737 U.S.
Military Bases = Global Empire
The following is excerpted from Chalmers Johnson's new
book, "NEMESIS:
The Last Days of the American Republic
" (Metropolitan Books).
By Chalmers Johnson
02/19/07 "ICH"
-- - Once upon a time, you could trace the spread of
imperialism by counting up colonies. America's version
of the colony is the military base; and by following the
changing politics of global basing, one can learn much
about our ever more all-encompassing imperial
"footprint" and the militarism that grows with it.
It is not easy, however, to assess the size or exact
value of our empire of bases. Official records available
to the public on these subjects are misleading, although
instructive. According to the Defense Department's
annual inventories from 2002 to 2005 of real property it
owns around the world, the Base Structure Report, there
has been an immense churning in the numbers of
installations.
The total of America's military bases in other people's
countries in 2005, according to official sources, was
737. Reflecting massive deployments to Iraq and the
pursuit of President Bush's strategy of preemptive war,
the trend line for numbers of overseas bases continues
to go up.
Interestingly enough, the thirty-eight large and
medium-sized American facilities spread around the globe
in 2005 -- mostly air and naval bases for our bombers
and fleets -- almost exactly equals Britain's thirty-six
naval bases and army garrisons at its imperial zenith in
1898. The Roman Empire at its height in 117 AD required
thirty-seven major bases to police its realm from
Britannia to Egypt, from Hispania to Armenia. Perhaps
the optimum number of major citadels and fortresses for
an imperialist aspiring to dominate the world is
somewhere between thirty-five and forty.
Using data from fiscal year 2005, the Pentagon
bureaucrats calculated that its overseas bases were
worth at least $127 billion -- surely far too low a
figure but still larger than the gross domestic products
of most countries -- and an estimated $658.1 billion for
all of them, foreign and domestic (a base's "worth" is
based on a Department of Defense estimate of what it
would cost to replace it). During fiscal 2005, the
military high command deployed to our overseas bases
some 196,975 uniformed personnel as well as an equal
number of dependents and Department of Defense civilian
officials, and employed an additional 81,425 locally
hired foreigners.
The worldwide total of U.S. military personnel in 2005,
including those based domestically, was 1,840,062
supported by an additional 473,306 Defense Department
civil service employees and 203,328 local hires. Its
overseas bases, according to the Pentagon, contained
32,327 barracks, hangars, hospitals, and other
buildings, which it owns, and 16,527 more that it
leased. The size of these holdings was recorded in the
inventory as covering 687,347 acres overseas and
29,819,492 acres worldwide, making the Pentagon easily
one of the world's largest landlords.
These numbers, although staggeringly big, do not begin
to cover all the actual bases we occupy globally. The
2005 Base Structure Report fails, for instance, to
mention any garrisons in Kosovo (or Serbia, of which
Kosovo is still officially a province) -- even though it
is the site of the huge Camp Bondsteel built in 1999 and
maintained ever since by the KBR corporation (formerly
known as Kellogg Brown & Root), a subsidiary of the
Halliburton Corporation of Houston.
The report similarly omits bases in Afghanistan, Iraq
(106 garrisons as of May 2005), Israel, Kyrgyzstan,
Qatar, and Uzbekistan, even though the U.S. military has
established colossal base structures in the Persian Gulf
and Central Asian areas since 9/11. By way of excuse, a
note in the preface says that "facilities provided by
other nations at foreign locations" are not included,
although this is not strictly true. The report does
include twenty sites in Turkey, all owned by the Turkish
government and used jointly with the Americans. The
Pentagon continues to omit from its accounts most of the
$5 billion worth of military and espionage installations
in Britain, which have long been conveniently disguised
as Royal Air Force bases. If there were an honest count,
the actual size of our military empire would probably
top 1,000 different bases overseas, but no one --
possibly not even the Pentagon -- knows the exact number
for sure.
In some cases, foreign countries themselves have tried
to keep their U.S. bases secret, fearing embarrassment
if their collusion with American imperialism were
revealed. In other instances, the Pentagon seems to want
to play down the building of facilities aimed at
dominating energy sources, or, in a related situation,
retaining a network of bases that would keep Iraq under
our hegemony regardless of the wishes of any future
Iraqi government. The U.S. government tries not to
divulge any information about the bases we use to
eavesdrop on global communications, or our nuclear
deployments, which, as William Arkin, an authority on
the subject, writes, "[have] violated its treaty
obligations. The U.S. was lying to many of its closest
allies, even in NATO, about its nuclear designs. Tens of
thousands of nuclear weapons, hundreds of bases, and
dozens of ships and submarines existed in a special
secret world of their own with no rational military or
even 'deterrence' justification."
