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From Military-Industrial Complex to Permanent War State
Fifty years after Dwight D.
Eisenhower's January 17, 1961 speech on the "military-industrial
complex", that threat has morphed into a far more powerful and sinister
force than Eisenhower could have imagined. It has become a "Permanent
War State", with the power to keep the United States at war continuously
for the indefinite future. 
But despite their seeming invulnerability, the vested interests behind U.S. militarism have been seriously shaken twice in the past four decades by some combination of public revulsion against a major war, opposition to high military spending, serious concern about the budget deficit and a change in perception of the external threat. Today, the Permanent War State faces the first three of those dangers to its power simultaneously -- and in a larger context of the worst economic crisis since the great depression.
When Eisenhower warned in this farewell address of the "potential" for the "disastrous rise of misplaced power", he was referring to the danger that militarist interests would gain control over the country's national security policy. The only reason it didn't happen on Ike's watch is that he stood up to the military and its allies.
The Air Force and the Army were so unhappy with his "New Look" military policy that they each waged political campaigns against it. The Army demanded that Ike reverse his budget cuts and beef up conventional forces. The Air Force twice fabricated intelligence to support its claim that the Soviet Union was rapidly overtaking the United States in strategic striking power -- first in bombers, later in ballistic missiles.
But Ike defied both services, reducing Army manpower by 44 percent from its 1953 level and refusing to order a crash program for bombers or for missiles. He also rejected military recommendations for war in Indochina, bombing attacks on China and an ultimatum to the Soviet Union.
After Eisenhower, it became clear that the alliance of militarist interests included not only the military services and their industrial clients but civilian officials in the Pentagon, the CIA's Directorate of Operations, top officials at the State Department and the White House national security adviser. During the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, that militarist alliance succeeded in pushing the White House into a war in Vietnam, despite the reluctance of both presidents, as documented in my book Perils of Dominance.
But just when the power of the militarist alliance seemed unstoppable in the late 1960s, the public turned decisively against the Vietnam War, and a long period of public pressure to reduce military spending began. As a result, military manpower was reduced to below even the Eisenhower era levels.
For more than a decade the alliance of militarist interests was effectively constrained from advocating a more aggressive military posture.
Even during the Reagan era, after a temporary surge in military spending, popular fear of Soviet Union melted away in response to the rise of Gorbachev, just as the burgeoning federal budget deficit was becoming yet another threat to militarist bloc. As it became clear that the Cold War was drawing to a close, the militarist interests faced the likely loss of much of their power and resources.
But in mid-1990 they got an unexpected break when Saddam Hussein occupied Kuwait. George H. W. Bush - a key figure in the militarist complex as former CIA Director -- seized the opportunity to launch a war that would end the "Vietnam syndrome". The Bush administration turned a popular clear-cut military victory in the 1991 Gulf War into a rationale for further use of military force in the Middle East. Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney's 1992 military strategy for the next decade said, "We must be prepared to act decisively in the Middle East/Persian Gulf region as we did in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm if our vital interests are threatened anew."
The Bush administration pressured the Saudis and other Arab regimes in the Gulf to allow longer-term bases for the U.S. Air Force, and over the next eight years, U.S. planes flew an annual average of 8,000 sorties in the "no fly zones" the United States had declared over most of Iraq, drawing frequent anti-aircraft fire.
The United States was already in a de facto state of war with Iraq well before George W. Bush's presidency.
The 9/11 attacks were the biggest single boon to the militarist alliance. The Bush administration exploited the climate of fear to railroad the country into a war of aggression against Iraq. The underlying strategy, approved by the military leadership after 9/11, was to use Iraq as a base from which to wage a campaign of regime change in a long list of countries.
That fateful decision only spurred recruitment and greater activism by al Qaeda and other jihadist groups, which expanded into Iraq and other countries.
Instead of reversing the ill-considered use of military force, however, the same coalition of officials pushed for an even more militarized approach to jihadism. Over the next few years, it gained unprecedented power over resources and policy at home and further extended its reach abroad:
- The Special Operations Forces, which operate in almost complete secrecy, obtained extraordinary authority to track down and kill or capture al Qaeda suspects not only in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in many more countries.
