Parasitic
Imperialism
How recent U.S. wars of
choice, driven largely by war profiteering, are plundering
not only defenseless peoples and their resources abroad, but
also the overwhelming majority of U.S. citizens and their
resources at home.
By Ismael Hossein-zadeh
07/07/07 "ICH" -- -- Although immoral, external
military operations of past empires often proved profitable,
and therefore justifiable on economic grounds. Military
actions abroad usually brought economic benefits not only to
the imperial ruling classes, but also (through
“trickle-down” effects) to their citizens. Thus, for
example, imperialism paid significant dividends to Britain,
France, the Dutch, and other European powers of the
seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth
centuries. As the imperial economic gains helped develop
their economies, they also helped improve the living
conditions of their working people and elevate the standards
of living of their citizens.
This pattern of economic gains
flowing from imperial military operations, however, seems to
have somewhat changed in the context of the recent U.S.
imperial wars of choice, especially in the post-Cold War
period. Moralities aside, U.S. military expeditions and
operations of late are not justifiable even on economic
grounds. Indeed, escalating U.S. military expansions and
aggressions have become ever more wasteful,
cost-inefficient, and burdensome to the overwhelming
majority of its citizens.
Therefore, recent imperial
policies of the United States can be called parasitic
imperialism because such policies of aggression are
often prompted not so much by a desire to expand the
empire’s wealth beyond the existing levels, as did the
imperial powers of the past, but by a desire to appropriate
the lion’s share of the existing wealth and treasure for the
military establishment, especially for the war-profiteering
Pentagon contractors. It can also be called dual
imperialism because not only does it exploit the
conquered and the occupied abroad but also the overwhelming
majority of U.S. citizens and their resources at home.
Since imperial policies abroad
are widely discussed by others, I will focus here on
parasitic military imperialism at home, that is, on what
might be called domestic or internal imperialism.
Specifically, I will argue that parasitic imperialism (1)
redistributes national income or resources in favor of the
wealthy; (2) undermines the formation of public capital
(both physical and human); (3) weakens national defenses
against natural disasters; (4) accumulates national debt and
threatens economic/financial stability; (5) spoils external
or foreign markets for non-military U.S. transnational
capital; (6) undermines civil liberties and democratic
values; and (7) fosters a dependence on or addiction to
military spending and, therefore, leads to an spiraling
vicious circle of war and militarism. (The terms domestic
imperialism, internal imperialism, parasitic imperialism,
and military imperialism are used synonymously or
interchangeably in this article.)
1. Parasitic Imperialism
Redistributes National Income from the Bottom to the Top
Even without the costs of the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, which are fast surpassing half
a trillion dollars, U.S. military spending is now the
largest item in the Federal budget. President Bush’s
proposed increase of 10% for next year will raise the
Pentagon budget to over half a trillion dollars for fiscal
year 2008. A proposed supplemental appropriation to pay for
the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq “brings proposed military
spending for FY 2008 to $647.2 billion, the highest level of
military spending since the end of World War II—higher than
Vietnam, higher than Korea, higher than the peak of the
Reagan buildup.”[1]
The skyrocketing Pentagon
budget has been a boon for its contractors. This is clearly
reflected in the continuing rise of the value of the
contractors’ shares in the stock market: “Shares of U.S.
defense companies, which have nearly trebled since the
beginning of the occupation of Iraq, show no signs of
slowing down. . . . 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.”[2]
But while the Pentagon
contractors and other beneficiaries of war dividends are
showered with public money, low- and middle-income Americans
are squeezed out of economic or subsistence resources in
order to make up for the resulting budgetary shortfalls. For
example, as the official Pentagon budget for 2008 fiscal
year is projected to rise by more than 10 percent, or nearly
$50 billion, “a total of 141 government programs will be
eliminated or sharply reduced” to pay for the increase.
