. military or "defence" budget. It's a "drop in the bucket", in comparison; I think. Of course the bases overseas need to be closed nevertheless.
thanks for your reply, mike c. yes closing bases in the u.s. is a distant dream, but not that distant from closing them overseas, in my opinion.
good points about mcdonalds et al. someone said in a movie i saw recently (which one? brain not working yet) "do you realize no country with a mcdonald's has gone to war w/the u.s.?" or something like that. unstated is that usually a military base is a prerequisite for a mickey d's. market penetration, i think, is always one goal of military intervention.
Do any of you remember when Donald Rumsfeld said in 2002, "The Department of Defense can not account for 2.2 TRILLION Dollars of expenditures?" Then, in 2003, the GAO came out with, "The Department of Defense can not account for another 1 TRILLION Dollars of expenditures." And, nobody said diddle.
Have any of you read Joseph Stiglitz's, "The Three TRILLION Dollar War?"
Have you noticed that President Obama only mentions the 1.2 TRILLION Dollar debt?
He never refers to the 10.7 TRILLION Dolllar National Debt and that at the end of 2009 the National Debt will be over 11.9 TRILLION Dollars.
Where can you start cutting? The Department of Defense with 1000 bases and over 100,000 mercenaries (Blackwater, Dyn Corp, CACI, and others are paid from Department of State, but do military assignments.)
Close 50% of the bases and move personnel and equipment to National Guard Bases. On the coasts, they could check all the containers before letting them out of docks....On the boarders, they could check cars and trucks entering and leaving. Inland, they could be ready to aid in case of emergencies and rotate out to coast duty or border duty or do river port checks of cargo. Put the Marines back at the U.S. Embassies.
Cancel all reconstruction contracts with American Companies in Iraq and Afghanistan.(Bechtel, Halliburton, KBR, Carlyle Group etc. have been paid trillions over the years and they just sub-contract the work out for a small percentage of the money they receive from the government. Let Iraqi companies rebuild Iraq. Let Afghan companies rebuild Afghanistan. (And, pay them directly)
The United States and Saudi Arabia created the 100,000 man Islamic Militant Force. If those are the terrorists of today and that is the enemy of the United States, why do we need jets, bombers, missles, submarines, aircraft carriers? They are now working in small cells in their home countries.
Personally, I believe that World Trade Center #7 was demolished with explosives and since the Mossad had been living two blocks from Mohammd Atta in Florida and were caught celebrating on the New Jersey side of the Hudson River, what good did all that Department of Defense spending do?
"Personally, I believe that World Trade Center #7 was demolished with explosives"
Jesus. A Troofer. Note that it's a belief.
WTC #7 burned down because some idiot mayor decided to build a bunker in the sky, complete with its own generators and several tons of diesel.
"If you meet a madman who says that he is a fish and that we are all fishes, do you take off your clothes to show him that you do not have fins?"
--Milan Kundera, Risibles Amours, 1984
http://www.users.bigpond.com/pmurray
http://www.paulmurray.id.au/ageofworms
"herbert r chersonsky February 26th, 2009 6:15 pm
Do any of you remember when Donald Rumsfeld said in 2002, "The Department of Defense can not account for 2.2 TRILLION Dollars of expenditures?" Then, in 2003, the GAO came out with, "The Department of Defense can not account for another 1 TRILLION Dollars of expenditures." And, nobody said diddle."
I SEEM to recall something about some similarly huge sum of money disappearing, "mysteriously", on Sep. 10 2001, or maybe a day sooner or later. Perhaps I'm confusing that with something else of great significance happening on Sep. 10 2001, only vaguely believing there was also a huge sum of money that then "disappeared".
herbert ...:
"Have any of you read Joseph Stiglitz's, "The Three TRILLION Dollar War?""
YES, I recall the title, but what I believe to recall in what he said is that the $3TN is the cost to the U.S., while there'd be another $3TN or so cost to the rest of the world or to the countries serving as coalition allies in the GWoT wars, or in either one of them anyway. That's possibly mistaken recollection, but I thought he had said the full total worldwide would be around double the $3TN for the U.S. alone.
herbert ...:
"Have you noticed that President Obama only mentions the 1.2 TRILLION Dollar debt?"
Very interesting. I knew there were "rats" in the House, the White House.
herbert ...:
"Close 50% of the bases and move personnel and equipment to National Guard Bases. On the coasts, they could check all the containers before letting them out of docks....On the boarders, they could check cars and trucks entering and leaving."
HEH! You're getting carried away there budd! The borders? Which borders?! The Canada-U.S. border is nearly like the East-West Germany border during the Nazi regime period. When's all this damn hellbent police state fascism going to stop?! There's no danger entering the U.S. from Canada or Mexico! There's occasionally danger coming into these countries from the U.S., but nothing significant to speak of the other way around. The borders were sufficiently controlled [before] 2001! Enough is enough! Too much is too much! Yada yada etcetera.
herbert ...:
"Put the Marines back at the U.S. Embassies."
