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A Historic Opportunity to Cut Military Spending
The agreement in Washington to raise the debt ceiling in exchange for spending cuts has made a lot of people very unhappy. But the agreement had one important positive aspect: it created a historic opportunity for significant cuts in projected military spending.
Under the agreement, a joint House-Senate committee is supposed to propose, by Thanksgiving, $1.5 trillion of debt reduction (expenditures less revenues) over ten years. Significant cuts in projected military spending are on the table. Indeed, if the joint committee doesn't agree on a plan or Congress doesn't enact it, $1.2 trillion in cuts in projected spending over 10 years will be triggered, of which half must come from the military.
If the military cuts in the trigger mechanism take place, when added to the projected military cuts announced by the White House as part of this week's deal, total cuts in projected military spending would amount to $884 billion. This is very close to the $886 billion in military cuts agreed by the plan of the Senate's "Gang of Six," a plan endorsed by President Obama. It's in the ballpark of - but less than - the $960 billion in proposed military cuts of the Frank-Paul Sustainable Defense Task Force, the trillion dollars in proposed military cuts of the report of President's deficit commission, the $1.1 trillion reduction in projected military spending proposed by the Domenici-Rivlin task force, and the $1.2 trillion in military cuts recommended by the Cato Institute. Conservative Republican Senator Tom Coburn says cutting the projected military budget by a trillion dollars over ten years is "not hard" and is "common sense."
In other words: cutting projected military spending by a trillion dollars over the next ten years has become politically plausible.
Now, some voices have said: the cuts in projected military spending in the automatic trigger are irrelevant, because the automatic trigger is not going to happen, because a key point of the automatic trigger is to be so odious to Republicans on military spending, that it will build pressure on the joint committee to come up with a compromise, and for Congress to approve the compromise, because the alternative will be the odious cuts in military spending.
But these voices neglect the fact that except for the super-hawks in Congress [e.g. McCain, Graham, Kyl, Lieberman, McKeon] - who, despite their media prominence, do not appear to currently control the Republican caucus - the military cuts in the automatic trigger are not that odious. As noted above, if the automatic cuts happen, the cut in projected military spending will be about the same as the bipartisan Senate Gang of Six plan - endorsed by President Obama - and less than the projected military cuts of the Sustainable Defense Task Force, the report of President's deficit commission, the Domenici-Rivlin task force, the Cato Institute, and conservative Senator Tom Coburn. For many Members of Congress - likely a majority, judging from the struggle over the recent deal - the automatic trigger is not as odious as what some people want to put in the joint committee report: tax increases, most odious to many Republicans; cuts in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid benefits, most odious to many Democrats. These most odious things are not in the automatic trigger.
Indeed, as Representative Barney Frank has recently noted, there's a new dynamic on the playing field: Tea Party Republicans who are skeptical of the Empire and are quite ok with cutting the military budget. As Frank told the Boston Globe, explaining the military cuts in the first round of the deal:
"The Tea Party people are anti-military spending to a greater extent than establishment Republicans and have a healthy dose of isolationism thanks to American intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan,'' says Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, who has long pushed to cut the defense budget. "On this issue, they were a positive force."
Therefore, the automatic trigger is not Armageddon as far as military cuts are concerned. And because the automatic trigger is not Armageddon on military cuts, cuts in projected military spending have the potential to play a big role in the joint committee report, because anyone who prefers the military cuts of the trigger to the joint committee report will have somewhere else to go.
The other key dynamic is this: because the joint committee has to come up with a fixed amount of debt reduction, there is going to be tremendous pressure from Democrats and Democratic constituency groups on Democratic leaders to cut military spending, because the main alternative to cuts in military spending will be cuts to domestic spending.