These would include cuts in housing assistance for
low-income seniors by 25 percent, home heating/energy
assistance to low-income people by 18
percent, funding for community development grants by 12.7
percent, and grants for education and employment training by
8 percent.[3]
Combined with redistributive
militarism and generous tax cuts for the wealthy, these cuts
have further exacerbated the ominously growing income
inequality that started under President Reagan. Ever since
Reagan arrived in the White House in 1980, opponents of
non-military public spending have been using an insidious
strategy to cut social spending, to reverse the New Deal and
other social safety net programs, and to redistribute
national/public resources in favor of the wealthy. That
cynical strategy consists of a combination of drastic
increases in military spending coupled with equally drastic
tax cuts for the wealthy. As this combination creates large
budget deficits, it then forces cuts in non-military public
spending (along with borrowing) to fill the gaps thus
created.
For example, at the same time
that President Bush is planning to raise military spending
by $50 billion for the next fiscal year, he is also
proposing to make his affluent-targeted tax cuts permanent
at a cost of $1.6 trillion over 10 years, or an average
yearly cut of $160 billion. Simultaneously, “funding for
domestic discretionary programs would be cut a total of $114
billion” in order to pay for these handouts to the rich. The
projected cuts include over 140 programs that provide
support for the basic needs of low- and middle-income
families such as elementary and secondary education, job
training, environmental protection, veterans’ health care,
medical research, Meals on Wheels, child care and HeadStart,
low-income home energy assistance, and many more.[4]
According to the Urban
Institute–Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center,
"if the President's tax cuts are made
permanent, households in the top 1 percent of the population
(currently those with incomes over $400,000) will receive
tax cuts averaging $67,000 a year by 2012. . . . The
tax cuts for those with incomes of over $1 million a year
would average $162,000 a year by 2012.”[5]
Official macroeconomic figures
show that, over the past five decades or so, government
spending (at the federal, state and local levels) as a
percentage of gross national product (GNP) has remained
fairly steady—at about 20 percent. Given this nearly
constant share of the public sector of national
output/income, it is not surprising that increases in
military spending have almost always been accompanied or
followed by compensating decreases in non-military public
spending, and vice versa.
For example, when by virtue of
FDR’s New Deal reforms and LBJ’s metaphorical War on
Poverty, the share of non-military government spending rose
significantly the share of military spending declined
accordingly. From the mid 1950s to the mid 1970s, the share
of non-military government spending of GNP rose from 9.2 to
14.3 percent, an increase of 5.1 percent. During that time
period, the share of military spending of GNP declined from
10.1 to 5.8 percent, a decline of 4.3 percent.[6]
That trend was reversed when
President Reagan took office in 1980. In the early 1980s, as
President Reagan drastically increased military spending, he
also just as drastically lowered tax rates on higher
incomes. The resulting large budget deficits were then paid
for by more than a decade of steady cuts on non-military
spending.
Likewise, the administration of
President George W. Bush has been pursuing a similarly
sinister fiscal policy of cutting non-military public
spending in order to pay for the skyrocketing military
spending and the generous tax cuts for the affluent.
Interestingly (though not
surprisingly), changes in income inequality have mirrored
changes in government spending priorities, as reflected in
the fiscal policies of different administrations. Thus, for
example, when from the mid 1950 to the mid 1970s the share
of non-military public spending rose relative to that of
military spending, income inequality declined accordingly.
But as President Reagan
reversed that fiscal policy by raising the share of military
spending relative to non-military public spending and
cutting taxes for the wealthy, income inequality also rose
considerably. As Reagan’s twin policies of drastic increases
in military spending and equally sweeping tax cuts for the
rich were somewhat tempered in the 1990s, growth in income
inequality slowed down accordingly. In the 2000s, however,
the ominous trends that were left off by President Reagan
have been picked up by President George W. Bush: increasing
military spending, decreasing taxes for the rich, and
(thereby) exacerbating income inequality.
The following are some specific
statistics of how redistributive militarism and supply-side
fiscal policies have exacerbated income inequality since the
late 1970s and early 1980s—making after-tax income gaps
wider than pre-tax ones. According to
recently released data by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO),
since 1979 income gains among high-income households
have dwarfed those of middle- and low-income households.
