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Cow Most Sacred: Why Military Spending Remains Untouchable
In defense circles, “cutting” the Pentagon budget has
once again become a topic of conversation. Americans should not
confuse that talk with reality. Any cuts exacted will at most reduce
the rate of growth. The essential facts remain: U.S. military outlays
today equal that of every other nation on the planet combined, a
situation without precedent in modern history. 
The Pentagon presently spends more in constant dollars than it did at any time during the Cold War -- this despite the absence of anything remotely approximating what national security experts like to call a “peer competitor.” Evil Empire? It exists only in the fevered imaginations of those who quiver at the prospect of China adding a rust-bucket Russian aircraft carrier to its fleet or who take seriously the ravings of radical Islamists promising from deep inside their caves to unite the Umma in a new caliphate.
What are Americans getting for their money? Sadly, not much. Despite extraordinary expenditures (not to mention exertions and sacrifices by U.S. forces), the return on investment is, to be generous, unimpressive. The chief lesson to emerge from the battlefields of the post-9/11 era is this: the Pentagon possesses next to no ability to translate “military supremacy” into meaningful victory.
Washington knows how to start wars and how to prolong them, but is clueless when it comes to ending them. Iraq, the latest addition to the roster of America’s forgotten wars, stands as exhibit A. Each bomb that blows up in Baghdad or some other Iraqi city, splattering blood all over the streets, testifies to the manifest absurdity of judging “the surge” as the epic feat of arms celebrated by the Petraeus lobby.
The problems are strategic as well as operational. Old Cold War-era expectations that projecting U.S. power will enhance American clout and standing no longer apply, especially in the Islamic world. There, American military activities are instead fostering instability and inciting anti-Americanism. For Exhibit B, see the deepening morass that Washington refers to as AfPak or the Afghanistan-Pakistan theater of operations.
Add to that the mountain of evidence showing that Pentagon, Inc. is a miserably managed enterprise: hide-bound, bloated, slow-moving, and prone to wasting resources on a prodigious scale -- nowhere more so than in weapons procurement and the outsourcing of previously military functions to “contractors.” When it comes to national security, effectiveness (what works) should rightly take precedence over efficiency (at what cost?) as the overriding measure of merit. Yet beyond a certain level, inefficiency undermines effectiveness, with the Pentagon stubbornly and habitually exceeding that level. By comparison, Detroit’s much-maligned Big Three offer models of well-run enterprises.
Impregnable Defenses
All of this takes place against the backdrop of mounting problems at home: stubbornly high unemployment, trillion-dollar federal deficits, massive and mounting debt, and domestic needs like education, infrastructure, and employment crying out for attention.
Yet the defense budget -- a misnomer since for Pentagon, Inc. defense per se figures as an afterthought -- remains a sacred cow. Why is that?
The answer lies first in understanding the defenses arrayed around that cow to ensure that it remains untouched and untouchable. Exemplifying what the military likes to call a “defense in depth,” that protective shield consists of four distinct but mutually supporting layers.
Institutional Self-Interest: Victory in World War II produced not peace, but an atmosphere of permanent national security crisis. As never before in U.S. history, threats to the nation’s existence seemed omnipresent, an attitude first born in the late 1940s that still persists today. In Washington, fear -- partly genuine, partly contrived -- triggered a powerful response.
One result was the emergence of the national security state, an array of institutions that depended on (and therefore strove to perpetuate) this atmosphere of crisis to justify their existence, status, prerogatives, and budgetary claims. In addition, a permanent arms industry arose, which soon became a major source of jobs and corporate profits. Politicians of both parties were quick to identify the advantages of aligning with this “military-industrial complex,” as President Eisenhower described it.
Allied with (and feeding off of) this vast apparatus that transformed tax dollars into appropriations, corporate profits, campaign contributions, and votes was an intellectual axis of sorts -- government-supported laboratories, university research institutes, publications, think tanks, and lobbying firms (many staffed by former or would-be senior officials) -- devoted to identifying (or conjuring up) ostensible national security challenges and alarms, always assumed to be serious and getting worse, and then devising responses to them.
The upshot: within Washington, the voices carrying weight in any national security “debate” all share a predisposition for sustaining very high levels of military spending for reasons having increasingly little to do with the well-being of the country.
Strategic Inertia: In a 1948 State Department document, diplomat George F. Kennan offered this observation: “We have about 50 percent of the world's wealth, but only 6.3 percent of its population.” The challenge facing American policymakers, he continued, was “to devise a pattern of relationships that will permit us to maintain this disparity.” Here we have a description of American purposes that is far more candid than all of the rhetoric about promoting freedom and democracy, seeking world peace, or exercising global leadership.
The end of World War II found the United States in a spectacularly privileged position. Not for nothing do Americans remember the immediate postwar era as a Golden Age of middle-class prosperity. Policymakers since Kennan’s time have sought to preserve that globally privileged position. The effort has been a largely futile one.
