Corporate war machine gathers speed
By Ismael Hossein-zadeh
08/15/06 "Asia
Times" -- -- There is strong evidence that as the
Bush administration is mulling over plans to bomb Iran, the
simmering conflict between high-ranking military professionals and
militaristic civilian leaders is bursting into the open.
The conflict, festering ever since the invasion of Iraq, has now
been heightened over the US administration's policy of an aerial
military strike against Iran. While civilian militarists, headed by
Vice President Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld,
are said to have drawn plans to bomb Iran, senior commanders are
openly questioning the wisdom of such plans. [1]
The administration's recent statements that it is now willing to
negotiate with Iran might appear as a change or modification of its
plans to launch a military strike against that country. But a closer
reading of those statements indicates otherwise: such pronouncements
are premised on the condition that, as President George W Bush
recently put it, "The Iranian regime fully and verifiably suspends
its uranium enrichment."
In light of the fact that suspension of uranium enrichment, which is
nothing beyond Iran's legitimate rights under the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, is supposed to be the main point of
negotiation, Iran is asked, in effect, "to concede the main point of
the negotiations before they started". [2]
Military professionals question the administration's plans of a
bombing campaign against Iran on a number of grounds. For one thing,
they doubt that, beyond a lot of death and destruction, the
projected bombing raids can accomplish much, ie, destroy Iran's
nuclear program.
For another, they caution that the bombing campaign could be very
costly in terms of military, economic and geopolitical interests of
the United States in the region and beyond.
More important, however, the professionals' opposition to the
administration's bombing plans stems from the fact that, as pointed
out by renowned investigative reporter Seymour Hersh, "American and
European intelligence agencies have not found specific evidence of
clandestine [nuclear] activities or hidden facilities" in Iran.
Hersh further writes, "A former senior intelligence official told me
that people in the Pentagon were asking, 'What's the evidence? We've
got a million tentacles out there, overt and covert, and these guys
- the Iranians - have been working on this for 18 years, and we have
nothing? We're coming up with jack shit.'" [3]
So far, the jingoistic civilian leaders do not seem to have been
swayed by the expert advice of their military experts. And the
discord over Iran policy continues.
Some observers have attributed the conflict to Rumsfeld's uneasy
relationship with the military hierarchy, arguing that his cavalier
attitude and unwillingness to accept responsibility are the main
reasons for the ongoing friction between the military and civilian
leadership. While there are clear elements of truth to this
explanation, it leaves out some more fundamental reasons for the
discord. There is a deeper and more general historical pattern -
often shaped by the economics of war - to the recurring
disagreements between the military and militaristic civilian leaders
over issues of war and peace. Let me elaborate on this point.
Differences over war and peace
Evidence shows that business or economic beneficiaries of war, who
do not have to face direct combat and death, tend to be more
jingoistic than professional military personnel who will have to
face the horrors of warfare. Furthermore, military professionals
tend to care more about the outcome of a war and "military honor"
than civilian leaders, who often represent some powerful economic
interests that benefit from the business of war.
Calling such business and/or ideologically driven warmongers
"civilian militarists", military historian Alfred Vagts points to a
number of historical instances of how civilian militarists'
eagerness to use military force for their nefarious interests often
led "to an intensification of the horrors of warfare". For example,
he points out how in World War II, "civilians not only anticipated
war more eagerly than the professionals, but played a principal part
in making combat ... more terrible than was the current military
wont or habit". [4]
The 2003 US invasion of Iraq serves as another blatant example of
civilian militarists' instigation of war in pursuit of economic and
geopolitical gains. A number of belatedly surfaced documents reveal
that not only were the civilian militarists, representing powerful
business and geopolitical interests, behind the invasion of Iraq,
but that they also advocated a prolonged occupation of that country
to avail their legal and economic "experts" the time needed to
overhaul that country's economy according to a restructuring plan
that they had drawn up long before the invasion.
One such document, titled "Moving the Iraqi Economy from Recovery to
Growth", was obtained from the State Department by well-known
investigative reporter Greg Palast. The document, also called the
"Economy Plan", was part of a largely secret program called "The
Iraq Strategy".
Here is how Palast describes the plan: "The Economy Plan goes boldly
where no invasion plan has gone before: the complete rewrite, it
says, of a conquered state's 'policies, laws and regulations'.
Here's what you'll find in the plan: a highly detailed program ...
for imposing a new regime of low taxes on big business, and quick
sales of Iraq's banks and bridges - in fact, 'all state enterprises'
- to foreign operators ... Beginning on page 73, the secret drafters
emphasized that Iraq would have to 'privatize' [ie sell off] its
'oil and supporting industries'." [5]
After a detailed account and analysis of the plan, Palast concludes,
"If the Economy Plan reads like a Christmas wish-list drafted by US
corporate lobbyists, that's because it was. From slashing taxes to
wiping away Iraq's tariffs (taxes on imports of US and other foreign
goods), the package carries the unmistakable fingerprints of the
small, soft hands of Grover Norquist."
Norquist, once registered as a lobbyist for Microsoft and American
Express, is one of many corporate lobbyists who helped shape the
Economy Plan for the "new" Iraq. In an interview with Palast,
Norquist boasted of moving freely at the Treasury, Defense and State
departments, and in the White House, "shaping the post-conquest
economic plans ...".
