Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Healthcare vs. Warfare: The Future Costs of the Afghanistan War
On Wednesday, President Obama will address a joint session of Congress
on health care. Later this year he will decide whether to deploy
additional troops to the war in Afghanistan, in addition to the 69,000
troops already deployed. The struggle for health care and the struggle
to end warfare are inextricably linked. The cost for substantive
(though imperfect) health care reform as envisioned in the House of
Representatives approach (with the public option) is projected to
average $100 billion per year for the next 10 years. The cost to
continue the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are projected to cost
anywhere from $55 to $100 billion a year. Make a few modest reductions
to the baseline military budget and the difference is paid.
The choice is clear: healthcare or warfare; the Common Good or Common Destruction.
Two
key developments in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars will likely take
place this month. Congress will more than likely pass the Defense
Appropriations Bill for Fiscal Year 2010 (which begins on October 1)
and General McChrystal will likely request that additional troops be
deployed to Afghanistan. The Defense Appropriations Bill contains
about $130 billion to wage the wars and occupations in Iraq and
Afghanistan through September 30, 2010. General McChrystal is expected
to request that 15,000 to 45,000 additional U.S. troops be deployed to
Afghanistan—bringing overall U.S. troops levels in Afghanistan to
84,000 to 114,000.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes and out of the public eye, the Army,
Navy, Marine Corps and Air Force are preparing their respective budget
requests for FY 2011 (which begins October 1, 2010 and runs through
September 30, 2011).
The publication “Inside the Pentagon” reports:
“Now, as the
Pentagon weighs the FY-11 base budget and OCO requests submitted by the
services on August 14, it is finding the services’ FY-11 OCO requests
are larger than expected. Instead of a ‘substantial’ decrease tied to
the draw down in Iraq, the OCO total is ‘roughly flat’ compared with
FY-10, a Pentagon official said, noting it is only a bit under the
FY-10 level.”
In other words, the military services seem to be seeking $120 to
$130 billion in war funds for 2011, during a time period when
ostensibly the U.S. will be reducing troop levels in Iraq and at a time
when much is made about the $100 billion per year projected cost for
providing substantive (though not perfect) healthcare reform. (“OCO”
is the new term of art for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the
abbreviation for Overseas Contingency Operations.)
These initial requests likely will be modified to some extent as
they wind their way through the Department of Defense and the White
House. However, the size of these requests indicate the importance of
current organizing efforts to end funding for the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars and occupations.
Regrettably, though, it gets worse, as the U.S. will, without
substantive troop reductions, likely continue to expend anywhere from
$70 billion to $100 billion per year to continue on-going military
operations in Afghanistan in 2012 and beyond.
The decidedly non-partisan Congressional Research Service (CRS)
issued a report in August that projects average monthly troop levels in
Iraq and Afghanistan through FY 2012 (i.e., through September 30,
2012). It then draws upon the work of the Congressional Budget Office
to project future war costs. What emerges is a never ending war with
never ending costs unless pressure can be brought to bear upon
President Obama and Congress to reverse course in Afghanistan and to
maintain the course of troop withdrawal in Iraq.
The Congressional Research Service bases its analysis upon average
monthly troop levels over the course of a year rather than numbers of
troops on the ground in any given month. For example, if 100,000
troops are deployed to a country for the first 6 months of 2010 but
then are reduced to 50,000 troops for the final 6 months of 2010, the
average monthly troop level in 2010 is 75,000 troops. Using the
monthly average over the course of a year evens out the increases and
decreases in troop levels as troops are deployed into and redeployed
out of a country.
The CRS projects average monthly troop strength in Iraq with the
implementation of President Obama’s troop drawdown. In 2010 it
projects average monthly troop strength at 88,300, with the number of
troops deployed to Iraq falling to 45,000 troops by August 30, 2010
(reflecting the withdrawal of U.S. combat forces--and, for the moment,
leaves aside the question of whether combat forces are truly removed
from Iraq or are simply renamed and “retasked”). In 2011 monthly
average troop strength falls to 42,750 troops (reaching complete
withdrawal of all but a small residual force of about 4000 troops by
December 31, 2011).