Specifically:
-
The average after-tax income of the top
one percent of the population nearly tripled, rising
from $314,000 to nearly $868,000—for a total increase of
$554,000, or 176 percent. (Figures are adjusted by CBO
for inflation.)
-
By contrast, the average after-tax
income of the middle fifth of the population rose a
relatively modest 21 percent, or $8,500, reaching
$48,400 in 2004.
-
The average after-tax income of the
poorest fifth of the population rose just 6 percent, or
$800, during this period, reaching $14,700 in 2004.[7]
Legislation enacted since 2001
has provided taxpayers with about $1 trillion in tax cuts
over the past six years. These large tax reductions have
made the distribution of after-tax income more unequal by
further concentrating income at the top of the income range.
According to the Urban Institute–Brookings Institution Tax
Policy Center, as a result of the tax cuts enacted since
2001, in 2006 households in the bottom fifth of the income
spectrum received tax cuts averaging only $20; households in
the middle fifth of the income range received tax cuts
averaging $740; households in the top one percent received
tax cuts averaging $44,200; and households with incomes
exceeding $1 million received an average tax cut of
$118,000.[8]
2. Parasitic Imperialism
Undermines Public Capital—both Physical and Human
Beyond the issue of class and
inequality, allocation of a disproportionately large share
of public resources to the beneficiaries of war and
militarism is also steadily undermining the critical
national objective of building and/or maintaining public
capital. This includes both physical capital or
infrastructure (such as roads, bridges, mass transit, dams,
levees, and the like) and human capital such as health,
education, nutrition, and so on. If not reversed or
rectified, this ominous trend is bound to stint long term
productivity growth and socio-economic development. A top
heavy military establishment will be unviable in the long
run as it tends to undermine the economic base it is
supposed to nurture.
In March 2001, the American
Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) issued a “Report Card for
America's Infrastructure,” grading 12 infrastructure
categories at a disappointing D+ overall, and estimating the
need for a $1.3 trillion investment to bring conditions to
acceptable levels. In September 2003, ASCE released a
Progress Report that examined trends and assessed the
progress and decline of the nation’s infrastructure. The
Progress Report, prepared by a panel of 20 eminent civil
engineers with expertise in a range of practice specialties,
examined 12 major categories of infrastructure. The report
concluded: “The condition of our nation's roads, bridges,
drinking water systems and other public works have shown
little improvement since they were graded an overall D+ in
2001, with some areas sliding toward failing grade.”[9]
Neoliberal proponents of
laissez faire economics tend to view government spending on
public capital as a burden on the economy. Instead of
viewing public-sector spending on infrastructure as a
long-term investment that will help sustain and promote
economic vitality, they view it as an overhead. By focusing
on the short-term balance sheets, they seem to lose sight of
the indirect, long-term returns to the tax dollars invested
in the public capital stock. Yet, evidence shows that
neglect of public capital formation can undermine long-term
health of an economy in terms of productivity enhancement
and sustained growth.
Continued increase in military
spending at the expense of non-military public spending has
undermined more than physical infrastructure. Perhaps more
importantly, it has also undercut public investment in human
capital or social infrastructure such as health care,
education, nutrition, housing, and the like—investment that
would help improve quality of life, human creativity and
labor productivity, thereby also helping to bring about
long-term socioeconomic vitality. Investment in human
capital—anything that improves human capacity and/or labor
productivity—is a major source of social health and economic
vitality over time.
Sadly, however, public
investment in such vitally important areas has been
gradually curtailed ever since the arrival of Ronald Reagan
in the White House in 1980 in favor of steadily rising
military spending. Evidence of this regrettable trend is
overwhelming. To cite merely a few examples: “The war
priorities have depleted medical and education staffs. . . .