- The CIA sought and obtained virtually unlimited freedom to carry out drone strikes in secrecy and without any meaningful oversight by Congress.
- The Pentagon embraced the idea of the "long war" - a twenty-year strategy envisioning deployment of U.S. troops in dozens of countries, and the Army adopted the idea of "the era of persistent warfare" as its rationale for more budgetary resources.
- The military budget doubled from 1998 to 2008 in the biggest explosion of military spending since the early 1950s - and now accounts for 56 percent of discretionary federal spending.
- The military leadership used its political clout to ensure that U.S. forces would continue to fight in Afghanistan indefinitely, even after the premises of its strategy were shown to have been false.
Those moves have completed the process of creating a "Permanent War State" -- a set of institutions with the authority to wage largely secret wars across a vast expanse of the globe for the indefinite future.
But the power of this new state formation is still subject to the same political dynamics that have threatened militarist interests twice before: popular antipathy to a major war, broad demands for reduced military spending and the necessity to reduce the Federal budget deficit and debt.
The percentage of Americans who believe the war in Afghanistan is not worth fighting has now reached 60 percent for the first time. And as the crisis over the federal debt reaches it climax, the swollen defense budget should bear the brunt of deep budget cuts.
As early as 2005, a Pew Research Center survey found that, when respondents were given the opportunity to express a preference for budget cuts by major accounts, they opted to reduce military spending by 31 percent. In another survey by the Pew Center a year ago, 76 percent of respondents, frustrated by the continued failure of the U.S. economy, wanted the United States to put top priority in its domestic problems.
The only thing missing from this picture is a grassroots political movement organized specifically to demand an end to the Permanent War State. Such a movement could establish firm legal restraints on the institutions that threaten American Democratic institutions through a massive educational and lobbying effort. This is the right historical moment to harness the latent anti-militarist sentiment in the country to a conscious strategy for political change.
77 Comments so far
Show AllA couple hundred people will read and agree with this essay. A few dozen will post 50 comments. We'll all wring our hands and swear under our breaths. 300 million will watch sitcoms and dramas and sports on television tonight. All will be right with the world.
USA - the most successfully suppressed democracy? in the free? world.
When those cheap trinkets from China
stop coming to feed the addiction,
maybe a few heads will clear and the
light will shine in.
Hallelujah!
"300 million will watch sitcoms and dramas and sports on television tonight. All will be right with the world."
Correct, so went the draft, so went the concern.
A gas tax of a couple dollars a gallon to fund war would get people's attention. But that will never happen.
Bryan Williams mentioned the MIC warning from Eisenhower on the NBC network news last night.
I was amazed, but why did this get on the news? What is the point?
When Michael Moore’s documentary Capitalism: A Love Story made it to the movie theaters, I thought it was a stunt to show even if people are spoon fed information about corporate/government power, they still will not do anything. I hope people start waking up.
For those who still buy the official 911 story-narrative, note the fascinating "coincidence" that a new enemy was required in order to justify funding the already-bloated MIC. Then, just in time, it arrives on the scene, and next thing you know, the military budget is doubled.
Also, as per Mr. Porter's call for an organized movement, given the pre-emptive arrests of those working on that objective, added to the presidential assassination order that holds such a loose grip on the concept of terrorist as to allow principled activists to qualify, added to the spy networks watching for this very thing... you realize that this dangerous behemoth (MIC) also watches out for "domestic" enemies. Like a beast, it regards any threats to its growing powers as worth stopping before they catch on. The "law" has been bent to preserve this monster in lieu of civil liberties and human rights. NOT a pretty picture...
So let's all stay hidden in our homes and apartments. It's best we don't act on moral convictions. I mean, it's not as if all the things you just mentioned were fabricated and embellished to get intelligent people such as yourself to live in cowardly fear.