By 1950 at the latest, those policymakers (with Kennan by then a notable dissenter) had concluded that the possession and deployment of military power held the key to preserving America’s exalted status. The presence of U.S. forces abroad and a demonstrated willingness to intervene, whether overtly or covertly, just about anywhere on the planet would promote stability, ensure U.S. access to markets and resources, and generally serve to enhance the country’s influence in the eyes of friend and foe alike -- this was the idea, at least.
In
postwar Europe and postwar Japan, this formula achieved considerable
success. Elsewhere -- notably in Korea, Vietnam, Latin America, and
(especially after 1980) in the so-called Greater Middle East -- it
either produced mixed results or failed catastrophically. Certainly,
the events of the post-9/11 era provide little reason to believe that
this presence/power-projection paradigm will provide an antidote to the
threat posed by violent anti-Western jihadism. If anything, adherence to it is exacerbating the problem by creating ever greater anti-American animus.
One might think that the manifest shortcomings of the presence/power-projection approach -- trillions expended in Iraq for what? -- might stimulate present-day Washington to pose some first-order questions about basic U.S. national security strategy. A certain amount of introspection would seem to be called for. Could, for example, the effort to sustain what remains of America’s privileged status benefit from another approach?
Yet there are few indications that our political leaders, the senior-most echelons of the officer corps, or those who shape opinion outside of government are capable of seriously entertaining any such debate. Whether through ignorance, arrogance, or a lack of imagination, the pre-existing strategic paradigm stubbornly persists; so, too, as if by default do the high levels of military spending that the strategy entails.
Cultural Dissonance: The rise of the Tea Party movement should disabuse any American of the thought that the cleavages produced by the “culture wars” have healed. The cultural upheaval touched off by the 1960s and centered on Vietnam remains unfinished business in this country.
Among other things, the sixties destroyed an American consensus, forged during World War II, about the meaning of patriotism. During the so-called Good War, love of country implied, even required, deference to the state, shown most clearly in the willingness of individuals to accept the government’s authority to mandate military service. GI’s, the vast majority of them draftees, were the embodiment of American patriotism, risking life and limb to defend the country.
The GI of World War II had been an American Everyman. Those soldiers both represented and reflected the values of the nation from which they came (a perception affirmed by the ironic fact that the military adhered to prevailing standards of racial segregation). It was “our army” because that army was “us.”
With Vietnam, things became more complicated. The war’s supporters argued that the World War II tradition still applied: patriotism required deference to the commands of the state. Opponents of the war, especially those facing the prospect of conscription, insisted otherwise. They revived the distinction, formulated a generation earlier by the radical journalist Randolph Bourne, that distinguished between the country and the state. Real patriots, the ones who most truly loved their country, were those who opposed state policies they regarded as misguided, illegal, or immoral.
In many respects, the soldiers who fought the Vietnam War found themselves caught uncomfortably in the center of this dispute. Was the soldier who died in Vietnam a martyr, a tragic figure, or a sap? Who deserved greater admiration: the soldier who fought bravely and uncomplainingly or the one who served and then turned against the war? Or was the war resister -- the one who never served at all -- the real hero?
War’s end left these matters disconcertingly unresolved. President Richard Nixon’s 1971 decision to kill the draft in favor of an All-Volunteer Force, predicated on the notion that the country might be better served with a military that was no longer “us,” only complicated things further. So, too, did the trends in American politics where bona fide war heroes (George H.W. Bush, Bob Dole, John Kerry, and John McCain) routinely lost to opponents whose military credentials were non-existent or exceedingly slight (Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama), yet who demonstrated once in office a remarkable propensity for expending American blood (none belonging to members of their own families) in places like Somalia, Iraq, and Afghanistan. It was all more than a little unseemly.
Patriotism, once a simple concept, had become both confusing and contentious. What obligations, if any, did patriotism impose? And if the answer was none -- the option Americans seemed increasingly to prefer -- then was patriotism itself still a viable proposition?
Wanting to answer that question in the affirmative -- to distract attention from the fact that patriotism had become little more than an excuse for fireworks displays and taking the occasional day off from work -- people and politicians alike found a way to do so by exalting those Americans actually choosing to serve in uniform. The thinking went this way: soldiers offer living proof that America is a place still worth dying for, that patriotism (at least in some quarters) remains alive and well; by common consent, therefore, soldiers are the nation’s “best,” committed to “something bigger than self” in a land otherwise increasingly absorbed in pursuing a material and narcissistic definition of self-fulfillment.
In effect, soldiers offer much-needed assurance that old-fashioned values still survive, even if confined to a small and unrepresentative segment of American society. Rather than Everyman, today’s warrior has ascended to the status of icon, deemed morally superior to the nation for which he or she fights, the repository of virtues that prop up, however precariously, the nation’s increasingly sketchy claim to singularity.