In Jordan, to take but one example, we have secretly
deployed up to five thousand troops in bases on the
Iraqi and Syrian borders. (Jordan has also cooperated
with the CIA in torturing prisoners we deliver to them
for "interrogation.") Nonetheless, Jordan continues to
stress that it has no special arrangements with the
United States, no bases, and no American military
presence.
The country is formally sovereign but actually a
satellite of the United States and has been so for at
least the past ten years. Similarly, before our
withdrawal from Saudi Arabia in 2003, we habitually
denied that we maintained a fleet of enormous and easily
observed B-52 bombers in Jeddah because that was what
the Saudi government demanded. So long as military
bureaucrats can continue to enforce a culture of secrecy
to protect themselves, no one will know the true size of
our baseworld, least of all the elected representatives
of the American people.
In 2005, deployments at home and abroad were in a state
of considerable flux. This was said to be caused both by
a long overdue change in the strategy for maintaining
our global dominance and by the closing of surplus bases
at home. In reality, many of the changes seemed to be
determined largely by the Bush administration's urge to
punish nations and domestic states that had not
supported its efforts in Iraq and to reward those that
had. Thus, within the United States, bases were being
relocated to the South, to states with cultures, as the
Christian Science Monitor put it, "more tied to martial
traditions" than the Northeast, the northern Middle
West, or the Pacific Coast. According to a North
Carolina businessman gloating over his new customers,
"The military is going where it is wanted and valued
most."
In part, the realignment revolved around the Pentagon's
decision to bring home by 2007 or 2008 two army
divisions from Germany -- the First Armored Division and
the First Infantry Division -- and one brigade (3,500
men) of the Second Infantry Division from South Korea
(which, in 2005, was officially rehoused at Fort Carson,
Colorado). So long as the Iraq insurgency continues, the
forces involved are mostly overseas and the facilities
at home are not ready for them (nor is there enough
money budgeted to get them ready).
Nonetheless, sooner or later, up to 70,000 troops and
100,000 family members will have to be accommodated
within the United States. The attendant 2005 "base
closings" in the United States are actually a base
consolidation and enlargement program with tremendous
infusions of money and customers going to a few selected
hub areas. At the same time, what sounds like a
retrenchment in the empire abroad is really proving to
be an exponential growth in new types of bases --
without dependents and the amenities they would require
-- in very remote areas where the U.S. military has
never been before.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, it was
obvious to anyone who thought about it that the huge
concentrations of American military might in Germany,
Italy, Japan, and South Korea were no longer needed to
meet possible military threats. There were not going to
be future wars with the Soviet Union or any country
connected to any of those places.
In 1991, the first Bush administration should have begun
decommissioning or redeploying redundant forces; and, in
fact, the Clinton administration did close some bases in
Germany, such as those protecting the Fulda Gap, once
envisioned as the likeliest route for a Soviet invasion
of Western Europe. But nothing was really done in those
years to plan for the strategic repositioning of the
American military outside the United States.
By the end of the 1990s, the neoconservatives were
developing their grandiose theories to promote overt
imperialism by the "lone superpower" -- including
preventive and preemptive unilateral military action,
spreading democracy abroad at the point of a gun,
obstructing the rise of any "near-peer" country or bloc
of countries that might challenge U.S. military
supremacy, and a vision of a "democratic" Middle East
that would supply us with all the oil we wanted. A
component of their grand design was a redeployment and
streamlining of the military. The initial rationale was
for a program of transformation that would turn the
armed forces into a lighter, more agile, more high-tech
military, which, it was imagined, would free up funds
that could be invested in imperial policing.
What came to be known as "defense transformation" first
began to be publicly bandied about during the 2000
presidential election campaign. Then 9/11 and the wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq intervened. In August 2002, when
the whole neocon program began to be put into action, it
centered above all on a quick, easy war to incorporate
Iraq into the empire. By this time, civilian leaders in
the Pentagon had become dangerously overconfident
because of what they perceived as America's military
brilliance and invincibility as demonstrated in its 2001
campaign against the Taliban and al-Qaeda -- a strategy
that involved reigniting the Afghan civil war through
huge payoffs to Afghanistan's Northern Alliance warlords
and the massive use of American airpower to support
their advance on Kabul.
In August 2002, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld
unveiled his "1-4-2-1 defense strategy" to replace the
Clinton era's plan for having a military capable of
fighting two wars -- in the Middle East and Northeast
Asia -- simultaneously. Now, war planners were to
prepare to defend the United States while building and
assembling forces capable of "deterring aggression and
coercion" in four "critical regions": Europe, Northeast
Asia (South Korea and Japan), East Asia (the Taiwan
Strait), and the Middle East, be able to defeat
aggression in two of these regions simultaneously, and
"win decisively" (in the sense of "regime change" and
occupation) in one of those conflicts "at a time and
place of our choosing."As the military analyst William
M. Arkin commented, "[With] American military forces ...
already stretched to the limit, the new strategy goes
far beyond preparing for reactive contingencies and
reads more like a plan for picking fights in new parts
of the world."