Besides, death is inevitable, but god forbid we give our lives for a greater cause. I can think of no instance where the world was bettered by an unselfish martyr. You know that nagging feeling in your gut and heart to get out of your comfort zone and live your life with the understanding that we are eternal beings of conscious energy, and what we do in life echoes in eternity, maybe you should do more than just hear it; listen to it.
TYLER DURDEN a/k/a Martian Bachelor, et al:
How DARE you project this condescending indictment at me?
Talk about what YOU in your plethora of screen-names have done to further "the cause."
I've been to protests, been fighting these SAME battles for 40 years.
I teach. I write books. And don't talk to me about courage. I probably have more in a toe nail than you possess in your entirety.
"Step outside a comfort zone?" Are you f--king for real?
To teach a subject that few understand and many denigrate IS outside a comfort zone.
To have raised children as a single mother is outside a comfort zone.
To be a feminist in a still sexist nation, increasingly turning rabidly to the right, is outside a comfort zone.
To not use TV, a cell phone, or many modern amenities is outside a comfort zone.
To have spent time traveling ALONE in India, Nepal, Malaysia, etc. was outside a comfort zone.
To self-publish book after book for virtually NO reward, is outside a comfort zone.
Get off my case, you lamebrain & judgmental sack of ...
To me, your comments didn't seem to inspire anyone to get out there and do anything. You could of used your life experiences to explain how important it is to protest and to NOT worry about all the things you mentioned. Instead, you injected fear and doubt into anyone who was thinking about taking action. Why? And why are you so angry?
My comment wasn't an attack on you, but for some reason when you speak in generalities, insecure people always assume you're talking about them. My reply was more of a sarcastic response to the negative/fear-inducing comments you made. Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate. Hate is the path to the darkside.
I'm sorry you feel that nobody appreciates your work, it must be tough.
Great Lawks Almighty, Sioux Rose, you are a troubled young soul, and no mistake. Poisonous rhetoric flows out of you at the flick of a switch. So much for your so-called enlightened stance on life. How do you get off calling someone a "lamebrain" and swearing in a post?
What hubris!
The US military exists to protect US companies with international interests. I can never understand the hysterical screams from the right about the "free market". If the "free market" is so good, then US companies can operate without the support of the US military, i.e., tax-payers dollars.
It was never a free market but a misnomer. It's just like that on the MIC especially on education and jobs. Brainwash enough people into believing that militarism will defend freedom on the markets and here's what happens. In a room of 20 young people for example, recently educated or working, one person speaks out against the military while 10 of them beat that lone voice while the other 9 are either wishy washy or just afraid to lose their skin. But I think there's another problem. The right makes it feel entertaining when they scream about "free markets" and the thought of using the military to lynch anyone who speaks out. It goes like this "Take this free market or take a whipping from the military". Make it sound entertaining and people can get hooked into the wrong idea just like that.
"The US military exists to protect US companies with international interests. I can never understand the hysterical screams from the right about the "free market"."
I thought the article laid it out quite well - it is NOT a free market, for invariably markets are "opened" at gunpoint, continued to be enforced at gunpoint and foreign leaders deposed if necessary.
Try downloading "War is a Racket"; it's short and to the point.
N.
Just as Orwell wrote in 1948.
Referendums on the military budget are long overdue. Let the people decide. http://ni4d.us/
I like that idea but there's just one problem. How do voters overcome intense campaigning efforts from the goons with the big money and entertainment spin? It would be nice if George Soros would do for defunded progressive groups what the Koch Brothers do for their rightwing groups. That would at least keep the competition fair so our side could win the PR war against expanding military budgets.
This is how the Swiss have done it for over 160 years of peace, prosperity, economic democracy, education, healthcare, no boom and bust, a healthy environment and so on:
http://direct-democracy.geschichte-schweiz.ch/
I'm sure that there's a lot of good things for the Swiss to brag about but I don't think that Americans think like the Swiss. Look at Obamacare that resembles the German/Swiss model. That got passed and the Democrats lost. But that aside, didn't the Swiss people also have to face well-funded opposition groups campaigning against social democracy in those 160 years? If so, what is it that the Swiss did to overcome their well-funded brainwashing campaigns?