While arguably the troop withdrawals should occur on a more rapid
timetable, pressure must be maintained upon Obama to ensure that he
does not allow any slippage to occur in his own proposed timetable.
The U.S. could, possibly, maintain a high level of troops in Iraq even
after a supposed “withdrawal” of combat troops if remaining troops were
to be retasked to other missions and redesignated. Also, a new
agreement could be reached with Iraq to maintain a larger U.S. military
presence in Iraq beyond the end of 2011.
Second, pressure must be exerted to prevent any expansion of the
U.S. military force in Afghanistan and then to reverse troop levels in
that country. Approximately 69,000 troops are currently deployed to
Afghanistan. McChrystal will likely seek an additional 15,000 to
45,000 troops. President Obama will most likely decide about troop
levels in Afghanistan by the end of this year.
And this is where the wave of substantive (though imperfect) healthcare reform comes crashing upon the shoals of warfare. Keep $100
billion in mind—the projected cost for each year of healthcare
reform—as you read the following based upon reports from the
Congressional Research Service and the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO).
In January 2009, the CBO projected the costs of maintaining troops
in Iraq and Afghanistan. It updated these projections in August 2009.
Caution is in order about drawing too firm a conclusion of war costs
based upon these projections. However, the projections do give a very
strong indicator of the likely lower end costs of continuing these wars.
The CBO projects that the cost to maintain 112,500 troops in Iraq
and Afghanistan in FY 2012 will be $95 billion. The CBO in January
projected that it will cost $70 billion to maintain 75,000 troops in
Iraq and / or Afghanistan from FY 2013 onward (though it lowered this
projection to $55 billion for FY 2014 onward in its August 2009 report,
without an explanation for the lower figure). Now use these cost
projections of CBO with the troop projections of the Congressional
Research Service and you get the following prescription for never
ending warfare.
The CRS projects that average monthly troop levels in FY 2011 will
be 106,200. Looking at the $95 billion cost projection of the CBO (for
112,500 troops), one would think that the war costs in FY 2011 will be
in the range of $90 to $100 billion. Yet, as indicated at the start of
this article the military services are apparently seeking funding
somewhere in the range of $130 billion for FY 2011 (or slightly
lower). Either way—whether it’s in the range of the $95 billion or so
projected by CBO or the perhaps nearly $130 billion in the military
services’ initial budget requests—that’s more than adequate funding to
pay for substantive healthcare reform in 2011.
The financial hemorrhaging will continue for as long as the U.S.
maintains military troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. Let’s assume the
CRS projections are correct and the U.S. withdraws all but 4000 troops
from Iraq by December 31, 2011 and that the U.S. maintains troop levels
in Afghanistan at their current level, without any increase of the sort
that General McChrystal may propose.
The long term cost of the Afghanistan war will then likely be in
the range of $55 to $70 billion per year (with average monthly troop
levels of 4000 in Iraq and 67,500 in Afghanistan according to the CRS
projections). This is based upon the CBO projection that maintaining a
deployment of 75,000 troops will cost somewhere between $55 billion and
$70 billion per year from 2013 onward (on a slightly more optimistic
note, the CBO projects that it will cost somewhere in the range of $25
billion to $32 billion per year if U.S. troops levels are reduced to
30,000).
All of this leaves out any discussion of reframing the size of the
U.S. military following a decade of great expansion. In June 2001, the
U.S. maintained about 26,000 troops in the region. In December 2008
the Department of Defense’s Defense Manpower Data Center’s “Location
Report” stated that 294,000 troops were stationed in the region and
assigned to the military operations in either Iraq or Afghanistan. Of
these, 181,000 troops were deployed inside either Iraq or Afghanistan
(according to the DoD’s “Boots on the Ground Report” for December
2008) President Obama has yet to address his plans for the
redeployment of the 100,000 plus troops stationed in the region as the
troop drawdown in Iraq commences.
