Why the US
Is Not Leaving Iraq
| "The
military-industrial-complex [would] cause
military spending to be driven not by national
security needs but by a network of weapons
makers, lobbyists and elected officials."
Dwight D. Eisenhower
"There are only two things we should fight
for. One is the defense of our homes and the
other is the Bill of Rights. War for any other
reason is simply a racket." General
Smedley D. Butler
|
By: Ismael
Hossein-zadeh
01/10/07 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Neither the
Iraq Study Group nor other establishment critics of the Iraq
war are calling for the withdrawal of US troops from that
country. To the extent that the Study Group or the new
Congress purport to inject some “realism” into the Iraq
policy, such projected modifications do not seem to amount
to more than changing the drivers of the US war machine
without changing its destination, or objectives: control of
Iraq’s political and economic policies.
In light of
fact that by now almost all of the factions of the ruling
circles, including the White House and the neoconservative
war-mongerers, acknowledge the failure of the Iraq war, why,
then, do they balk at the idea of pulling the troops out of
that country?
Perhaps the
shortest path to a relatively satisfactory answer would be
to follow the money. The fact is that not everyone is
losing in Iraq. Indeed, while the Bush administration’s wars
of choice have brought unnecessary death, destruction, and
disaster to millions, including many from the Unites States,
they have also brought fortunes and prosperity to war
profiteers. At the heart of the reluctance to withdraw from
Iraq lies the profiteers’ unwillingness to give up further
fortunes and spoils of war.
Pentagon
contractors constitute the overwhelming majority of these
profiteers. They include not only the giant manufacturing
contractors such as Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and
Boeing, but also a complex maze of over 100,000 service
contractors and sub-contractors such as private army or
security corporations and “reconstruction” firms.[1] These
contractors of both deconstruction and “reconstruction,”
whose profits come mainly from the US treasury, have
handsomely profited from the Bush administration’s wars of
choice.
A time-honored
proverb maintains that wars abroad are often continuations
of wars at home. Accordingly, recent US wars abroad seem to
be largely reflections of domestic fights over national
resources, or public finance: opponents of social spending
are using the escalating Pentagon budget (in combination
with drastic tax cuts for the wealthy) as a cynical and
roundabout way of redistributing national income in favor of
the wealthy. As this combination of increasing military
spending and decreasing tax liabilities of the wealthy
creates wide gaps in the Federal budget, it then justifies
the slashing of non-military public spending—a subtle and
insidious policy of reversing the New Deal reforms, a policy
that, incidentally, started under President Ronald Reagan.
Meanwhile, the
American people are sidetracked into a debate over the grim
consequences of a “pre-mature” withdrawal of US troops from
Iraq: further deterioration of the raging civil war, the
unraveling of the “fledgling democracy,” the resultant
serious blow to the power and prestige of the United States,
and the like.
Such concerns
are secondary to the booming business of war profiteers and,
more generally, to the lure or the prospects of controlling
Iraq’s politics and economics. Powerful beneficiaries of war
dividends, who are often indistinguishable from the policy
makers who pushed for the invasion of Iraq, have been
pocketing hundreds of billions of dollars by virtue of war.
More than anything else, it is the pursuit and the
safeguarding of those plentiful spoils of war that are
keeping US troops in Iraq.
(Because the
role of oil is discussed extensively by many other
researchers and writers, I would focus here on the role of
the Pentagon contractors, both as a major driving force to
the war on Iraq and a major obstacle in the way of
withdrawing from that country.)
The rise of
the fortunes of the major Pentagon contractors can be
measured, in part, by the growth of the Pentagon budget
since President George W. Bush arrived in the White House:
it has grown by more than 50 percent, from nearly $300
billion in 2001 to almost $455 billion in 2007. (These
figures do not include the Homeland Security budget, which
is $33 billion for the 2007 fiscal year alone, and the costs
of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, which are fast
approaching $400 billion.)