Indeed, in a letter sent to Congressional Democratic leaders Thursday, the AFL-CIO, the National Organization for Women, the NAACP, Friends of the Earth, and many other Democratic constituency groups called for cuts in military spending to be as least as great as any cuts in domestic spending:
Any discretionary savings must rely at least as much on cuts in national security programs as on spending cuts in non-security discretionary programs. While there is an effort to cut spending across the broad array of annual discretionary spending programs, national security spending, which comprises 61% of the discretionary budget, continues to grow. Without cuts to national security programs, even very deep cuts to all other discretionary funding taken together will fall far short of dealing with the deficit. We want a safe and secure nation. But national security programs should not be immune from oversight and fiscal responsibility. We can responsibly reduce spending in this area without compromising our nation's security.
Thus, according to these influential Democratic constituency groups, in the scenario in which the joint committee does not agree to any revenue increases, the cuts to "national security programs" would be at least as much as in the automatic trigger: 50%.
A trillion dollars over ten years may seem intuitively like a huge cut. But in fact, it isn't. Remember that the baseline for all these numbers is currently projected spending over the next ten years. The Domenici-Rivlin task force suggested freezing military spending for five years and not letting grow it faster than GDP for the next five; that would save $1.1 trillion over ten years. And, as noted above, there are now a number of plans in circulation, from experts across the political spectrum, showing where to cut to get $1 trillion in savings in military spending. A trillion in cuts in military spending over ten years would just return military spending to the average for the Cold War. And, according to the White House, $350 billion in cuts to military spending are already agreed, so we just have $650 billion to go to get to a trillion, which is just a little over half of what the joint committee is charged with finding.
Cutting the military budget by a trillion dollars over ten years would likely imply a fundamentally different foreign policy than we have recently experienced: one without counterinsurgency wars. The Washington Post reports:
To find $1 trillion in savings, the White House would have to make major changes to its current global military strategy, under which the Pentagon should be able to fight two wars like Iraq and Afghanistan simultaneously. Scaling back that requirement would allow for big cuts to the Army and Marine Corps... Congress would be betting that the Afghan war will wind down as planned and that the country will not be drawn into any big, costly counterinsurgency wars in the next 10 to 15 years.
From the point of view of the interests of the majority of Americans, that's not a cost of cutting the military budget; it's a benefit.
Of course, a trillion in cuts in military spending is not a ceiling for what we should aspire to. There's no reason that we should accept Cold War levels of military spending as the best we can do. But from where we are now, a trillion in cuts in military spending would be a tremendous leap forward.
A historic opportunity is, of course, not at all the same thing as a certainly. If you want to see these military cuts take place, speak up. You can urge your representatives in Congress and the President to put the military budget first in line for cuts here.
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10 Comments so far
Show Allwell, at least the record for using the word "odious" in a single paragraph has been shattered. that's about the only thing I can recommend here.
Thanks for finding a ray of sunshine Robert. I hope you're right. But I don't see it...
Even if our war machine loses some funding, for example a hypothetical 10% over 10 years, we could still wage twice the warfare This is because the cost of war is effectively going down, a surprising aberration.
Several factors come to mind, which is not at all an attempt to exhaust the subject. I'll just note a few and let the comment board go nuts.
1. The exponential increase in drones, with no end in sight, over very expensive spy planes and conventional missiles.
2. The phenomenal doubling of computing power every year, while the price keeps dropping. Kill thousands with a mouse click from 10,000 miles away at your desk...
3. The increase in mercenary soldiers. No GI benefits, and they are less accountable and more effective. It's a different mindset. This group lives for warfare. And when you get paid on commission, expect results.
4. Increasingly, much of this new warfare can be paid "off the book" by irregular methods. Congress has consistently raised the amount of money for covert operations. This money doesn't get tallied where it affects these cuts.
5. Now we have roots in the Middle East, so overall operational expense is less.
6, I know there's more, but after reading what I have so far, I think I'll go throw up.
Note: "2. ..Kill thousands with a mouse click from 10,000 miles away at your desk." I wonder if this is why Fort Bragg in Texas is having 10 suicides a MONTH on average.