Politically, therefore, “supporting the troops” has become a categorical imperative across the political spectrum. In theory, such support might find expression in a determination to protect those troops from abuse, and so translate into wariness about committing soldiers to unnecessary or unnecessarily costly wars. In practice, however, “supporting the troops” has found expression in an insistence upon providing the Pentagon with open-ended drawing rights on the nation’s treasury, thereby creating massive barriers to any proposal to affect more than symbolic reductions in military spending.
Misremembered History: The duopoly of American politics no longer allows for a principled anti-interventionist position. Both parties are war parties. They differ mainly in the rationale they devise to argue for interventionism. The Republicans tout liberty; the Democrats emphasize human rights. The results tend to be the same: a penchant for activism that sustains a never-ending demand for high levels of military outlays.
American politics once nourished a lively anti-interventionist tradition. Leading proponents included luminaries such as George Washington and John Quincy Adams. That tradition found its basis not in principled pacifism, a position that has never attracted widespread support in this country, but in pragmatic realism. What happened to that realist tradition? Simply put, World War II killed it -- or at least discredited it. In the intense and divisive debate that occurred in 1939-1941, the anti-interventionists lost, their cause thereafter tarred with the label “isolationism.”
The passage of time has transformed World War II from a massive tragedy into a morality tale, one that casts opponents of intervention as blackguards. Whether explicitly or implicitly, the debate over how the United States should respond to some ostensible threat -- Iraq in 2003, Iran today -- replays the debate finally ended by the events of December 7, 1941. To express skepticism about the necessity and prudence of using military power is to invite the charge of being an appeaser or an isolationist. Few politicians or individuals aspiring to power will risk the consequences of being tagged with that label.
In this sense, American politics remains stuck in the 1930s -- always discovering a new Hitler, always privileging Churchillian rhetoric -- even though the circumstances in which we live today bear scant resemblance to that earlier time. There was only one Hitler and he’s long dead. As for Churchill, his achievements and legacy are far more mixed than his battalions of defenders are willing to acknowledge. And if any one figure deserves particular credit for demolishing Hitler’s Reich and winning World War II, it’s Josef Stalin, a dictator as vile and murderous as Hitler himself.
Until Americans accept these facts, until they come to a more nuanced view of World War II that takes fully into account the political and moral implications of the U.S. alliance with the Soviet Union and the U.S. campaign of obliteration bombing directed against Germany and Japan, the mythic version of “the Good War” will continue to provide glib justifications for continuing to dodge that perennial question: How much is enough?
Like concentric security barriers arrayed around the Pentagon, these four factors -- institutional self-interest, strategic inertia, cultural dissonance, and misremembered history -- insulate the military budget from serious scrutiny. For advocates of a militarized approach to policy, they provide invaluable assets, to be defended at all costs.

75 Comments so far
Show AllVery good article by Mr. Bacevich though I must take issue with his belief that John McCain should be viewed as being a hero. Dropping bombs on people from 30,000 feet in the air against an under developed country like Vietnam that could never be considered a threat to the largest military power on the face of the earth should not be a reason to praise the actions of a warmonger like John McCain.
He was shot down while bombing a light bulb factory. I guess to some these light bulbs proved a grave threat to the security of the United States of America and had he not bombed that light bulb factory (killing Civilian workers by the way which is a war crime) "Americans would all be speaking Vietnamese".
So the "evil vietnamese" beat poor John when he was captured and all Poor John did was drop bombs on civlians in defense of "freedom".
how dare the vietnamese commit such an act of violence to an honest man for simply doing his job.
You left out that the Vietnamese save the war criminal McCain's life by pulling him out of the pond he landed in.As for the light bulb factory presumably without employees and McCain could tell that from 30,000 ft. We all know that when bombing indiscriminately from 30,000 will always hit the supposed target. Then their is McCain treason for giving the Vietnamese more than his name, rank and serial number and by broadcast to the American troops the propaganda that the Vietnamese told him to do. THIS IS IN RESPONSE TO THE CRETIN WHO DEFENDED McCain his being a war criminal and traitor.THIS IS NOT IN RESPONSE TO GwNorth. It's early and I screwed up.
mccain son of an admiral, grandson of yet another admiral "graduated" from his class of a little over 1600 cadets fifth last from the bottom - one can only wonder where the other four are.
he crashed 5 planes and was forbidden to fly anything but old demustered planes
he often went awol
he was an alcoholic
he went for two or three days in north vietnamese custody before cracking and agreeing to make anti-american propaganda for the cong
so let's stop with the war hero shit please
i wish mr b would explore the cog concept a little more
continuity of government:
"Back in 1987 during joint congressional hearings into the Iran-Contra affair, Rep. Jack Brooks (D-TX) asked Lt. Col. Oliver North, Reagan's point-man on the National Security Council:
Brooks: Colonel North, in your work at the N.S.C. were you not assigned, at one time, to work on plans for the continuity of government in the event of a major disaster?