"didn't the Swiss people also have to face well-funded opposition groups campaigning against social democracy in those 160 years? If so, what is it that the Swiss did to overcome their well-funded brainwashing campaigns?"
The Swiss did what they do when faced with undemocratic campaigns--they held lots of voter initiatives and referendums to correct any problems stemming from these campaigns.
Oh please. Obaminationcare is nothing like the Swiss health care system.
Swiss--NON-PROFIT, price controls, highly regulated.
Good grief!
Okay, but Germany and Switzerland don't have a single payer system like Canada. How's their health care system doing now? That may be good to hear about the fact that there's more non-profit, price controls, and lots of regulation on the insurance companies but I'm firmly against forcing people to buy insurance out of their own pockets. We're already paying lots in taxes and the least we could get is basic health care coverage from the government especially for those of us who are unemployed or underemployed. I hope you see the difference and what I'm after.
MAX: I agree about the funding. The Bible says the LOVE of $ is the root of all evil for a reason. I love the part about it being easier for a camel to get through the eye of a needle than a rich man to be parted from his money.
Although there have been some clear-minded persons of great wealth who campaigned AGAINST another round of tax cuts to those who "brought it on," the Wall St/bank crash, that is; and Nader executed the literary equivalent of bending down on one knee to beg the rich's indulgence ("Only The Super-Rich Can Save Us")... there sure is a gaping vacuum in terms of GENUINE media funding for causes that don't align with uber: capitalism, the make-war state, or the disabling convenient fictions that increasingly narrow the lines of who gets the benefits. It's interesting how US interests are hooking up with those of India, as each ultimately acts to preserve its own version of a caste system. In the US, it's just more subtle.
I have to get that book by Nader that you mentioned. The Obama supporters have been known to make fun of that title and some would use it to prop up their "a vote for Nader is a vote for Republicans" theory. The Republican supporters would use that title to tie socialism to elitism. I can't blame Nader for writing such a book. It reminds me of what I learned about the history of cutting diamonds. Before lasers came about, the only way to cut a diamond would be to get another diamond to cut it. On a recent discussion on another topic, I asked an Alex Jones supporter who always hates George Soros what he thought of the idea of getting Soros to do what Hugo Chavez does. He was a big Chavez fan and told me more about it. All along, he would look like a rightwinger despite his valid criticism of Bush and Obama giving away to Goldman Sachs until I mentioned Chavez to him. I'll have to see how that catches on to others like him.
I think that the Supremes also opened the floodgates to foreign campaign "contributions". Chavez might be able to have some influence here. As you know, he uses referendums and abides by their results.
The nostrum that referendums cost too much has been nullified by our present technology. Direct democracy is the future. Representative government will die slowly and cause lots of collateral damage in the process.
The Offense Dept budget should be cut by 99%. It won't be because the MIC has contractors and sub contractors in cities and small towns all across the U$A. Workers are so terrified of loosing their jobs that they will not vote out the war machine. The taboo against speaking out on this issue is so strong that even the so called peace groups have been silent. I live in Vermont and our Senator Leahy campaigned on the MIC jobs he brought to the State. Of course, he won the election...again.
Read my article on this topic titled, AN IMPORTANT MORAL QUESTION. It is on the Internet and has been published in Canada, but banned in the U$A.
Can't find it !
http://archive.peacemagazine.org/v25n4p18.htm
Thanks !
thank you, rosemarie!
"Will the churches ever break their silence on this issue? An important moral question needs to be answered. Would it be moral to provide a bulletproof vest to someone who was intent on invading, looting, and occupying a neighbor's house? What is the moral difference between providing bulletproof vests to a gang of home invaders and supplying Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles for the invasion/occupation of Afghanistan?"