Those U.S. bases? Why not get rid of most of them too?! They evidently do mostly serve as spying posts or outposts for the U.S. ruling elites anyway. They certainly never do any [good] for the world.
Article's fine and some reader posts are fine, but recall:
- The 'Great Game', "Lord" Curzon
- "The Grand Chessboard: ...", Zbigniew Brzezinski
- Both games are about the West, Curzon for Britain or else England, and Brzezinski for himself and also the U.S., albeit Curzon was surely in it for himself too, I suppose; well, both games have the same target region and purpose, control of Asia, especially (since Curzon or sometime not long afterwards anyway) Asia's profitable or very profitable resources.
Maybe the Obama administration sending out Joseph Biden and a number of other people of the administration to foreign countries for "talks" very recently, according to something I read or else heard in a video yesterday anyway, has something to do with the "chessboard" sort of gaming that's going on. I'm not sure if it was in an article or video that I learned of Obama's team sending out these people, but they seemed to be at least a few or more and I was surprised. Perhaps it's not a surprising matter, but I was surprised, because there seemed to be a sense of rush(ing) involved; like urgent.
How Many Souls Is Enough?
If our wise ones are so godly, colorblind even,
Shouldn’t our God, too, be gender-blind,
Nation-blind,
Politics-blind
EVEN RELIGION-BLIND?
If layers upon layers upon layers of lies divide humankind,
How many souls could we save by freein’ our minds?
53,000 parents watched their children die today,
And hardly one “important” person blinked their way.
26,500 poor kids buckled under the strain,
How many children could “brake” a free market train?
26,500 lives were cut short on this very day,
Still our newspapers push fashion in the free market way.
26,500 babies died in their mother’s arms, be aware!
I explained this to the president’s men, but did they care?
Every day the “important ones” sacrifice 26,500 children on the alter of greed!
Then, they expect us to nod when they teach their moral creed?
More than eight 911’s a day proves WE DON’T SUFFER THE LITTLE CHILDREN,
Foreign Aid for dictators keeps our addiction alive, no joke.
While our first world weapons trade keeps the third class yoked.
26,500 souls departed just now!
And God’s “chosen” helpers did nothing.
Because tomorrow 26,500 more will die, how many is enough?
26,500 children gave up the ghost for poverty’s sake just today.
And I went shopping for a new cell phone,
Wanna see it?
This is a timely and perfectly sensible article. Calling for an evaluation of our military bases overseas is long overdue. Two thirds of them could be closed and would never be missed. The other third could be culled down to what we really need.
Don't be surprised if a number of the countries where some of these base's are, object to their closure. It means a loss of money both to the country and to its citizens.
Why bother evaluating them? The results already speak for themselves. I say shut them all down and give that money to us all to grow our own economies or something like that. And any country that wants to object, well it's time to pull the spoonfeeding plug and leave them on their own and if they can't handle it, well it's their fault not ours. I'd love to see those countries objecting squeal like pigs. Besides, it's not as if the people of those countries had anything to gain from those military bases and there's nothing they'll lose. So what if the political elites lose? Let them fail. They don't deserve to rely on us as military welfare punchbags, do they? Besides, how about putting a few military bases on both borders to curb all those illegal immigration?
Well, the countries might object. But the peole who live next to them won't: they are sick and tired of all the rapes. Google "okinawa rape" to get an idea.
http://www.users.bigpond.com/pmurray
http://www.paulmurray.id.au/ageofworms
Say what you will about the overseas bases. They are like the oasis of calm and financial stability in this turbulent world.
So are graveyards.
said with equal insight and utmost clarity and truth as the
Ancient Roman Historian TACITUS saying:
"what is actually Pillage, Rape, exploitation and theft of other nations' riches - they call EMPIRE...and what it leaves as Desert ..they call Peace".
Pure bullshit. Those overseas bases didn't stop Osama bin Laden and Al Quaida and the financial stability is already in the toilets. To say that they're the oasis of calm and financial stability is to say that gun control prevents crimes which it does not.
actually a US GENERAL -- General Smedley Butler -- US marine from the 1930's revealed it better:
that WORLD INSTABILITY has largely been DUE to the "RACKETEER USA"....
when he said in MANY speeches throughout the USA after his career that he gave speeches as "partial atonement for what I had done and what I allowed myself to do for our big bosses...and set aside my OWN conscience"....