Brendan Sullivan [North's counsel]: Mr. Chairman?
Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-HI), immediately squelched Brooks' inquiry:
Inouye: I believe that question touches upon a highly sensitive and classified area so may I request that you not touch upon that?
Brooks: I was particularly concerned, Mr. Chairman, because I read in Miami papers, and several others, that there had been a plan developed, by that same agency, a contingency plan in the event of emergency, that would suspend the American constitution. And I was deeply concerned about it and wondered if that was an area in which he had worked. I believe that it was and I wanted to get his confirmation.
Inouye: May I most respectfully request that that matter not be touched upon at this stage. If we wish to get into this, I'm certain arrangements can be made for an executive session."
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8572
--------------------------
peter dale scott has written extensively on this topic and in this article discussed how the mic have taken over the country
"In recent years I have become more and more concerned with the interactions between three important and alarming trends in recent American history. The first is America’s increasing militarization, and above all its inclination, even obsession, to involve itself in needless and pernicious wars. The second, closely related, is the progressive shrinking of public politics and the rule of law as they are subordinated, even domestically, to the requirements of covert U.S. operations abroad.
The third, also closely related, is the important and increasingly deleterious impact on American history and the global extension of American power, of what I have called deep events. These events, like the JFK assassination, the Watergate break-in, or 9/11, which repeatedly involve law-breaking or violence, are mysterious to begin with, are embedded in ongoing covert processes, have consequences that enlarge covert government, and are subsequently covered up by systematic falsifications in media and internal government records.
One factor linking Dallas, Watergate, and 9/11, has been the involvement in all three deep events of personnel involved in America’s highest-level emergency planning, known since the 1980s as Continuity of Government (COG) planning, or more colloquially as “the Doomsday Project.” The implementation of COG plans on 9/11, or what I call Doomsday Power, was the culmination of three decades of such planning, and has resulted in the permanent militarization of the domestic United States, and the imposition at home of institutions and processes designed for domination abroad.
Writing about these deep events as they occurred over the decades, I have been interested in the interrelations among them. It is now possible to show how each was related both to those preceding it, and those which followed."
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=22908
the fascists have run this country as mr b points out since at lease dec 7, 1941 but they have been a powerful forse since day one
MED: Great stuff. I suspected all this, but didn't have it laid out in such a clear, seamless depiction. Thank you for sharing this information. Anyone still think the government is building these covert edifices to protect citizens from outside dangers?
The globalresearch website runs a lot of stuff that you rarely see even on progressive websites. As does thirdworldtraveler.
When I started to deeply study post WW2 US elite foreign "policy", besides reading the obvious people like Chomsky and Parenti and Zinn, I remember reading an incredible book entitled "Friendly Fascism" by a man who was at least a little bit of an insider. The title refers to the idea that when fascism comes to America it will not look like screaming Nazis' parading around in goofy get-ups - it will come with a smile wearing an expensively tailored suit. And so it goes.
"The globalresearch website runs a lot of stuff that you rarely see even on progressive websites"
that's because they are not progressive at all
maybe when fascism coms to amerika it will look like katrina van heuvel from the nation - smiling and lots of make up
they might even use a guy like barry soetero who smiles real good...........
mccain IS a WAR criminal, as are all who slaughter for amerikan imperialism; and those in congress and the white house that support it !
Leave the Pentagon budget as it is.
That way we will have no problem adding to it the cost of two of our *top national security priorities* which are currently under threat due to a dire 'lack of sufficient funding'.
a) A robust public option or single-payer healthcare system.
b) A fiscally solvent, and robust Social Security fund.
.
.
.
These are urgent national security concerns, posing far more immanent a threat to the homeland than Muslim terrorists ever could hope to represent.
Well, I know this is coming from left-field, but I actually think if it were brought up before Congress, there could be some takers.
That's all that's needed to get the ball rolling... From far out in left field to home base.
I'd love to see our politicians trying to deny that healthcare and social security are not both inherent, and essential aspects of our national defense.
Indeed. As one of my buttons accurately points out:
"If We have the Money to kill People [with War], We've got the Money to help People."-Former British MP, Tony Benn
The profit motive needs very quietly to be laid to rest, deconstructed, forgotten, however obsolescence be defined. The latter being an example of dynamic - planned obsolescence is the antithesis of sustainability, arising from an unsustainable paradigm. The fact of any other 'economic' alternative being demonized despite factual data regarding the deleterious embattlement of the system, is a taste of the solipsistic reasoning. Scarcity based, and constantly generating ever greater scarcity, it can only be protected by force when it denies the capacity for healthy change.
Western economics is a derivative of the planetary creation - a minuscule and profoundly incomplete portion of wisdom within entire natural system. So the stunted version of life destroys the systems and the human life that has for millennia shared that wisdom - while blaming the victims of its entropic delusions.