~ ~ ~
astounding isn't it? for a brief time while in high school i joined the rainbow girls, but two conditions of membership bugged me. 1) the vow of secrecy and (2)the theme song, "onward christian soldiers." how in the world can the religious believe that they are immerced in the spirit of the prince of peace support war without giving it a thought? do these not see the hypocrisy, the dichotomy, in opposing ideals? once i viewed such zealots as part of an ignorant fringe group that would surely fizzle and die, shrinking into the shadowy darkness as the "tree of enlightenment" grew stronger, nurtured by knowledge and understanding gained from moral reflection. yikes! was i naïve or what?
i've often wondered how a congregation can join together lifting their voices in unison in praise of Love and Peace (the dreaded "p" word?), "the good samaritan," "do unto others" then shake the pulpiteer's hand, "great sermon, rev!" step out into the "real world" where none of the high ideals apply.
the young developing mind coerced to subjugate curiosity as the enemy of faith and that introspection or "daydreaming" opens the mind's door to satan may sacrifice the ability of the brain's synapses to correlate incoming stimuli from the 3D world. the data stored in the brain in compartments allowing one truth during sunday survice and another in our "dog eat dog" world. once the mind is ruled by myth the child has no impetus to even expect a logic based in empirical reasoning. in time that child has children of his own, does his duty and teaches his/her children well!
now comes the boob tube, the 20th century babysitter, allowing mom and dad some free time while the little ones can passively take it all in--or if bored, change the channel for better stimulus totally unconnected with any other channel.
HUMMINGBIRD: Thank you for the "testimony." I think it's much worse than you realize. Who was Bush's main support apart from the very rich who hardly constitute a large demographic? It was the fundamentalist churches and their membership into the millions. These groups don't just ignore the carnage guaranteed by America's martial foreign policy, they champion "our" troops and have been led to believe this is a Holy War. It is a dangerous situation, as you know; for once converted to a faith, reason need not enter the moral equation. And therein lies the rub. Of course Chris Hedges' important book, "American Fascists" lays out the links in the compelling case(s) he presents.
thanks Siouxrose, just told my son that as the proverbial 10 o'clock scholar of cd i write for practice never expecting a response. i do learn a lot as i peruse these comments while sipping my morning cuppa. i figured that "w" was offered the job as "leader of the free world" contingent on his willingness to get u.s. armies into iraq. i knew all along the search for wmds was an excuse not a reason. i gained some insight as to why this ne'er do well was chosen from molly ivans, who pointed out bush's use of evangelical code words making him the drawing card for the "too much heaven on their minds" crowd. and that worked! they flocked into the voting booths. googling anwar province i discovered in this thinly populated area lay a huge easy to reach pool of sweet, sweet crude. aha! then i learned that within a mere 5 days of w's first term there was a top level meeting to discuss the threat that sadam hussein wanted open bidding for developing iraq's oil--including china--drawing together the geopolitical and resource motives. thanks to all of you here at cd, i have discoved the wisdom of chris hedges.
now, i'm on my way to investigate your intriguing thoughts as to the balance of masculine and feminine as symbolized in the zodiac!
don, max, hummingbird, sioux...thanks for the comments. I do not blame religion as much as I blame Capitalism. Sometimes, religion inspires acts of peace and virtue. I think about MLK, the Berrigan brothers, Malcolm X, The St Pat's Four, Dorothy Day, Bishop Oscar Romero...
Capitalism is the big inspiration for war, war toys, violence in TV and video games...It has infected our culture and the educational system. Last night C-span2 aired the Congressional hearing on the rebuilding of Afghanistan. It was crystal clear again that the reason that the US imposes destruction abroad is to secure the rebuilding contracts for US corporations. It's very simple - first destroy their infrastructure and then get the contracts to rebuild. As Gen Butler said in 1935, War is a Racket. More recently Col David Hackworth said the same thing. Just follow the money.
Sorry, but I also wrote an article on the topic of religious influence. It is titled GOD AND THE RED SOX. It is still out there on the Web someplace.
"Sorry, but I also wrote an article on the topic of religious influence. It is titled GOD AND THE RED SOX. It is still out there on the Web someplace."