A seemingly easy three-week victory over Saddam
Hussein's forces in the spring of 2003 only reconfirmed
these plans. The U.S. military was now thought to be so
magnificent that it could accomplish any task assigned
to it. The collapse of the Baathist regime in Baghdad
also emboldened Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld to use
"transformation" to penalize nations that had been, at
best, lukewarm about America's unilateralism -- Germany,
Saudi Arabia, South Korea, and Turkey -- and to reward
those whose leaders had welcomed Operation Iraqi
Freedom, including such old allies as Japan and Italy
but also former communist countries such as Poland,
Romania, and Bulgaria. The result was the Department of
Defense's Integrated Global Presence and Basing
Strategy, known informally as the "Global Posture
Review."
President Bush first mentioned it in a statement on
November 21, 2003, in which he pledged to "realign the
global posture" of the United States. He reiterated the
phrase and elaborated on it on August 16, 2004, in a
speech to the annual convention of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars in Cincinnati. Because Bush's Cincinnati
address was part of the 2004 presidential election
campaign, his comments were not taken very seriously at
the time. While he did say that the United States would
reduce its troop strength in Europe and Asia by 60,000
to 70,000, he assured his listeners that this would take
a decade to accomplish -- well beyond his term in office
-- and made a series of promises that sounded more like
a reenlistment pitch than a statement of strategy.
"Over the coming decade, we'll deploy a more agile and
more flexible force, which means that more of our troops
will be stationed and deployed from here at home. We'll
move some of our troops and capabilities to new
locations, so they can surge quickly to deal with
unexpected threats. ... It will reduce the stress on our
troops and our military families. ... See, our service
members will have more time on the home front, and more
predictability and fewer moves over a career. Our
military spouses will have fewer job changes, greater
stability, more time for their kids and to spend with
their families at home."
On September 23, 2004, however, Secretary Rumsfeld
disclosed the first concrete details of the plan to the
Senate Armed Services Committee. With characteristic
grandiosity, he described it as "the biggest
re-structuring of America's global forces since 1945."
Quoting then undersecretary Douglas Feith, he added,
"During the Cold War we had a strong sense that we knew
where the major risks and fights were going to be, so we
could deploy people right there. We're operating now
[with] an entirely different concept. We need to be able
to do [the] whole range of military operations, from
combat to peacekeeping, anywhere in the world pretty
quickly."
Though this may sound plausible enough, in basing terms
it opens up a vast landscape of diplomatic and
bureaucratic minefields that Rumsfeld's militarists
surely underestimated. In order to expand into new
areas, the Departments of State and Defense must
negotiate with the host countries such things as Status
of Forces Agreements, or SOFAs, which are discussed in
detail in the next chapter. In addition, they must
conclude many other required protocols, such as access
rights for our aircraft and ships into foreign territory
and airspace, and Article 98 Agreements. The latter
refer to article 98 of the International Criminal
Court's Rome Statute, which allows countries to exempt
U.S. citizens on their territory from the ICC's
jurisdiction.
Such immunity agreements were congressionally mandated
by the American Service-Members' Protection Act of 2002,
even though the European Union holds that they are
illegal. Still other necessary accords are acquisitions
and cross-servicing agreements or ACSAs, which concern
the supply and storage of jet fuel, ammunition, and so
forth; terms of leases on real property; levels of
bilateral political and economic aid to the United
States (so-called host-nation support); training and
exercise arrangements (Are night landings allowed? Live
firing drills?); and environmental pollution
liabilities.
When the United States is not present in a country as
its conqueror or military savior, as it was in Germany,
Japan, and Italy after World War II and in South Korea
after the 1953 Korean War armistice, it is much more
difficult to secure the kinds of agreements that allow
the Pentagon to do anything it wants and that cause a
host nation to pick up a large part of the costs of
doing so. When not based on conquest, the structure of
the American empire of bases comes to look exceedingly
fragile.
See also: Chalmers Johnson: ”The Last Days of the
American Republic.”
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13602.htm
From the book
NEMESIS: The Last Days of the American Republic
by Chalmers Johnson. Reprinted by arrangement with
Metropolitan Books, an imprint of Henry Holt and
Company, LLC. Copyright (c) 2006 by Chalmers Johnson.
All rights reserved.