Shortages of housing have caused a swelling of the homeless
population in every major city. State and city governments
across the country have become trained to bend to the needs
of the military—giving automatic approvals to its spending
without limit. The same officials cannot find money for
affordable housing.”[10]
The New York Times
columnist Bob Herbert recently reported that some 5.5
million young Americans, age 16 to 24, were undereducated,
disconnected from society's mainstream, jobless, restless,
unhappy, frustrated, angry and sad. Commenting on this
report, Professor Seymour Melman of Columbia University
wrote: “This population, 5.5 million and growing, is the
product of America's national politics that has stripped
away as too costly the very things that might rescue this
abandoned generation and train it for productive work. But
that sort of thing is now treated as too costly. So this
abandoned generation is now left to perform as fodder for
well-budgeted police SWAT teams.”[11]
3. Parasitic Imperialism
Undermines National Defense Capabilities against Natural
Disasters—the Case of Hurricane Katrina
Neglect of public physical
capital, or infrastructure, can prove very costly in terms
of vulnerability in the face of natural disasters. This was
tragically demonstrated, among many other instances, by the
destruction wrought by Hurricane Katrina. In light of the
steady cuts in the infrastructural funding for the city of
New Orleans, catastrophic consequences of a hurricane of the
magnitude of Katrina were both predictable and, indeed,
predicted.
Engineering and meteorological
experts had frequently warned of impending disasters such as
Katrina. Government policy makers in charge of maintaining
public infrastructure, however, remained indifferent to
those warnings. They seem to have had other priorities and
responsibilities: cutting funds from public works projects
and social spending and giving them away to the wealthy
supporters who had paid for their elections. It is not
surprising, then, that many observers and experts have
argued that Katrina was as much a policy disaster as it was
a natural disaster.
The New Orleans project manager
for the Army Corps of Engineers, Alfred Naomi, had warned
for years of the need to shore up the levees, but corporate
representatives in the White House and the Congress kept
cutting back on the funding. Naomi wasn’t the only one who
had warned of the impending disaster.
In 2001, the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) “ranked the potential damage to New
Orleans as among the three likeliest, most catastrophic
disasters facing the country,” wrote Eric Berger in a
prescient article in the Houston Chronicle of
December 1, 2001. In that piece, Berger warned: “The city’s
less-than-adequate evacuation routes would strand 250,000
people or more, and probably kill one of ten left behind as
the city drowned under twenty feet of water. Thousands of
refugees could land in Houston.”[12]
In June 2003, Civil
Engineering Magazine ran a long story by Greg Brouwer
entitled “The Creeping Storm.” It noted that the levees
“were designed to withstand only forces associated with a
fast-moving” Category 3 hurricane. “If a lingering Category
3 storm—or a stronger storm, say, Category 4 or 5—were to
hit the city, much of New Orleans could find itself under
more than twenty feet of water.”[13]
On October 11, 2004, The
Philadelphia Inquirer ran a story by Paul Nussbaum,
entitled “Direct Hurricane Hit Could Drown City of New
Orleans, Experts Say.” It warned that “more than 25,000
people could die, emergency officials predict. That would
make it the deadliest disaster in U.S. history.” The story
quoted Terry C. Tuller, city director of emergency
preparedness: “It’s only a matter of time. The thing that
keeps me awake at night is the 100,000 people who couldn’t
leave.”
But government representatives
of big business in the White House and the Congress were not
moved by these alarm bells; the warnings did not deter them
from further cutting non-military public spending in order
to pay for the escalating military spending and the generous
tax cuts for the wealthy.
Some disasters cannot be
prevented from occurring. But, with proper defenses, they
can be contained and their disastrous consequences
minimized. Katrina was not; it was not “because of a
laissez-faire government that failed to bother to take
warnings seriously,” and because of a skewed government
fiscal policy “that is stingy when it comes to spending on
public goods but lavish on armaments and war.”[14]
4. Parasitic Militarism
Costs External Markets to Non-military Transnational Capital
U.S. military buildup and its
unilateral transgressions abroad have increasingly become
economic burdens not only because they devour a
disproportionately large share of national resources, but
also because such adventurous operations tend to create
instability in international markets, subvert long-term
global investment, and increase energy or fuel costs.
Furthermore, the resentment and hostilities that unprovoked
aggressions generate in foreign lands are bound to create
backlash at the consumer level.