A "Sustainable Defense Task Force". How about a "Sustainable Civilization Task Force"? Thanks Robert, we need all the sober analysis like yours we can get.
We need to bill the government in each country that we have a military base; if they don't want to reimburse us for our services, we pack up and leave.
An historic opportunity came and went with the end of the Cold War. Obviously, the elites aren't interested in this sort of opportunity. They want to rule the world and to do so, they need to terrorize the world.
Here's a pretty long essay/rant for you all to chew on, or spit back out if you choose.. I don't go to church but play on the computer on Sundays. And just want to kind of try and develop some ideas- which is a euphemism for making it up as I go along...
on war money and the MIC and religion and other subjects that "normal" Americans don't think about quite as much as I do:
part 1
We can't stop the money going out, or control where it goes, once the Pentagon gets it. As an individual, about all I can do about that is to not allow the Pentagon to have any of my money. That's easier said than done.
I was thinking though, wouldn't it be nice to have a list of every American who has profited from the two wars? Kind of like a really really large sex offender registry.
I know there would be gray areas. for example, some worker whose paycheck depends on them stapling together the cardboard boxes in which sticky widgets or nose tissue are packaged before being sold to the Pentagon and then sent to troops or contractors in Iraq or Afghanistan. Is he at all responsible? Maybe, maybe not. The general opinion about a case like that is that generally, it's a matter of opinion.
But then there are the middle-class and upper-class folks with their investments in corporations which make things that are definitely and directly used by the military in its seemingly endless continuation of the wars. What about them?
Or another example, one of many possibilities, but one I heard about and which exists not more than an hour away from my home- a gigantic small-arms ammo plant which, according to accounts I have read, manufactures/supplies some 80% of the small-arms ammunition for the two wars.
Supposedly this plant is near KC or Independence. I've never been there. A few years ago, a man or several men were charged with stealing copper from the place.
This was at a time when there were frequent news reports of copper thefts from homes. Electrical wire, copper pipes and copper coils from air conditioners were being ripped off every day, it seemed. This was apparently a direct result of a steep climb in the price of copper.
I''ve wondered how much the Pentagon purchases of copper for war use has diminished available supplies and driven up the price of copper. Someone suggested to that probably the price of copper was way up because so much was demanded by electronics industries, but I don't have any actual numbers, being too lazy to try and look them up. I personally suspect the war has a lot to do with it. A lot of copper is used in munitions and probably most, if not all, is lost, not recovered. After WW1 French orchards were damaged by all the brass from shells in the ground. Brass is mostly copper. U.S. copper is wasted in the wars and is just one more abuse of resources with the result of helping to impoverish our whole nation just a little bit more, so that certain people and corporations could profit.
Nothing new with that idea. It's been going on forever. At one time I think there were laws against war proifiteering, weren't there? Are there still? I don't know. But these days, I don't see any restrictions on war profiteering at all.
I did notice, some period of time after the invasion of Iraq, I forget the exact month and year, more and more news stories about copper thefts- wherein desperate people would risk felony charges just to get a few dollars' worth of metal. And usually get caught before long.
I took it as an indicator of the growing desperation of the poor people.
There were also thefts of reels of wire and cable- which bothered me more because typically a copper-wire thief just throws the wire in a fire to burn off all the plastic, which releases a lot of toxic gas and smoke.
I personally know people, who apparently believe environmentalism is a leftist plot, who do this as a matter of course when saving legally obtained wire scraps from construction jobs.And regarding the pollution factor, I'm quite sure some of them would do it just to bug "libs" like me, even if there were no other reason.
But back to the subject. This ammo plant, my example, must employ scores, and probably hundreds, of workers from top to bottom, top-floor office to floor-scrubber. Each of them gets a paycheck, for his or her part in making the whole enterprise successful, i.e. fulfilling their cog-wheel roles in the machine which begins its work digging ore and ends when a round comes out of an American gun somewhere.