I am sure you have something of importance to convey to your readers. However, you seem more occupied with impressing the world with your command of the language than in sharing your ideas. As an English professor who believed in simplicity in expression once admonished her class, "When you write, instead of preambulating down the boulevard, simply walk down the God damned street!"
The profit motive needs very quietly to be laid to rest, deconstructed, forgotten, however obsolescence be defined. The latter being an example of dynamic - planned obsolescence is the antithesis of sustainability, arising from an unsustainable paradigm. The fact of any other 'economic' alternative being demonized despite factual data regarding the deleterious embattlement of the system, is a taste of the solipsistic reasoning. Scarcity based, and constantly generating ever greater scarcity, it can only be protected by force when it denies the capacity for healthy change.
Western economics is a derivative of the planetary creation - a minuscule and profoundly incomplete portion of wisdom within entire natural system. So the stunted version of life destroys the systems and the human life that has for millennia shared that wisdom - while blaming the victims of its entropic delusions.
Excellent article.
Don't forget the role of the Pentagon in planning and executing false flag terror attacks of 9/11 either.
Rumsfeld the day before:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OlnQTcLHaMM
I just thinking about that little Rumsfield incident and where that $2.3 trillion went.
Yes, a great article. And if anyone disbelieves the vast power of myth, they should read this article.
It's just so obvious that the attack on the pentagon was orchestrated BY the pentagon, conveniently targeting the audit section, opposite the executive offices, requiring a nearly impossible flight path (well, certainly for the alleged hi-jacker Hani Hanjour anyway)
I wish people would wake up to the truth of 9/11. It's that single incident which has precipitated the orgy of military spending and warfare that will ultimately ruin the United States, if it hasn't already done so.
It saddens me to think that Cheney, Rumsfeld and their criminal cabal of neo-con crazies seem likely to escape justice for their crimes against humanity, and the staggering damage they have to the United States and the world.
It is difficult to comment on what is the truth about our warmongering country. The U.S. economy needs the defense curse for jobs. The people in the Army are usually the poor who if they survive can get benefits to help them live better--if they live.
That is a set-up. Those trillions of dollars could create other jobs, far more productive jobs, jobs that build a new national infrastructure of renewable energy, comprehensive public transit, diverse regional agricultural markets, etc etc etc, add other obvious priorities that COULD be funded. Universal health care as SS noted above. Oops he said public option but universal is what we need to fund.
We need CONVERSION from a militarist leech economy to a living economy. Take that trillion-plus annual budget, break it into five sectors (energy, transit, agriculture, health, education) and start shifting 10% a year, so that over ten years we ramp up a $200B annual investment in jobs and infrastructure in each sector. Spend the rest on securing Social Security. Orderly program of closing overseas bases, shifting bomb factories to high-speed rail plants, etc etc etc.
But what we are going to get is a horrific wrenching crash... UNLESS we get millions of USers in the streets with simple universal demands, demanding an end to the kleptocratic oligarchy that pilots this rusting hulk. No reform measures are going to turn this ship, we need a mutiny.
In my mind, this is the best article CD has ever run by Bacevich. The man IS growing and developing a greater capacity to look critically at the military-industrial establishment, the zone to which he dedicated much of his life.
This quote from the article is key:
" In a 1948 State Department document, diplomat George F. Kennan offered this observation: “We have about 50 percent of the world's wealth, but only 6.3 percent of its population.” The challenge facing American policymakers, he continued, was “to devise a pattern of relationships that will permit us to maintain this disparity.” Here we have a description of American purposes that is far more candid than all of the rhetoric about promoting freedom and democracy, seeking world peace, or exercising global leadership."
The quote supports the contentions of Jack Perkins.
Given its implicit truth, all talk of "supporting the troops" becomes inane, even with the help of PR campaigns intent upon masking the true purposes behind U.S. foreign wars. Resource exploitation is at the heart of most (if not all) of them.
The only thing missing from this otherwise excellent analysis is the degree to which war has been sewn into the national psyche. This fiber traces back to religious rhetoric and the premise of "Holy War" which is being recycled today in the Middle East. That dangerous fiction has retained millions of devout followers.
Back then it was 50% of the world's wealth and 6.3% of the population. But now that 50% has shrunk by at least a half for some 4.5% of the population. I don't remember the figures but in the 1940's, with every country spending for war, the % of US military spending would have been much less than the current half of the world's spending.
We can suppose that US war spending will continue to grow as its economic clout shrinks. Sort of: "If we can't buy'em then bomb'em"
Siouxrose: Always great to read your posts. Having read all of Andrew Bacevich'e books, I agree with your assessment: "The man IS growing and developing a greater capacity to look critically at the military-industrial establishment, the zone to which he dedicated much of his life"
Also, the quote about John Keenan from the article also jumped right out at me and I placed it in my files.
Wouldn't it be great if our universities taught us such stuff? But they are in cultural chains and our churches as well.
By the way, I'll be traveling to Ireland next month, and I just bought the VIDEO BOOK "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" by John Perkins to listen to on the plane.