The Economy Plan's "Annex D" laid out "a strict 360-day schedule for
the free-market makeover of Iraq". But General Jay Garner, the
initially designated ruler of Iraq, had promised Iraqis they would
have free and fair elections as soon as Saddam Hussein was toppled,
preferably within 90 days.
In the face of this conflict, civilian militarists of the Bush
administration overruled Garner: elections were postponed - as
usual, on grounds that the local population and/or conditions were
not yet ripe for elections. The real reason for the postponement,
however, was that, as Palast points out, "It was simply
inconceivable that any popularly elected government would let
America write its laws and auction off the nation's crown jewel, its
petroleum industry."
When Palast asked lobbyist Norquist about the postponement of the
elections, he responded matter-of-factly: "The right to trade,
property rights, these things are not to be determined by some
democratic election." The troops would simply have to wait longer.
Garner's resistance to the plan to postpone the elections was a
major factor for his sudden replacement with L Paul Bremer, who,
having served as managing director of Kissinger Associates, better
understood the corporate culture. Soon after assuming power in
Saddam's old palace, Bremer canceled Garner's scheduled meeting of
Iraq's tribal leaders that was called to plan national elections.
Instead, he appointed the entire "government" himself. National
elections, Bremer pronounced, would have to wait until 2005. "The
delay would, incidentally, provide," Palast notes, "time needed to
lock in the laws, regulations and irreversible sales of assets in
accordance with the Economy Plan ... Altogether, the leader of the
Coalition Provisional Authority issued exactly 100 orders that
remade Iraq in the image of the Economy Plan."
Palast's report is by no means an isolated or exceptional story. It
is part of a historical pattern of how or why civilian militarists,
often representing powerful interests of the beneficiaries of war,
tend to be more belligerent than the professional military. The
report also shows that, contrary to popular perceptions, the
jingoistic neo-conservative forces in and around the Bush
administration are not simply a bunch of starry-eyed ideologues bent
on "spreading US values". More important, they represent influential
economic and geopolitical interests that are camouflaged behind the
facade of the neo-conservatives' rhetoric and their alleged ideals
of democracy.
There is clear evidence that the leading neo-conservative figures
have been longtime political activists who have worked through a
network of warmongering think-tanks that are set up to serve either
as the armaments lobby or the Israeli lobby, or both.
These corporate-backed militaristic think-tanks include Project for
the New American Century, the American Enterprise Institute, the
Center for Security Policy, the Middle East Media Research
Institute, the Middle East Forum, the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy, the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, and
the National Institute for Public Policy. Major components of the
Bush administration's foreign policy, including the war on Iraq,
have been designed largely at the drawing boards of these
think-thanks, often in collaboration, directly or indirectly, with
the Pentagon and the arms lobby. [6]
Even a cursory look at the records of these militaristic think-tanks
- their membership, their financial sources, their institutional
structures and the like - shows that they are set up in essence to
serve as institutional fronts to camouflage the dubious relationship
between the Pentagon, its major contractors and the Israeli lobby,
on the one hand, and the warmongering neo-conservative politicians
on the other. More critically, this unsavory relationship also shows
that powerful interests that benefit from war are also in essence
the same powers that can - and indeed do - make war. Additionally,
it explains why civilian militarists are so eager to foment war and
international tensions.
By the same token, the incestuous relationship between war
beneficiaries and warmakers goes some way to explain the increasing
tensions between the military and civilian militarists in and around
the Bush administration, especially in the context of the
administration's plans to bomb Iran. When contemplating war plans,
military commanders make some critically important decisions that
seem to be of no or very little significance to civilian leaders.
Not only will the military have to face direct combat, death and
destruction but, perhaps more important, the commanders will have to
think very carefully about the outcome of the war and the chances of
victory, that is, the honor and pride of the military.
By contrast, the primary concern and the measure of success for
civilian militarists lies in the mere act or continuation of war, as
this would ensure increased military spending and higher dividends
for military industries and war-induced businesses.
In other words, the standard of success for corporate beneficiaries
of war, which operate from behind the facade of neo-conservative
forces in and around the Bush administration, is based more on
business profitability than on the conventional military success on
the battlefield.
This is a clear indication of the fact that, for example, while from
a military point of view the war on Iraq has been a fiasco, from the
standpoint of the powerful beneficiaries of the Pentagon budget it
has been a boon and a huge success. This explains, perhaps more than
anything else, the ongoing tensions between the military and
militaristic civilian leaders, or chicken hawks.
Notes
1. Seymour M Hersh, "The military's problem with the president's
Iran policy", The New Yorker (July 10).
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.
4. Alfred Vagts, A History of Militarism: Civilian and Military
(London: Hollis & Carter, 1959), p 463.
5. Greg Palast, "Adventure capitalism", TomPaine.com (October 26,
2004).
6. William Hartung and Michelle Ciarrocca, "The
military-industrial-think tank complex", International Monitor
(January-February 2003).
Ismael Hossein-zadeh is a professor of economics at Drake
University, Des Moines, Iowa. This article draws heavily on his
newly released book, The Political Economy of US Militarism.
Copyright 2006 Asia Times Online Ltd
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