Now, the guy scrubbing the floors in the toilet stalls at the ammo plant is not hurting anyone. He needed a job. Maybe a newspaper ad said "go here and apply, and he gets the job, and then the boss tells him to scrub the floor. And if he does, he gets money.
If he feels any connection at all with the fact of a bullet coming out of the barrel of a gun somewhere in Iraq or Afghanistan, he can easily convince himself that he is in no way responsible for any harm done by that bullet which was made by people for whom he scrubbed the floors so the rest room would look nice when the people running the bullet machines had to come take a bathroom break.
part 2
Then, there's maybe the wife or husband, or mother or father, of the person scrubbing the floors in the ammo plant. Does any one of them say "You're doing a bad thing by scrubbing the floor in a military-industrial complex factory. You should quit, and have no job and no money, for moral reasons."
No one tells him that. If anything, he is told by friends and family and spouse that he is doing right by A. having a steady job and B doing his part for the "Homeland".
Or maybe he is even led to believe that he is doing his part for "God" or Jesus by helping kill the evil and ungodly "insurgents". Chances are good that he (or she) has been brought up to believe that anyone with a different religion or belief system is just plain going to hell, period, so killing them is actually doing them, and the world, a favor. Not only that, but every "al" but Bundy is a potential terrorist, he thinks.
WTF? you say. No one is so stupid! But you know better, don't you. People - by which I mean some of my fellow Americans- can be so stupid, that truly their stupidity almost takes on the qualities of great art.
There is no debt ceiling on stupidity. No lid on it at all, as far as I can tell.
But the more or less subconscious thinking goes a bit like this: since if God wants "them" in hell (i.e. insurgents, islamo-fascists, radical Islamic fundamentalists, terrorists, or whatever the label-o'-the-week is), then why not help God out, by sending them there?
And so, that bullet made by the ammo factory bullet machine operators who walked on the clean floors which the floor-scrubber cleaned so that he would get a check on Friday so that he could go out and have a few beers or pay his satellite bill, is shot out of a gun somewhere in the war, and maybe an Iraqi or Afghani is hit and wounded or killed by it, anbd all in all, this is seen as good thing and a success! a success" in, uh, duh, something! No one knows what.
But if this floor-scrubber, or the bullet machine operators, or bosses upstairs, feel any connection between their own actions at their jobs, and the murder, assassination, execution, or wounding of another human being by that little metal lump from their factory, it is most likely a feeling of pride or satisfaction, and a conviction that that if their bullet hurt or killed anyone, then it follows that the killed or wounded person deserved it. Even if it is "collateral damage" the American attitude is almost always either "Too bad, but nits make lice" or "Probably they did something, even if not this time, so they deserved it."
This attitude is often socially acceptable, without any hard questions ever being asked, as if it were something based on evidence, instead of pure prejudice and pure speculation.
Why did my hypothetical person over in the war zone deserve the hypothetical bullet made as a group effort by the hypothetical workers in an actual ammo plant?
What is the reasoning that justifies this whole process?
Obviously, there is the tendency for anyone to want to justify and rationalize what he does to get his pay. Secondly, there is the large and quite pervasive golem-like rabidity known as radical fundamentalist "Christianity" in this country which tends to be supportive of, and even, sometimes, enthusiastic about, the killing non-Christians in general, and of Muslim non-Christians in particular. This is part of the message that has been given to them, either overtly or covertly or both, since early childhood, by their parents, pastors, and teachers, by their government, and by many of the rest of their "betters"- (meaning in this case, simply those who have more money or perceived status than they do).
All this support- you have a good job, you get a paycheck, you are pleasing the church, the government, and other important people and institutions, plus the natural tendency of any man to justify his own means of making a living, all combine to make it very unlikely that the floor-scrubber or any of his co-workers or bosses will have a moral crisis, or for that matter, even a fleeting doubt about the ultimate use of the bullet they all helped to make a reality.