STEPHEN: I'm sure Ireland has gorgeous countryside and wonderfully friendly people. I hope you have a wonderful time, and I'm sure you will spread your Light and understanding wherever you go.
Things are speeding up. The action in Tunisia, Egypt, and among workers in Europe is creating a contagious new force. Maybe we won't have to wait until 2020 for the global revolution I envision? It would be great if by that year, the egalitarian ethos was already in place.
And thank you for the kind acknowledgements. I feel so energized. Do you? I think it's a gift to fire signs.
Another fact to add to the mix is pressure by influential Senators and Congressmen to protect from deletion defense projects in their states and districts that amount to federal largesse and produce armaments the Pentagon neither needs nor wants (e.g., the "Seawolf" submarine protected by former Senator Dodd, various military bases that should be consolidated or closed, veterans hospitals are that are basically welfare facilities and not run to serve their original or stated purpose, caring for those injured in war).
Let's call it what it is an Empire, that's what we have and it's increasingly becoming hollow in the center as those that benefit the most from it increasingly persuade themselves and their followers they don't need to support it with their ill gotten gains. The fighting and dying for this Empire of the few is increasingly the burden of the poor and the what's left of the middle class and the only people that want it to continue is an increasingly tiny portion of our population. The destruction of a broad based economy and the tax base it provided will eventually destroy the ability of the Empire to continue it's Imperial wars. The final nail in it's coffin will come when our Chinese patrons refuse to loan us the money to endlessly fill the military's requests for men and material and endless Wars. That is right up ahead and even the military brass as thick headed and arrogant as they are sees it coming.
The Chinese beginning to withdraw from US Treasury bonds has already happened.
The Wall Street Journal last week reported that China was actually SELLING
US Treasury bonds for the first time in years.
The Chinese also offered to invest in the Euro...
The Empire is crumbling...
Iraq War - lost- US Oil firms did NOT get the oil and Moqtada Al Sadr is 30% of govt
Afghan War - stalemate to date but on the downhill slide
Tunisia - dictator overthrown partly due to Wikileaks revelations
Egypt - in process of overthrown following Tunisian example
Saudi Arabia - next in line??
Latin America for the most part has already left the American Empire.
China has been angling for entree to Latin America via Spain who has more influence
than the US
Wikileaks about to release names of 2,000 Swiss bank tax evading tycoons...
I cannot wait for that one to come out...
This is a wonderful essay, authored by a career military man who lost a son in Iraq, and who now as college professor specializes in analyzing national security issues from the sort of perspective of the late Chalmers Johnson. I highly recommend Bacevich's books. He speaks truth to power, and his personal background largely insulates him from the sort of cheap character assassination and marginalization that progressives who have never served in the military are vulnerable to.
If Barack Obama really aspired to reassert meaningful civilian control over the nation's active duty soldiers, black ops spies, and subcontract mercenaries, a big first step in the right direction would be to replace Secretary of Defense Robert Gates with Andrew Bachevich.
The other night, I watched part of a documentary about American isolationism in the early days of World War II, prior to Pearl Harbor. Here was an old black and white film clip of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, speaking to Congress in support of what was called his Lend-Lease program, which dramatically ramped up US military weapons manufacturing specifically to counter Nazi Germany's threat to invade Great Britain. I was amazed to hear President Roosevelt clearly, emphatically utter the simple words "I am a pacifist" in his speech.
What Andrew Bacevich terms the American non-interventionist tradition (haphazard as it was in actual historical practice) desperately needs to be revived in popular discourse about war, and drone war policies.
Do you think there is a single elected official of national prominence, or any widely recognized US mainstream media figure of today, who would dare to say those same words that Franklin Roosevelt said?
Bill from Saginaw
Marvelously cogent essay by Bacevich. The tragedy is that our political class & the plutocracy that owns them (often the same people) do not want to hear this stuff -- even coming from a fairly conservative (in the legitimate sense) military officer & astute historian who lost a son in the invasion of Iraq...
Many good comments here... and Bill from Saginaw -- an excellent question.
Like many empires before us, it looks as though the U.S. will choose the path detailed by Paul Kennedy, Chalmers Johnson, et al. to bankrupt the nation rather than give up the world straddling empire.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Rise_and_Fall_of_the_Great_Powers
The corporations in general will be shielded but the populace not so much.
" The corporations in general will be shielded but the populace not so much."
I don't think so. This is the world wide plutocracy's last hurrah. Once the money supply around the world is coralled into the hands of a a very progressive, intellectual class that exists and which directs many of the world's events to exhaust the destructive capacity of the American military state, a plan put in motion by those who do not want the hidden theocracy called America to unravel the best of the Enlightenment, the hierarchical, plutocratic controlled corporation will be a starved beast.