Large Pentagon
contractors have been the main beneficiaries of this
windfall. For example, a 2004 study by The Center for Public
Integrity revealed that, for the 1998–2003 period, one
percent of the biggest contractors won 80 percent of all
defense contracting dollars. The top ten got 38 percent of
all the money. Lockheed Martin topped the list at $94
billion, Boeing was second with $81 billion, Raytheon was
third (just under $40 billion), followed by Northrop Grumman
and General Dynamics with nearly $34 billion each.[2]
Fantastic
returns to these armaments conglomerates have been reflected
in the continuing jump in the value of their shares or
stocks in the Wall Street: “Shares of U.S. defense
companies, which have nearly trebled since the beginning of
the occupation of Iraq, show no signs of slowing down. . . .
All the defense companies—with very few exceptions—have been
doing extremely well with mostly double-digit earnings
growth. . . . The feeling that makers of ships, planes and
weapons are just getting into their stride has driven shares
of leading Pentagon contractors Lockheed Martin Corp.,
Northrop Grumman Corp., and General Dynamics Corp. to
all-time highs. . . .”[3]
Major
beneficiaries of war dividends include not only the giant
manufacturing contractors such as Northrop Grumman and
Lockheed Martin, but also a whole host of other war-induced
service contractors that have mushroomed around the Pentagon
and the Homeland Security apparatus in order to cash in on
the Pentagon’s spending bonanza.
A highly
profitable and fast growing industry that has evolved out of
the Pentagon’s tendency to shower private contractors with
tax-payers’ money is based on its increasing practice of the
outsourcing of the many of the traditional military services
to private businesses. “In 1984, almost two-thirds of [the
Pentagon’s] contracting budget went for products rather than
services. . . . By fiscal year 2003, 56 percent of Defense
Department contracts paid for services rather than goods.”
What is more,
these services are not limited to the relatively simple or
routine tasks and responsibilities such food and sanitation
services or building maintenance. More importantly, they
include “contracts for services that are highly
sophisticated, strategic in nature, and closely approaching
core functions that for good reason the government used to
do on its own. The Pentagon has even hired contractors to
advise it on hiring contractors.”[4]
Private
security contracting, a lucrative and rapidly growing
industry, is a good example of the Pentagon’s policy of
outsourcing. These contractors operate on the periphery of
U.S. foreign policy by training foreign “security forces,”
or by “fighting terrorism.” Often these private military
corporations are formed by retired Special Forces personnel
seeking to market their military expertise to the Pentagon,
the State Department, the CIA, or foreign governments.
For example,
MPRI, one of the largest and most active of these firms,
which “has trained militaries throughout the world under
contract to the Pentagon,” was founded by former Army Chief
of Staff Carl Vuono and seven other retired generals. The
fortunes of these military training contractors, or
modern-day mercenary companies, like those of the
manufacturers of military hardware, have skyrocketed by
virtue of heightened war and militarism under President
George W. Bush. For example, “The per share price of stocks
in L3 Communications, which owns MPRI, has more than
doubled.”[5]
As the
Pentagon’s manufacturing contractors such as Lockheed Martin
make fortunes through the production of the means of death
and destruction, they also create profit opportunities for
service contractors such as Halliburton that, like vultures,
follow the plumes of the smoke of deconstruction and set up
shop for “reconstruction.”
For example,
in the same month (October 2006) that the US forces lost a
record number of soldiers in Iraq, and the Iraqi citizens
lost many more, Halliburton announced that its third quarter
revenue had risen by 19 percent to $5.8 billion. This
prompted Dave Lesar, the company’s chairman, president and
CEO, to declare, "This was an exceptional quarter for
Halliburton.”
Jeff Tilley,
an analyst who does research for Halliburton, likewise
pointed out, "Iraq was better than expected. . . . Overall,
there is nothing really to question or be skeptical about. I
think the results are very good."
This led many
critics to point out scornfully that when around the same
time Vice President Dick Cheney told Rush Limbaugh that "if
you look at the overall situation [in Iraq] they're doing
remarkably well," he must have been talking about
Halliburton.[6]
The service
and “rebuilding” contractors are frequently called
“reconstruction rackets” not only because they obtain
generous and often no-bid contracts from their policy-making
accomplices, but also because they habitually shirk on their
contracts and skimp on what they promise to do. For example,
an investigative on-the-ground report from Iraq, sponsored
by the Institute for Southern Studies and titled “New
Investigation Reveals Reconstruction Racket,” showed that
despite “billions of dollars spent, key
pieces of Iraq's infrastructure—power plants, telephone
exchanges, and sewage and sanitation systems—have either not
been repaired, or have been fixed so poorly that they don't
function.”