What I am saying is that although we here at CD- we philosophers, sages, and prophets, we hippies, yippies, and yuppies, we astrologers, economists and historians, prophets, sages, and peaceniks, butchers, bakers, candlestick makers- and all-around bozos like myself- can easily see that in terms of karma, everyone involved in any part of that bullet's manufacture and use is partly responsible for the harm it might do, it is extremely unlikely that the folks who are making the bullets, buying the bullets, flying the bullets overseas, or shooting the bullets, will feel any responsibility for the hypothetical death or wounding mentioned above.
Why should any of these people take any responsibility for it? Why should they, when we live in a country where a murder of a black man by a white man can be seen live, up-close, and in person, can be filmed for the whole world to see, even, and the killer can claim it was an accident, and get a light sentence? (scar Grant case) I mean, when it becomes clear that if you are a cop or if you are working for the government or military, and you kill someone, it's not murder, it's "just doing your job".
Don't like Stateside where unless you are very rich you will go to prison for killing someone? Then join up, and you can go overseas and in-country to our national live shooting range where you can use real weapons on real people and even photograph and make video of it and show it to the world, and nothing will happen to you! ( "Collateral Murder", one of, no doubt, many U.S. military snuff movies paid for by your tax dollars.).
And you don't even have to buy or steal the gun or bullets! And your friends say, good job! And your government says, "You are my hero! Sigh.."
We just really need to quit falling for the old "Don't you just LOVE a man in uniform?" jerk-fest.
To continue (whatever the heck I was writing about):
Back at the ammo plant...
The guy scrubbing the floor in the ammo factory is not going to lose one second of sleep over my hypothetical bullet and his small part in helping make that little bullet happen.
He won't feel a speck of doubt, remorse, or guilt.
He won't get one word of criticism, or asked one question, about whether it is right or wrong to make that bullet.
If he were asked, he wold only laugh and think the question beyond absurd. Obviously! Because everyone knows! It's because of nine-eleven. We need all those bullets because of nine-eleven. The madness is even almost as bad as "Why you little lib traitor you.Don't you know that that terrorist, that guy, Osama bin Al Hussein Taliban Qaeda killed 3,000 Americans on nine-eleven!"
The ammo factory and society neede to arrest and prosecute the thieves who took a little bit of the copper meant for bullets, because although no one will come out and say so, it is a worse crime in this nation to be poor and steal a bit of copper than it is to take untold thousands of pounds of copper for the purpose of not only throwing it away thousands of miles from home but hopefully killing someone with it. And anyone killed by is de facto, (or really ex post facto) a bad guy, in the American mindset and the floor-scrubbing American's individual mind.
If he even thinks about it at all, which is highly unlikely.
Okay... enough belaboring of that example.
The main point I am trying to make is that the military industrial complex is, to an extent we do not like to admit, US. I mean US, not U.S. It is us, or our neighbors, or our cousin who works for the company which makes widgets for the war, or the old lady piously praying as she sits on Sundays in the pretty white-painted church; the little old church lady whose meager investments include stock in a company which, perhaps, makes the paper for the work orders for the ink used on the boxes of toilet paper sent to Iraq so that a contractor or a soldier can have some TP to wipe his butt after a long hard day of hunting humans for the United States government.
Is the little old lady going to even think about it? Doubtful. Besides, even if she does, she knows she is not invested in a bullet factory or a bomb factory. For heaven's sake! She believes she has nothing to do with the war. and most people would agree.
But she gets a little dividend check every so often, and she likes that.
Or she follows the stock price of the ink-making concern, which she has five shares of, and is glad when business is good, because it makes her feel more secure to have investments that are not scary, but rather reliable.
No one is going to accuse this hypothetical old lady of being a warmonger.
Yet, she is part of the system of finance and manufacture which literally enables the wars to continue, and without which, the wars would have to end.
So in a way the enemy of peace is found on every block in the U.S.A., in many homes; and many Americans would not willingly give up their dividends, large or small, or the stock price increases, or the paycheck from a MIC company.