Ultimately all forces of control in human history up to now have relied on four things:
1. Male brute force which has been the constant of human "civilization" for the last 6,000 years.
2. Gold and money worship, which in economics proper is called the money illusion in contrast to the human intellect which Nature endowed us to evolve into Natural reality rather than human imaginary ones such as the said worship.
3. The incredible need of the human brain facing the uncertainties of life and Nature for "god"-religion delusions to cope with the uncertainties, making the neural architecture of the mind always gullible to the type of propaganda supporting the toy soldier power games Bachevich is talking about among the idle rich.
4. The pernicious nature of human, literary religions ability to spin "spiritualist" cosmologies totally alienated from Nature, thereby alienating humankind from Nature,which is the ultimate repository of objective truth. Religion is the sworn enemy of reason, logic and deep,respectful understanding of Nature without attempting to dominate it at "god's" command.
Now that intellectual class I alluded to above may seem cryptic to people whose knowledge skims only the surface visual and sound effects of events set in motion by design rather through useful fools in America. But consider it as the post Enlightenment version of the Knights Templar that went underground during the Inquisition. They have scores to settle with organized religions everywhere and usher in a universal, humanism based on Natural truth away from the four horsemen listed above.
Watch as events unfold with incredible speed in this decade. Tunisia and Egypt are hints. Nobody on Earth just one month ago would or could have predicted SPONTANEOUS combustion in these seemingly safe for American military hegemoney states run by compliant, vicious dictators for so long. Could they?
guns and bombs are all the US got. don't expect the US to surrender without real bloody fight.
- Certainly, the events of the post-9/11 era provide little reason to believe that this presence/power-projection paradigm will provide an antidote to the threat posed by violent anti-Western jihadism. -
Yes, and I keep writing that future terrorism cannot be forever prevented by military means. This should certainly not be the stated goal of any declaration of war against vague and unnamed enemies.
That would be stupid.
Damn good article! War is a racket and America has been conned into supporting the war racket business. Peace is an anathema to this business. FDR quoted as being a pacifist?
Going to an All Volunteer Army was --and is-- a brilliant strategy for the military-industrial complex. Now they can have perpetual war without significant widespread protests by the American people because most of us no longer have "skin" in the game.
For most us, unlike Vietnam, we no longer have our sons, friends, and loved ones at risk of going to a senseless war. That risk put us on the streets in protest.
Now the soldiers who go and die, well, they volunteered for it, didn't they? So the machine rolls on year after year without forcing the rest of us to really think about it or be directly affected by it. Brilliant.
I hope that over time, Bacevich will become more explicit about the fundamental truth that the Amerikan Empire's capitalist underpinning is both the fuel for the military/corporate/political/financial juggernaut, and the common denominator that bonds its divergent tentacles together.
In 1953, General Motors President Charles Wilson testified before Congress; when Wilson was asked whether he saw a conflict of interest in his becoming secretary of defense, he replied, “I cannot conceive of one, because for years I thought what was good for our country was good for General Motors, and vice versa. The difference did not exist. Our company is too big.”
This often-paraphrased quote is typically cited as a telling expression of the common interests of the business and political power elite. But it contains a "buried lede"-- the typically forgotten point that Wilson's testimony was occasioned by his nomination for Secretary of Defense.
Although controversial at the time, this distinguished plutocrat was indeed confirmed and served as Secretary of "Defense"-- as Ford Motor Company's Robert MacNamara did a decade later.
Thus, the superficially separate concentrations of military, financial, and political power have become fused and conjoined-- becoming a medieval mythical beast, Mammon's own familiar, with the blood of wealth circulating through its capitalist heart and nourishing its disparate organs and sinews.
It's worth emphasizing that military spending is a Sacred Cow because it has become an excellent and increasingly prolific source of Golden Calves; the latter's tender and succulent veal is a staple entrée of the power elite, especially when smothered in Patriotism Sauce and served with Freedom Fries.
[12:47 pm comment edited for clarity]
"what was good for our country was good for General Motors"
... and of course he thus became the model for Milo Minderbinder in "Catch-22".
And everybody has a share.
Because war-profiteers are the leeches on the earth's butt.
The real reason is because THEY are terrified!
not just of their enemy, that is, the people of the world,
but also of the rank and files of their own military.
oh yeah, they are terrified alright.
' but also of the rank and files of their own military'
Steve - If this is true, and I believe it is, they have got to be terrified the instant their drugs wear off.
I doubt that members of our USMC support the use of their private contractors used to guard the Corporate Embassies.
The day is coming when our Marines will be resorted to their proper role of guarding our U. S. Embassies.
Speaking of "misremembered" history it's telling that Mr Bacevich neglects to mention the American war against the Philippine people 110 years ago. For purely mercenary reasons we slaughtered 250,000 of our little brown brothers under the guise of liberation. But we got some spiffy bases to use in our quest to dominate Eastern resources(oil).
He would have been better advised to quote Brig Gen Smedley Butler who said that he realized he had spent his military career acting as the muscle abroad for American corporations.