The report, carried out by Pratap Chatterjee
and Herbert Docena and published in the Institutes’
Publication Southern Exposure, further revealed that
the giant Pentagon contractor Bechtel “has been given tens
of millions to repair Iraq's schools. Yet many haven't been
touched, and several schools that Bechtel claims to have
repaired are in shambles. One 'repaired' school was
overflowing with unflushed sewage.”
The report also showed that out of a $2.2
billion “reconstruction” contract with Halliburton, the
company spent only 10 percent on “community needs—the rest
being spent on servicing U.S. troops and rebuilding oil
pipelines. Halliburton has also spent over $40 million in
the unsuccessful search for weapons of mass destruction.”[7]
The spoils of war and devastation in Iraq
have been so attractive that an an extremely large number of
war profiteers have set up shop in that country in order to
participate in the booty: “There are about 100,000
government contractors operating in Iraq, not counting
subcontractors, a total that is approaching the size of the
U.S. military force there, according to the military's first
census of the growing population of civilians operating in
the battlefield,” reported The Washington Post in its
5 December 2006 issue.
The report,
prepared by Renae Merle, further points out, “In addition to
about 140,000 U.S. troops, Iraq is now filled with a
hodgepodge of contractors. DynCorp International has about
1,500 employees in Iraq, including about 700 helping train
the police force. Blackwater USA has more than 1,000
employees in the country, most of them providing private
security. . . . MPRI, a unit of L-3 Communications, has
about 500 employees working on 12 contracts, including
providing mentors to the Iraqi Defense Ministry for
strategic planning, budgeting and establishing its public
affairs office. Titan, another L-3 division, has 6,500
linguists in the country.”[8]
The fact that
powerful beneficiaries of war dividends flourish in an
atmosphere of war and international convulsion should not
come as a surprise to anyone. What is surprising is that, in
the context of the recent US wars of choice, these
beneficiaries have also acquired the power of promoting
wars, often by manufacturing “external threats to our
national interest.” In other words, profit-driven
beneficiaries of war have also evolved as war makers, or
contributors to war making.[9]
The following
is a sample of such unsavory business–political
relationships, as reported by Walter F. Roche and Ken
Silverstein in a 14 July 2004 Los Angeles Times
article, titled “Advocates of War Now Profit from Iraq’s
Reconstruction:”
• Former CIA Director R. James Woolsey is a
prominent example of the phenomenon, mixing his business
interests with what he contends are the country's strategic
interests.
• Neil Livingstone, a former Senate aide
who has served as a Pentagon and State Department advisor
and issued repeated public calls for Hussein's overthrow. He
heads a Washington-based firm, GlobalOptions, Inc. that
provides contacts and consulting services to companies doing
business in Iraq.
• Randy Scheunemann, a former Rumsfeld
advisor who helped draft the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998
authorizing $98 million in U.S. aid to Iraqi exile groups.
He was the founding president of the Committee for the
Liberation of Iraq. Now he's helping former Soviet Bloc
states win business there.
• Margaret Bartel, who managed federal
money channeled to Chalabi's exile group, the Iraqi National
Congress, including funds for its prewar intelligence
program on Hussein's alleged weapons of mass destruction.
She now heads a Washington-area consulting firm helping
would-be investors find Iraqi partners.
• K. Riva Levinson, a Washington lobbyist
and public relations specialist who received federal funds
to drum up prewar support for the Iraqi National Congress.
She has close ties to Bartel and now helps companies open
doors in Iraq, in part through her contacts with the Iraqi
National Congress.