At this moment of critical decision-making we should utilize all
legal and extralegal (i.e., nonviolent civil disobedience) methods and
techniques to send the strongest possible message to President Obama
and Congress that it is time to completely end the U.S. military
misadventures in Iraq and Afghanistan.
On October 5, nonviolent civil disobedience/civil resistance will
take place at the White House. Organized by such groups as the
National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance, Witness Against Torture,
War Resisters League and Atlantic Life Community, this effort is an
opening salvo in a renewed and revitalized effort to completely end the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as to bring the U.S. into full
compliance with international law as regards torture and mistreatment
of those being held by the U.S. in the erstwhile “war on terrorism”.
The National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance website is with additional information available on the website of the War Resisters League.
The longer term Peaceable Assembly Campaign
is an umbrella effort being coordinated by Voices for Creative
Nonviolence in an effort to draw the connections between the continuing
pursuit by the U.S. and its allies of on-going Common Destruction in
Iraq, Afghanistan and the Occupied Palestinian Territories on the one
hand and the lack of funding for the Common Good—schools, health care,
full employment and living wage policies, the public infrastructure,
refugee services—on the other hand. The Peaceable Assembly Campaign
seeks as well to draw the connections between the ongoing
militarization of the United States and the critical necessity to
commit our country to a new environmentalism that, amongst other
things, makes the strong commitment to a renewable energy policy that
is safe for the environment.
The Peaceable Assembly Campaign begins, this fall, with the
development of local campaign committees to advance campaign objectives
and to lobby Congress regarding these objectives.
In January
2009, the PAC will focus upon President Obama. From January 19 to
February 2 we will maintain a daily vigil—which will include daily acts
of civil disobedience--at the White House seeking an end to funding for
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. This time period is critical for a
final attempt to influence President Obama before he submits his budget
request for 2011 to Congress. January 19 marks the start of President
Obama’s second year in office with February 2 being the date by which
he is supposed to submit his 2011 budget to Congress, a budget that
will include funding for the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
After February 2, the Peaceable Assembly Campaign will once again
emphasize legal and extralegal lobbying work to achieve its
objectives. The extralegal lobbying work will consist of nonviolent
civil disobedience at the offices of Representatives and Senators who
do not agree with the objectives of the campaign—and especially who do
not commit to cutting off funding for warfare with a concomitant
redirection of funds to serve the Common Good. This phase of the
campaign is timed to the legislative calendar during which Congress
will be developing and enacting the Defense Appropriations Bill for
2011—a bill which will likely include funding for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. More than likely the House and Senate will act upon the
Defense Appropriations Bill for 2011 by the end of July 2010. The
Peaceable Assembly Campaign can be reached by email (pac@vcnv.org), by phone (773-878-3815) or on the web (http://
These next several weeks and months are critical in redirecting our country away from Common Destruction and towards the Common Good. Decisions will be made by President Obama and Congress which could send hopes for health care, education, living wage jobs, a new environmental policy crashing upon the shoals of never ending war in Iraq and Afghanistan. We must insert ourselves into this decision-making process. We cannot afford to not utilize legal and extralegal (civil disobedience) lobbying, tactics and strategies to bring about an end to the Common Destruction being waged globally in our name.

21 Comments so far
Show AllIt may be that our collective conscience is telling us that we are unfit to live and we are doing everything we can to self destruct before what we are doing can occur to us on a conscious level.
If we could just stop. Stop working 60 hours a week. Stop trying to cheat each other. Stop watching TV. Stop looking for scapegoats--- Maybe we would have time to think.
Stop eating, stop living in a sheltered comfortable location, stop resisting arrest.
Actually you, like most other people, probably do eat too much. Your heat pump has rendered you indifferent to natural cycles, and, like me, you probably would never resist arrest.
Police have far too much power. If they don't like you they have the authority to 'run you in' on any charge they find convenient. If the case winds up in court they would lie when the truth would do just as well. Remember Mark Furman? If you are black don't forget to say 'sir'.
Well said.