Just google your name and the title of your article. It works every time. :-)
We were told by Bush and Cheney that the war on terror was a new kind of war. Torture , disproportionate civilian causalities.False reason for invading a nation that had nothing to do with terror.So many troops seriously injured they cannot be counted and some are returned to duty with PTSD, amputees. No body counts of insurgents or civilians. No burial of dead insurgents. prosecutions convictions and long sentences, of suspected male Muslim U.S. citizens because they might become terrorist some day.Untold numbers of U.S. troops have died in all wars against terror including the suicides which are the highest of any war. Indefinite detention of so called "enemy combatants", execution of suspects by drones without a trial. America needs a total number of deaths due to the war on terror compared to the number of deaths on 9-11 and a total number of war crimes committed against troops and foreigners.
Martin Luther King Jr. was right wars are all about the rich using the poor for profiteering, so to speak.
Karma can be a real bitch. Our time is coming.
Porter has the total truth in this piece. sad nobody
picked up on Ikes speech and our Nation then went into
our age of Kennedy Camelot when the MIC was ignored
but allowed to prosper andd power up.
Iran is the next objective of Zion and its willing
dupe USA. Gaza and the west bank are precursers that
Zion will invade anybody anytime its dark heart feels
like it.
Welcome to the perpetual war state still trying to make
enemies out of allies, and reduce our global portrait
to that of an agressor nation.
Porter needs to mention the PNAC document signed by all
the best Neocons intending for the second Pearl Harbor,
9/11. MSM has sold the party line 9/11 conspiracy
story of bin laden to most of the us gullible public.
They swallow it each day on fox tv, but they never seem
to spit it out.
Woe be to we the sheeple who no longer know Peace as
an American trait, or even as a global objective.
Most people prefer to believe the lies the mic feeds them on the tv, radio, internets, mic funded mega-churches. The truth is so devastating that it throws people into deep depression, hopelessness and helplessness. The genocidal criminals are aware of this. Those who are in the greatest need of convincing that criminal genocidal behavior (war) must be stopped are those who are fomenting and actively participating in creating war. Deprogramming the minds of the warmakers of their hate and violence they so treasure and pleasure is what is needed.
Stringbean: I believe, at least in the lesser ranks, the whole madness feeds on a very brutal premise of masculinity. This need to be tough, hard, and able to remain impervious to feelings, emotions, or empathy. Such traits allow men (and now some ridiculous women, immitating these behaviors) to become killers. The military could not entice them, $ and all, if this mindset were also not operating. It's been long cultivated by Hollywood, sports like football, and even in religion when the idea of fighting for "God," or holy war comes into the twisted spiritual equation.
I realize men have their own cruel pecking order; and to the boy who is not muscular by nature, or doesn't seem to measure up in rites of prowess, he'll be forced to bear the stigma of humiliation. It may scar him for life. Yet if he joins the military and toughens up, puts on that classy uniform and boots, he just may win respect in his buddies' eyes.
There is a military recruiting station at the local Winn Dixie shopping center and I sometimes see the skinny boys trying to prove they can "be all that they can be," by measuring up to this very macho standard of what it means to be a man.
Society cripples women in different ways. How many girls think they need to get breast implants, develop eating disorders (in attempts to remain impossibly thin), or otherwise grotesquely alter their appearance to become more sexually enticing?
Many dislike astrology, but it represents SIX models of both masculine and feminine viable expressions, or archetypes. As a society, few of us can further afford the model written for, by, and about Mars: the war god masquerading as Creator. Is this not the ultimate inversion of truth, that in its power to destroy (but never create), this entity claims dominion? And once the atom bomb was discovered, it's my belief that civilization took a karmic nose-dive.
Had America recognized that it had taken a turn to the dark side, and instead of becoming morally drunk on owning this ungodly power, shown penitence by truly becoming a peace-making force, the inevitable dissolution of our nation would not be fast approaching.
Wars don't kill people.