• Joe M. Allbaugh, who managed President
Bush's 2000 campaign for the White House and later headed
the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and Edward Rogers
Jr., an aide to the first President Bush, recently helped
set up New Bridge Strategies and Diligence, LLC to promote
business in postwar Iraq.[10]
There are strong indications that these
dubious relationships represent more than simple cases of
sporadic or unrelated instances of some unscruplulous or
rogue elements. Evidence shows that contracts for the
“reconstruction” of Iraq were drawn long before the invasion
and deconstruction of that country had started. In a
fascinating report for The Nation magazine, titled
“The Rise of Disaster Capitalism,” Naomi Klein describes
such long-projected “rebuilding” schemes as follows:
“Last summer, in the lull of the
August media doze, the Bush Administration's doctrine of
preventive war took a major leap forward. On August 5, 2004,
the White House created the Office of the Coordinator for
Reconstruction and Stabilization, headed by former US
Ambassador to Ukraine Carlos Pascual. Its mandate is to draw
up elaborate ‘post-conflict’ plans for up to twenty-five
countries that are not, as of yet, in conflict. According to
Pascual, it will also be able to coordinate three full-scale
reconstruction operations in different countries ‘at the
same time,’ each lasting ‘five to seven years.’”[11]
Here we get a
glimpse of the real reasons or forces behind the Bush
administration’s preemptive wars. As Klein puts it, “a
government devoted to perpetual pre-emptive deconstruction
now has a standing office of perpetual pre-emptive
reconstruction.” Klein also documents how (through Pascual’s
office) contractors drew “reconstruction” plans in close
collaboration with various government agencies and how, at
times, contracts were actually pre-approved and paper work
completed long before an actual military strike:
“In close
cooperation with the National Intelligence Council,
Pascual's office keeps ‘high risk’ countries on a ‘watch
list’ and assembles rapid-response teams ready to engage in
prewar planning and to ‘mobilize and deploy quickly’ after a
conflict has gone down. The teams are made up of private
companies, nongovernmental organizations and members of
think tanks—some, Pascual told an audience at the Center for
Strategic and International Studies in October, will have
‘pre-completed’ contracts to rebuild countries that are not
yet broken. Doing this paperwork in advance could ‘cut off
three to six months in your response time.’”
No business
model or entrepreneurial paradigm can adequately capture the
nature of this kind of scheming and profiteering. Not even
illicit businesses based on rent-seeking, corruption or
theft can sufficiently describe the kind of nefarious
business interests that lurk behind the Bush
administration’s preemptive wars. Only a calculated imperial
or colonial kind of exploitation, albeit a new form of
colonialism or imperialism, can capture the essence of the
war profiteering associated with the recent US wars of
aggression. As Shalmali Guttal, a Bangalore-based researcher
put it, “We used to have vulgar colonialism. Now we have
sophisticated colonialism, and they call it
'reconstruction.'"[12]
Classical
colonial or imperial powers roamed on the periphery of the
capitalist center, “discovered” new territories, and drained
them off of their riches and resources. Today there are no
new places in our planet to be “discovered.” But there are
many vulnerable sovereign countries whose governments can be
overthrown, their infrastructures smashed to the ground, and
fortunes made as a result (of both destruction and
“reconstruction). And herein lies the genius of a
parasitically efficient market mechanism, as well as a major
driving force behind the Bush administration’s unprovoked
unilateral wars of choice.
Not only does
the new form of imperial or colonial aggression, driven
largely by the powerful interests that are vested in the
armaments industries and other war-based businesses, bring
calamity to the vanquished, but it is also detrimental and
burdensome to the victor, namely, the imperium and its
citizens. Contrary to the external military operations of
past empires, which usually brought benefits not only to the
imperial ruling classes but also (through “trickle-down”
effects) to their citizens, U.S. military expeditions and
operations of late are not justifiable even on the grounds
of national economic gains.
Indeed,
escalating US military expansions and aggressions have
become ever more wasteful and cost-inefficient as they are
hollowing out the public treasury, undermining social
spending, and accumulating national debt. Viewed in this
light, the new form of imperialism can perhaps be called
“parasitic” imperialism.
War
profiteering is, of course, not new; it has always existed
in the course of the history of warfare. What makes war
profiteering in the context of the recent US wars of choice
unique and extremely dangerous to world peace and stability,
however, is the fact that it has become a major driving
force behind war and militarism.