For example, A Business Week
report pointed out in the immediate aftermath of the U.S.
invasion of Iraq that in the Muslim world, Europe, and
elsewhere “there have been calls for boycotts of American
brands as well as demonstrations at symbols of U.S.
business, such as McDonald’s corporation” (Business Week,
14 April 2003, p. 32).
A leading Middle East business
journal, AME Info, reported in its April 8, 2004
issue that “In 2002, a cluster of Arab organizations
asked Muslims to shun goods from America,
seen as an enemy of Islam and a supporter of Israel. In
Bahrain, the Al-Montazah supermarket chain, for example,
boosted sales by pulling about 1,000 US products off its
shelves, and other grocers followed suit.” The report
further pointed out that “Coca-Cola and Pepsi, sometimes
considered unflattering shorthand for the United States,
took the brunt of the blow. Coca-Cola admitted that the
boycott trimmed some $40 million off profits in the
[Persian] Gulf in 2002.”[15]
The report also
indicated that in recent years a number of “Muslim colas”
have appeared in the Middle Eastern/Muslim markets. “Don't
Drink Stupid, Drink Committed, read the labels of Mecca
Cola, from France. . . . Iran's Zam Zam Cola, originally
concocted for Arab markets, has spread to countries
including France and the United States.” In addition, the
report noted that “US exports to the Middle East dropped $31
billion from 1998-2002. Branded, value-added goods—all the
stuff easily recognized as American—were hit the hardest.”
Quoting Grant Smith, director of IRmep, a leading
Washington-based think tank on Middle Eastern affairs, the
report concluded: “Our piece of the pie is shrinking, and
it's because of our degraded image.”[16]
Evidence shows
that foreign policy-induced losses of the U.S. market share
in global markets goes beyond the Middle East and/or the
Muslim world. According to a December 2004 survey of
8,000 international consumers carried out by Global Market
Insite (GMI) Inc., one-third of all consumers in Canada,
China, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, and the United
Kingdom “said that U.S. foreign policy, particularly the
‘war on terror’ and the occupation of Iraq, constituted
their strongest impression of the United States. Brands
closely identified with the U.S., such as Marlboro
cigarettes, America Online (AOL), McDonald's, American
Airlines, and Exxon-Mobil, are particularly at risk.” Twenty
percent of respondents in Europe and Canada “said they
consciously avoided buying U.S. products as a protest
against those policies.” Commenting on the results of the
survey, Dr. Mitchell Eggers, GMI's chief operating officer
and chief pollster, pointed out, "Unfortunately, current
American foreign policy is viewed by international consumers
as a significant negative, when it used to be a
positive."[17]
Kevin Roberts, chief executive
of advertising giant Saatchi & Saatchi, likewise expressed
concern about global consumer backlash
against militaristic U.S. foreign policy when he told
the Financial Times that he believed consumers in
Europe and Asia are becoming increasingly resistant to
having "brand America rammed down their throats." Similarly,
Simon Anholt, author of Brand America, told the
British trade magazine Marketing Week that “four more
years of Bush's foreign policy could have grave consequences
for U.S. companies' international market share.”[18]
Writing in the October 27, 2003
issue of the Star Tribune, Ron Bosrock of the Global
Institute of St. John’s University likewise expressed
anxiety over negative economic consequences that might
follow from the Bush administration’s policies of unilateral
military operations and economic sanctions.
Concerns of this nature have
prompted a broad spectrum of non-military business interests
to form coalitions of trade associations that are designed
to lobby foreign policy makers against unilateral U.S.
military aggressions abroad. One such anti-militarist
alliance of American businesses is USA*ENGAGE. It is a
coalition of nearly 700 small and large businesses,
agriculture groups and trade associations working to seek
alternatives to the proliferation of unilateral U.S. foreign
policy actions and to promote the benefits of U.S.
engagement abroad. The coalition’s statement of principles
points out, “American values are best advanced by engagement
of American business and agriculture in the world, not by
ceding markets to foreign competition” through unilateral
foreign policies and military aggressions (
http://www.usaengage.org/about_us/index.html ).