Just as it is said that ignorance of the law is not an excuse for breaking the law, the soldier's ignorance regarding his true mission is no excuse for his actions, killing and maiming innocent people. The most honorable eventually realize this and commit suicide.
I’ve been re-reading ‘1984’ and was just practicing ‘Double-Speak’. But, damn that’s harsh, dkshaw.
As far as ‘breaking the law’ – the Bush Crime Family was not even held accountable, to say nothing about paying any price, for their treason.
The entire American economy is based on war, and our kids are brainwashed by the media, by the ‘patriotic’ sports events and, all too often, even by schools. Big money makes the decisions, not the guys on the ground.
What choice do these young kids have anymore? They buy into the propaganda at a young age and get caught up in it. I think we need to cut them some slack, although, I understand where you’re coming from.
I can handle guns, but don’t like them either. I’ve lived abroad; Americans, in general, have no idea how people in civilized countries view us. For the few of us who travel abroad, most stay at an American hotel. Tourists see some different landscape and architecture, eat some different food but, in essence, never leave home. Most Americans seem to be completely clueless, and have never even been exposed to any unfamiliar thought.
Yeah, pretty harsh for sure. I can forgive the ones who got roped in for the first couple years after 911, but now they should, but apparently don't, know the truth of what is happening and what has happened. You're exactly correct in your last paragraph. Clueless, unfamiliar thought, all of that. Insular is a good word.
Those of us who are older need to find a way to get to them, teach them, open their eyes and persuade them to stay out of the military. Those of us who are able need to give them jobs, or maybe give them a place to stay while they get an education.
My son, a Vietnam veteran, is involved in several veterans' organization and is the commander of his local VFW post. He tells me that young veterans coming back from these Mideast wars are seeking out older veterans because they say they can't talk to anyone else. His VFW group is currently trying to help 9 young men who have all served tour after tour in Iraq and Afghanistan despite eventually breaking down with PTSD.
In desperation, after being sent back into combat in spite of their shattered mental conditions, these young soldiers each went AWOL. This means that after several years of military service, each is now out of the service with a dishonorable discharge and is disqualified for VA services. Most are having domestic problems, have no health insurance, and are having no luck finding a job.
Unless you are a veteran suffering with PTSD or have been in the position of trying to cope with a family member suffering from PTSD, you have no idea the hell these people live with most of their adult lives. They are no less victims of war than anyone else caught up in this insanity. Many of them went into the service in the first place because there were no jobs. Recruiters have been hanging around high school for years with their glib talk of travel, free education, free medical care, etc., etc., etc. War has been glorified forever, it seems, and what do 18-19 year old kids know about the facts of war, anyway?
At last count, the official number of homeless veterans in the USA is over 120,000. The count has grown by 20,000 as new veterans from new wars have joined their ranks. That is the OFFICIAL count. The actual count, of course, is much higher.
The enemy is not the common soldier duped into believing the usual salesman propaganda. The enemy is the war mentality. War is indeed a racket and a disease of the human mind--a barbaric practice that should long ago have been abolished along with human sacrifice, slavery, and other such brutal and uncivilized practices. The reasons given for warfare are almost universally fabrications manufactured by power-hungry nations to gain something by force that belongs to another nation. Until we change the mindset that encourages, supports or permits such legal slaughter of one nation by another, we have no right to call ourselves civilized.
In the meantime, a little compassion for all victims of warfare, please!
BASEN: Thank you for the excellent post. Your points are all well taken.
A most excellent, enlightening post, Basenjis.
My heart bleeds for these guys.
Your comments give ‘Support the Troops’ a profound meaning – unfortunately not the one being propagated.
>>
The enemy is not the common soldier duped into believing the usual salesman propaganda. The enemy is the war mentality. War is indeed a racket and a disease of the human mind--a barbaric practice that should long ago have been abolished along with human sacrifice, slavery, and other such brutal and uncivilized practices. The reasons given for warfare are almost universally fabrications manufactured by power-hungry nations to gain something by force that belongs to another nation. Until we change the mindset that encourages, supports or permits such legal slaughter of one nation by another, we have no right to call ourselves civilized.