This is key to
an understanding of why the US ruling elite is reluctant to
pull US troops out of Iraq. The reluctance or “difficulty”
of leaving Iraq stems not so much from pulling 140,000
troops out of that country as it is from pulling out more
than 100,000 contractors. As Josh Mitteldorf of the
University of Arizona recently put it, “There are a lot of
contractors making a fortune and we don’t want that money
tap turned off, even though it is borrowed money, which our
children and grandchildren will have to repay.”[13]
It follows
that US troops will not be withdrawn from Iraq as long as
antiwar voices are not raised beyond the premises and
parameters of the official narrative or justification of the
war: terrorism, democracy, civil war, stability, human
rights, and the like. Antiwar forces need to extricate
themselves from the largely diversionary and constraining
debate over these secondary issues, and raise public
consciousness of the scandalous economic interests that
drive the war.
It is
crucially important that public attention is shifted away
from the confining official narrative of the war, parroted
by the corporate media and political pundits, to the
economic crimes that have been committed because of this
war, both in Iraq and here in the United States. It is time
to make a moral case for restoring Iraqi oil and other
assets to the Iraqis. It is also time to make a moral case
against the war profiteers’ plundering of our treasury, or
tax dollars. To paraphrase the late General Smedley D.
Butler, most wars could easily be ended—they might not even
be started—if profits are taken out of them.[14]
Ismael
Hossein-zadeh is a professor of economics at Drake
University, Des Moines, Iowa. He is the author of the newly
published book,
The Political Economy of U.S. Militarism
His Web page is
http://www.cbpa.drake.edu/hossein-zadeh
NOTES:
1. Renae
Merle, “Census Counts 100,000 Contractors in Iraq,” The
Washington Post (December 5, 2006), <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/04/AR2006120401311_pf.html>.
2. The Center
for Public Integrity, “Report Finds $362 Billion in No-Bid
Contracts at the Pentagon” (September 29, 2004),
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/pns/default.aspx?act=summary>.
3. Bill Rigby,
“Defense stocks may jump higher with big profits,” Reuter
(April 12, 2006),
<http://www.boston.com/business/articles/2006/04/12/defense_stocks_may_jump_higher_with_big_profits/>.
4. The Center
for Public Integrity, “Outsourcing the Pentagon” (September
29, 2004),
<http://www.publicintegrity.org/pns/report.aspx?aid=385>.
5. Esther
Schrader, “Companies Capitalize on War on Terror,” Los
Angeles Times (14 April 2002),
<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-041402trainers.story>.
6. Steve
Young, “What Is Bad for America Is Good for Halliburton . .
. Just Ask the Vice President,” OpEdNews.com (23
October 2006), <http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_steve_yo_061023_what_s_bad_for_ameri.htm>.
7. “War
Profiteering,” by Source Watch (a project of the Center for
Media & Democracy),
<http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=War_profiteering>.
8. Renae
Merle, “Census Counts 100,000 Contractors in Iraq,”
Washington Post (December 5, 2006), <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/04/AR2006120401311.html>.
9. William D.
Hartung, How Much Are You Making on the War, Daddy?
(New York: Nation Books, 2003); Chalmers Johnson, The
Sorrows of Empire (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2004);
Ismael Hossein-zadeh, The Political Economy of U.S.
Militarism (New York & London: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2006).
10. “War
Profiteering,” by Source Watch (a project of the Center for
Media & Democracy), <http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=War_profiteering>.
11. Naomi
Klein, “The Rise of Disaster Capitalism,” The Nation
(May 2, 2005), <http://www.thenation.com/docprint.mhtml?i=20050502&s=klein>.
12. As quoted
in Klein, “The Rise of Disaster Capitalism.”
13. Josh
Mitteldorf, “Why we’re not getting out of Iraq,” Op Ed
News (December 8, 2006), <http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_josh_mit_061206_why_we_re_not_gettin.htm>.
14. Smedley D.
Butler, War Is a Racket (Los Angeles: Feral House,
1935 [2003]).
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