:
"OUR FOREIGN POLICY HAS ALWAYS BEEN GEARED towards gathering as much of the world's resources unto ourselves at the expense of other nations...the TRUE purpose of our MILITARY is to make the world safe for Capitalism and our economic and cultuarl Assault...it has nothing to do with freedom, justice or democracy....it is about PROFITS for our Big Business, Big Corporations, Big MOney Big Finance...and they have their "brains"....people who decide and identify who our enemies will be to be destroyed so that our corporations can run their countries unmolested for our advantage....and for 30 years -- i was willing to set aside my own conscience...and i became their Chief Enforcer for our BIG MUSCLES -- which is our Military - to do their bidding.....there is no Money Racket that the US military is Blind to....WAR is a Racket by Big Money in order to fix the bad investments by our big banks and corporations ....so that , as we americans become NERVOUS when our DOLLAR can only buy 6 percent at home...we go abroad so our dollar can buy 100 percent...and where the DOllar Goes -- our FLAG follows -- where our flag goes -- our military follows....all IN SERVICE of OUR BIG BOSS....our Supernationalistic Capitalism....Our Foreign Policy of WAR is a RACKET -- and I was its Chief RACKETEER"
This issue has been "under the radar" of news coverage for too long. We simply assume that's the way things are because they have been that way since in the 1950's. We say we need those bases for national security. But when you consider over 1,000 bases, that does not look like "national security" - that looks like the Roman Empire or the British Empire. And when you hear the scare tactics, it begins to sound like paranoid schizophrenia with obsessive fear of a commie under every rock and behind every bush, and when that got old it became a jihadi terrorist under every rock and behind every bush.
We need to ask ourselves why we must have so many bases all over the world for national security when no foreign country has bases in the United States?
And when you look at who builds and maintains those bases, guess who we find? The same motley crew of sociopaths that are in Iraq - KBR, Halliburton, Bechtel, etc... We are feeding the military industrial complex contracts and trillions of dollars. It is kind of the on going bail out that no one really questions.
The other day I was looking at a book about the federal budget crisis on Amazon.com. One astute customer reviewer noted that:
"The book contains a pie-chart showing federal spending for 2006. The chart shows the following categories and the percentage of spending associated with each: Medicare (12.4%), Social Security (20.7%), Total non-defense discretionary (31.9%), Interest on the debt (8.5%), Defense (19.7%) and Medicaid (6.8%). Based on this information, one would expect that Social Security, Medicare, and Defense would receive nearly equal treatment in a book about the federal budget.
"I performed a rough count of the number of occurrences of specific terms and obtained the following results: Social Security (206 occurrences), Medicare (180), boomers/baby-boom (28), Defense (6), Pentagon (4), and missile defense (1)."
Americans from the highest to the lowest levels have what can only be described as a pathological belief that no amount of "defense" spending can ever be too much. (I realize that at the higher levels many people profit personally from federal "defense" spending, but that whopping conflict of interest aside, even some of the higher-ups do seem to genuinely believe what they're saying when they advocate for absurd levels of weapons spending).
America *is* a unique country in many ways. But for the most part, not in the ways that conservatives like to claim. Just look at the pie chart on this page:
http://www.globalissues.org/article/75/world-military-spending
The United States, just ONE of roughly 200 nations on earth, containing just 4% of the world's population, by itself spends almost HALF of the world's combined military budget.
Politicians on both sides of the aisle are eager to cut the programs that actually help us while pumping endless amounts of money into new nuclear weapons, fighter jets, Star Wars anti-missile programs, etc. It's utterly insane, and there's not another nation on earth that does it to the extent that we do.
For more info on America's network of bases, check out:
http://www.alternet.org/story/47998/?page=entire
"Politicians on both sides of the aisle are eager to cut the programs that actually help us while pumping endless amounts of money into new nuclear weapons, fighter jets, Star Wars anti-missile programs, etc. It's utterly insane, and there's not another nation on earth that does it to the extent that we do."
You are 100% correct and its just driving me nuts. I concur with your entire post. And there is never any message or discussion of this among the media talking heads.
Mark my wrods. Eventually social security and medicare will suffer huge cuts in order to support the empire. Forget national health care. It is all going to end badly.
d.k.shaw
US installation of military bases near Mecca and Medina prompted Al Qaeda to perpetrate the 9/11 hijackings, killing nearly 3000 USans. The elites controlling the US government quietly closed the bases after that but never took responsibility for the 3000 deaths. USans went shopping for new SUVs.
SUVs which need Saudi oil for fuel, and which the short-sighted Big 3 can no longer sell. Last year GM lost $1000 for every man, woman and child in the USA. The cycle of stupidity continues...
But not forever. Stein's law: If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.
http://www.users.bigpond.com/pmurray
http://www.paulmurray.id.au/ageofworms
Note that one of the fundamental reasons why the national guard was deployed in Iraq is because we had too many regular army units scattered across these foreign bases.
Never criticize a man until you've walked a mile in their moccasins - Native American proverb.