They certainly won't give these things up out of a sense of morality or ethics, or a desire to not be involved in war profiteering.
War profiteering? they would say "Are you joking?".
But it is exactly war profiteering.
part 4
It's not just all the wealthiest Americans, the ten percent of the one- percent of us; nor is it just the Left's "bad guys" like Dick Cheney and his cronies, or Bush, or Obama, or Congress.
It's a hundred million or two hundred million or more Americans, who knows?- a lot of them, anyway- who to some extent, benefit financially from the war business, whether that business has to do with widgets or toilet paper or bullets actually used in the wars or if it has to do with "peacetime" or nonviolent uses.
The military-industrial complex is not like a tumor on top of someone's head, but more like a many-tentacled, multi-fibered, highly invasive tumor affecting all the organs, a tumor like a huge mycelium, with tendrils running to everywhere from everywhere, so that there is hardly a spot beneath the surface which is not in the grip of its tendrils or unaffected by its voracious use of whatever it can reach. (this bizarre metaphor is somewhat based on reality: there is, supposedly, a fungus or something similar, in the Pacific Northwest, which is a single organism coverning hundreds or thousands of square miles beneath the surface)
Anyway- this has gone on too long. I mean my comment! The wars, too. I guess I just wanted to write about this because we on the so-called misnamed "left" are just as prone as our 'thuglican opposition to over-simplifying.
The military-industrial complex is a vast cancer on our society. But to remove it means all sorts of consequences for individuals and communities. Like the little old lady who doesn't want to lose her little dividend check, or the floor scrubbing guy who wants to have a job and have a little money. The U.S. economic system is so dominated by not just the big obvious MIC business but just as importantly by all the little business which are affected, whether first-hand or second, third, and fourth-hand, by "defense" spending. And by "affected", I mean, they get some of that money for themselves, their families, their community tax base.
I can't see any way out. A real solution for the problem of war and violence and profiteering is going to be so difficult I am tempted to say it is impossible. It's not a surface tumor that canbe lopped off. It's in many, if not all, of us. As a society we have to reject more than wars that are wrong-headed, impossible to win, or illegal or too expensive. That is not enough, because that is only a kind of cutting off the part of the vast tumor that can be seen above the surface. We have to deeply, sincerely, and wholeheartedly reject militarism in all its forms, even the ones that seem so innocent or 'it's for the kids" like fly-overs of jets at games or fireworks on the Fourth or singing that monstrous mutant of a song we have for an anthem- worst song possible. A drunk's song, to be brayed out in a bar after getting shitfaced. A drunk's song about blowing things up. What a great country this is.
I could go on and on but out of kindness I will spare you folks any more of this word boullabaise of mine. Writing this stuff does nothing to help the people being killed in the wars. Maybe ultimately something i say or write will have an effect. but forty years ago I thought what millions of us said and marched for and suffered for and got jailed for, would have an effect. And it did have an effect, for a while. It sobered up the MIC just a little bit, like for half a day, and then the MIC went "if this continues, returns on your investments will tank, people" and so really, it is all driven by money- or more accurately, not by money but by love of money. And we all know what love of money has been called. So we should not be surprised that as a society we have been going towards a state of continual and have endless wars. No business wants to put itself out of business any more than any worker wants to lose his paycheck.
And humans can rationalize anything nomatter how heinous, and can rationalize anything if there is any money to be made, and can rationalize anything if a religious dogma claims to support it.
So I guess my conclusion is, we are up the creek without the paddle, and the creek has a name beginning with sh, and it will eventually lead to all the things that logically follow according to what history tells us, and we are doomed. but life will go on. i don't think we will destroy the planet, or everything on it. In a few hundred years there will be six-foot cockroaches instead of humans in the halls of congress and the white house. Wait a minute! Oh, never mind. for a couple of seconds, I was convinced that time had already come.