Before you say another word about health care--see "Sicko" Then heed this--what are you going to do, good men, good men?--I'll tell you what I'm going to do--I'm not going to wait for them to pretend that they will change--I'm going to get off my ass and participate in pro-active events to take the power away from those unfit to hold it--it's been way too long since justice has been served in these United States--we must meet on the shores of the Potomac and take back out nation--all who see tyranny must act now and muster in DC beginning October 4th and ending when we have succeeded--those who cannot make it must support the cause by striking until the job is finished. Let the whole world see Americans at their best--"Because now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the true spirit of the United States of America. I'll see you there the Right and the left--We won't be fooled again!
Why wait until Oct. 4? Why not today, tommorow, right in your hometown? We sheepish Americans can't turn off our teevees and computers and all the other electo-rubbish we've been sold to keep us quiet, and get the hell out in the streets of YOUR HOME TOWN! No need to wait for "MoveOn" or any other sanctioned beauracracy to give permission to march. Start believing who the real Superpower is: it is you and me and our neighbors, not some invisible entity calling the shots from Manhattan! Wake up!
It has always been this way ever since Vietnam War. There is a reason Medicare and SS were kept limited to 65 and over. But what makes today worse is that the training in the military is poorer than ever, overcoming PTSD is left for cheaps, single payer even as it exists is in the red if the VA is any indicator, and even if you signed up to join you're not safe. While I was sick, another young soldier returning was facing financial ruin and my wife and neighbors of all political stripes stepped in to offer financial help to this young soul and saved him from another mortgage meltdown as well as helping his wife pay the bills. His wife's health was already in peril and she was already closer to losing her life due to lack of coverage from unemployment. He thanked everyone and told my wife that if it weren't for them, he would ended his own life just like that. How many returning soldiers will have the love and care that my neighborhood has? I was nice enough to give Obama one chance to prove that he meant change for the better even when I was very reluctant to vote for him.
PS: Despite the benefits soldiers have, my neighborhood can't trust government to provide 'em. That's why we would rather take our chances chipping in and helping out and this article confirms government's selfishness !
Excellent comment.
An excellent analysis by Mr. Leys.
This is the point I've been trying to make for several months now: Warfare or Healthcare. The money is there.
This is another incredibly insulting and familiar article, that reads like a computerized opinion on murder and destruction. Who on earth would give a damn about a country that stopped an unprovoked attack and invasion of another country because it cost too much money?! If people wrote and talked about the horrible immorality of murdering people across an ocean that never attacked America, as much as they write and talk about how that "misadventure"(?!?) is draining the economy, then the future of this country may have hope and respect from people all around the world. But no. Again we have to withdraw because we need the money spent on it, because we don't have a good enough strategy to continue to occupy and oppress the people of Afghanistan. With that kind of thinking, a booming economy in America would be a sign to the rest of the world that the empire now has enough money to invade and destroy at will.
I predict future happiness for Americans if they can prevent the government from wasting the labors of the people under the pretense of taking care of them.
Thomas Jefferson
We are lost
http://healthcare.kucinich.us/petition/
Kucinich has posted an online petition to declare Health Care a Human Right
Sioux Rose
Just as Obama shows that the gigantic insurance networks are "too big to fail," and likewise donates our hard-earned dollars to the banks because they are too big to fail, the same pattern is showing with the military. Nick Turse and others have published articles on CD relating the manner by which the military has insinuated itself into a great many domestic product arenas. Too many would lose contracts and money were the military to stop the orders, a lucrative revenue chain that many senators have recognized brings "jobs" to their districts. This, of course, causes those senators who MIGHT have considered a more peaceful path unable to change course as their communities would lose jobs.
The wisest use of the US military would be taking its manpower out of the destructive "theaters" of war, and bringing it home to ghetto regions and abandoned neighborhoods. Surely all that manpower can rebuild homes and schools, teach the unemployed legions of the young, particularly those of color, how to work with construction materials. And the entire project should involve greener technologies.
Companies pay big bucks for highway signs and similar exposures during televised sporting events. If a company like Coke donates $50,000 to such a project, it gets a permanent logo on the end of the block it helps to finance. Community gardens can be part of this recipe, too.