<<
Allow me to reiterate:
Those of us who are older need to find a way to get to them, teach them, open their eyes and persuade them to stay out of the military. Those of us who are able need to give them jobs, or maybe give them a place to stay while they get an education.
>>fabrications manufactured by power-hungry nations<<
Partially correct. In reality it is the wealthy few in and behind governments that want warfare because of its enormous profit potential for them. The populations of countries seldom want war without exposure to constant propaganda supplied by presses controlled by those same wealthy elite. The United States is not populated by "power hungry" people, but is 1% wealthy who literally own the government because they have purchased it certainly power-hungry thanks to the enormous profit potential involved.
I have compassion for the innocents killed, not for their killers. I'm sorry. I've lived too long and seen too much. Do not assume that I am unacquainted with PTSD and its causes.
Well argued, dkshaw.
I agree with your paradigm, but how do you separate the effect of the propaganda from the pervasive war mentality?
At enlistment age, military recruits are still children (especially from our 'lived too long and seen too much' POV). How many times have we said to ourselves, ‘If I knew then what I know now’? The thing is – at age 18 or so, we thought we knew an awful lot about a lot of things. Remember?
I hope there are at least some young people, who read the stuff on this site.
Keep the faith, my friend.
This seems a little like Democrat propaganda. To not mention the Truman Doctrine at all in an article like this is absurd. The MIC started with FDR and Truman. Also Clinton played a very important role in setting up the country for Bush and the Iraq War. His use of executive power to order military actions was similar to Truman's abuse of executive power. Consider Haiti, Bosnia, Kosovo for how much Clinton laid the groudwork for the Bush II presidency. And no mention of Barack Droneattack either and his role in all this.
Before WW2 the war opposition came from the old right non-interventionism and since then has been the paleoconservative libertarians like Ron Paul. The left in the sixties had a brief period of consistent war protest but they sold out and moved on pretty quickly. The far right has always been against war and still is today as much as ever. But this history and perspective isn't mentioned at all. There's also the progressive era and the big gov liberalism that led to our imperialist militarism then too.
Fact is that America is a "Welfare-Warfare State." As the federal government gains power and money from progressive and socialist programs it usually also expands its militarism so liberals and Democrats have often been the more pro-war political group. Today, they aren't as vocal about it, they just sort of ignore it and talk about issues like national healthcare and taking guns away from private citizens instead. The liberals that do still want to be vocal in their support of war just call themselves neocons and become Republicans.
Either way you have a big gov welfare-warfare state and the only real opposition comes from the right like libertarians such Ron Paul or Justin Raimondo. There's a reason why Justin Raimondo calls his site antiwar.com. Because begin antiwar is the most important issue for many on the far right. Seems like that deserves some mention.
"Consider Haiti, Bosnia, Kosovo for how much Clinton laid the groudwork for the Bush II presidency."
Halliburton had a lucrative deal there too but most of us would never find out. Here's an article on that company during the 1990s.
http://www.counterpunch.org/stclair07142005.html
The 2000s was only a continuation.
"As the federal government gains power and money from progressive and socialist programs it usually also expands its militarism so liberals and Democrats have often been the more pro-war political group."
The money isn't going towards the progressive and socialist programs as it's supposed to. It's being diverted to militarism.
"The left in the sixties had a brief period of consistent war protest but they sold out and moved on pretty quickly."
No, their war protesting efforts were then successful in ending Vietnam. Today, the war machine is deeply embedded into our lives that war protests are rendered ineffective until this empire nation finishes crumbling.
I agree the Vietnam protests were successful because for once you had the liberals really standing up to oppose war but not so much today. Libertarians, rightwing non-interventionists are still opposing war as they have been for 100 years.
All I can ever take seriously of libertarian are the civil libertarian ideas and where people make corrections on what's really free and what isn't but simply labeled "free". For a while in 2009, the "Tea Party" looked like a rightwing non-interventionist party but now we see that they're just neocons too.