Every time I read a piece by Mr Bacevich I groan at the studied ignorance of an intelligent man who chooses not to see the truth.
Patriotism is the last refuge of the scoundrel
---Samuel Johnson
I've always dated the major transformation to "world power" as starting with McKinley. Why would he not want to see this truth? It is true, though, that post WWII did mark a second transformation from "a world power" to "The world power.
You guys are sniffing up the right trail. Keep going. I had a conversation with a Soviet immigrant in the early 80's. I was spouting all my American exceptionalism about freedom and democracy. I went into my patented diatribe about Stalin and his murderous rampages. The guy calmly asked me about the Native American genocide. Talk about a shutdown.
I can't think of any president who has even mentioned the plight of Native Americans in this country outside of JFK and he was promptly shot and killed. We'll wave our arms about Stalin and Hitler at the drop of a hat, as this author did, but never acknowledge our own shameful and bloodied past. Furthermore, we need to disabuse ourselves of any pride we take in WWII. In all reality, both world wars were really just by-products of capitalist hijinks run amok. We helped cause them as much as anyone so any commendation we try to place on ourselves for ending them is absurd. After all, Prescott Bush was a banker to the Nazis regardless of what the ADL says.
What is the prognosis for a country that is unable to turn inward and recognize its own bloodied and violent past? I would say that more war, more drones and more death are on the horizon.
Allow me to update and broaden some of the questioning that Mr. Bacevich begins:
Why are we at war in Afghanistan that was in response to a false flag terror attack?
Why are our civil liberties being shredded due to a false flag terror attack?
Why was there so much support for war in Iraq as it was mostly a reaction to a false flag terror attack?
How effectively were "patriotism" and fear used as weapons to subjugate the populace in the wake of the false flag terror attack?
Why was defense spending ramped up due to said false flag terror attack?
How have our international relations changed due to said false flag terror attack?
So many questions and avenues of investigation if only some had the courage to admit what the majority of the planet seems to understand:
What the U.S. government has told us happened on 9/11 is a freaking lie.
Hey, maybe we should have to endure ANOTHER decade of wanton killing and oppression because we're too scared to face the truth, right?
*They can't handle the truth!*
Our good leaders understand this. The truth would break our fragile minds.
"Next the statesmen will invent cheap lies, putting the blame upon the nation that is attacked, and every man will be glad of those conscience-soothing falsities, and will diligently study them, and refuse to examine any refutations of them; and thus he will by and by convince himself that the war is just, and will thank God for the better sleep he enjoys after this process of grotesque self-deception."
--Mark Twain
"The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary"
--H. L. Mencken
And the following quotes are not the words of madmen, but of shrewd 'leaders' and politicians:
"The size of the lie is a definite factor in causing it to be believed, for the vast masses of a nation are in the depths of their hearts more easily deceived than they are consciously and intentionally bad. The primitive simplicity of their minds renders them a more easy prey to a big lie than a small one, for they themselves often tell little lies, but would be ashamed to tell big lies."
--Adolf Hitler
"Propaganda must always be essentially simple and repetitious...The most brilliant propagandist technique will yield no success unless one fundamental principle is borne in mind constantly ... it must confine itself to a few points and repeat them over and over."
--Joseph Goebbels
Worked then, works now.
"Our good leaders understand this. The truth would break our fragile minds."
It is really nice to know that they're just looking out for us.
The funny thing is, though, after the debacles of the last decade - election 2000, the Iraq War, Katrina, oil spill, financial crisis, etc etc - which have clearly shown the illusory nature of basically every single one of our most revered institutions - people in America - for the most part - have NOT lost their sh*t.
The elite always underestimate the resilience and/or ignorance of the masses when confronting traumatic experiences.
I mean if the government told us today that they did indeed have live aliens holed away in Area 51, how many Americans wouldn't be at work the next day?
I agree.
I hate to beleaguer the group with excess quotes, but these guys say it as well as anything I can come up with:
"We are not afraid to entrust the American people with unpleasant facts, foreign ideas, alien philosophies, and competitive values. For a nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people."
--John F. Kennedy
"All truth goes through three stages.
First it is ridiculed.
Then it is violently opposed.
Finally it is accepted as self-evident."
-- Schoepenhauer
"The simple step of a courageous individual is not to take part in the lie."
--Alexander Solzhenitsyn
To all whose intestinal fortitude inclines them to prefer harsh truth over comforting illusions:
http://www.ae911truth.org/
Good questions, polycarpe, which Bacevich predictably avoids. How can we as a nation confront the Military Industrial Complex until and unless we can admit that the entire so called "war on terror" is based on a false flag operation? And, of course, until we can begin to see that it is a Military-MEDIA-Industrial-Complex, because the corporate media will not allow discussion of this issue, except for the ritual dismissal and denigration of any who question the official mythology of nine eleven as "conspiracy theorists."