In other words, I understand how inextricably connected with fiscal channels, the U.S. labyrinthian military now is. Rather than cut off its tentacles (or perhaps testicles, while we're at it), these living membranes should be used in acts that construct, conserve, and increase value... as opposed to treating so many human beings like worthless collateral damage. It's a matter of using this omnipresent resource along positive, as opposed to negative, life-negating channels.
Well said, SouixRose and I agree with everything - the military has the infrastructure that can (and should) be used but for building up rather than tearing down.
But then, what would happen to your young man who has been indoctrinated with body counts since before he was a teenager? Without the destructive military option, HE'D be needing PTSD treatment, wouldn't he?
Sioux Rose
JLD: I believe humanity, with the US at the head of this ship of transformation, is in need of a major tuning of its shared compass. The masculine, pro-force, Mars-rules bankrupt ethos has literally brought humanity as well as the ecosystems it relies upon to the brink of extinction. Venus represents the counterpart, and her energy centers on caring and giving pleasure, as opposed to Mars generally offering pain. Even in the develop-muscles strategic incentive practiced at the nation's gyms and boot camps, it's all about "no pain no gain." That same worship of pain and force ever at work.
Men who are taught to honor Venus can take pride in what they can build, in helping inner cities become thriving metropolis centers, as opposed to damanged limbs, dis-eased parts of the body politic. So it's really the matter of using all that muscular manpower in a new and vital life-affirming as opposed to life-negating direction, a basic ZEN nostrum applied to the military.
Is there another choice really? Our nation under militarism is making it so painfully clear that it would rather bomb the children of foreigners (those who possess the resources needed to keep the military engines running) than provide health CARE to its own citizens. At the least you'd think they'd regulate the bastards, a/k/a insurance companies and hold them under INDICTMENT if they DARED to rule against the medical needs of persons paying in every month. I cannot think of a more obvious example of corporate malfeasance than that!
If present politics were mathematics, not a single one of its elected equations would balance. And therein lies the Venus-Mars rub... there's a reason the cosmic clockmaker placed earth in orb between these two "love" stars.
Holy Sacrilege! Is someone taking about war and health care costs in the same article? You mean to tell me that our government needs money to pay for wars? I thought wars weren't optional? I just can't remember a news item saying that wars were paygo. I've never heard a politician saying the words "we can't afford" in regard to war unless he was the "discredited" Kucinich.
This country is so past tense.
In the unlikely event that we actually decided to have a real budget accounting where all expenses were included and all expenses were capped at the proir year's revenue, we might begin to talk about what costs what. As it stands, it's a fool's game.
Why?
Because there are 12 private banks called the federal reserve that can legally issue themselves and other banks money without a revenue source. You can't do that and neither can I. After that grand larceny, it just gets worse. The most conniving, greedy people on earth can issue money without working for it. It seems it can't get much worse than that but it does because these "pillars" of the community are now what every bright college kid wants to be. Until those top dog crooks are imprisoned, there isn't any hope for honesty anywhere down the food chain.
Nicely done AGG!
If you add up the Various NATO forces involved, US troop strength and that of the armed Contracters in Afganistan, the strength is already greater then the PEAK soviet strength.
This with the allegedly best trained, best equipped bravest and most deadly Military in the world.
Yet the situation gets WORSE.
A population with adequate health-care is what? Healthy, not struggling to survive. Ergo they are more likely to agitate against government policies no matter how much these policies benefit them. Thus it is in the public good to have little or no health care. At least for the sake of unfetterred warring, gutting of the constitution, and pillaging, plundering and raping of the people themselves.
Healthy people get brave now and then.
God Bless America!
The dual function of militarization and war is to protect and expand Empire and to waste so much money that there's little or nothing left in the government's treasury to provide for the common good. In the late 18th century this led to tha French Revolution, in the 20th Century to the Russian Revolution. And today militarization and war is bringing about the immiseration of the American people. Will this lead to revolution?
Guns vs butter. Guns always win. And if it looks they might not, the jackboots are there to turn the tide.
As Kurt Vonnegut recommended before he died: "Join a gang"