Non-military business
interests’ anxiety over the Bush administration’s unilateral
foreign policy measures is, of course, rooted in their
negatively-affected financial balance sheets by those
actions: “Hundreds of companies blame the Iraq war for poor
financial results in 2003, many warning that continued U.S.
military involvement there could harm this year's
performance,” pointed out James Cox of USA Today.
In a relatively comprehensive
survey of the economic impact of the war, published in the
July 14, 2004 issue of the paper, Cox further wrote: “In
recent regulatory filings at the Securities and Exchange
Commission, airlines, home builders, broadcasters, mortgage
providers, mutual funds and others say the war was directly
to blame for lower revenue and profits last year.” Many
businesses blamed the war and international political
turbulence as a ‘risk factor’ that threatened their sales:
“The war led to sharp decreases in business and leisure
travel, say air carriers, travel services, casino operators,
restaurant chains and hotel owners.” The survey covered a
number of airlines including Delta Airlines, JetBlue,
Northwest Airlines and Alaska Airlines, all of which blamed
the war for a drop in air travel. Related industries such as
travel agencies, hotels, restaurants, and resort and casino
operations all suffered losses accordingly.[19]
Even technology giants such as
Cisco, PeopleSoft and Hewlett-Packard that tend to benefit
from military spending expressed concerns that “hostilities
in Iraq hurt results or could harm performance.” For
example, managers at Hewlett-Packard complained that
"potential for future attacks, the national and
international responses to attacks or perceived threats to
national security, and other actual or potential conflicts
or wars, including the ongoing military operations in Iraq,
have created many economic and political uncertainties that
could adversely affect our business, results of operations
and stock price in ways that we cannot presently predict."
Other companies that were specifically mentioned in the
survey as having complained about the “whiplash from the
Iraq conflict” included home builders Hovnanian and Cavalier
homes, casino company Mandalay Resort Group, retailer
Restoration Hardware, cosmetics giant Estée Lauder, eyewear
retailer Cole, Longs Drug Stores, golf club maker Callaway,
and H&Q Life Sciences Investors.[20]
5. Parasitic Imperialism
Accumulates National Debt, Weakens National Currency, and
Undermines Long-Term National Financial/Economic Health
A major source of the financing
of the out-of-control military spending has been
borrowing—the other source has been cutting non-military
public spending. This represents a cynically clever strategy
on the part of the powerful interests that benefit from war
and militarism: instead of financing their wars of choice by
paying taxes proportionate to their income, they give
themselves tax cuts, finance their wars through borrowing,
and then turn around and lend money (unpaid taxes) to the
government and earn interest.
Viewed in this light, the
staggering national debt of nearly $9 trillion, which is
more than two thirds of gross nation product (GNP),
represents a subtle redistribution of national resources
from the bottom to the top: it represents unpaid taxes by
the wealthy, which has to be financed by cutting
non-military public spending—both now and in the future.
This means that the wealthy has successfully converted their
tax obligations to credit claims, that is, lending instead
of paying taxes—which is in essence a disguised form of
theft or robbery.
This cynical policy of
increasing military spending, cutting taxes for the wealthy
and, thereby, accumulating national debt cannot continue for
ever, as it might eventually lead to national or Federal
insolvency, collapse of the dollar, and paralysis of
financial markets—not only in the United States but perhaps
also in broader global markets.
Prospects of such developments
has led a number of observers to argue that the
profit-driven military expansion might prove to be the
nemesis of U.S. imperialism: the escalating and
out-of-control militarization tends to gradually drive the
once-prosperous U.S. superpower in the direction of a
mismanaged and destructive military imperial force whose
capricious and often purely existential military adventures
will eventually become costly both politically and
economically. While the top-heavy imperial military colossus
tends to undermine its economic base, it is also bound to
create many enemies abroad and a lot of discontentment and
hostility to the established order at home. Unchecked, a
combination of these adverse developments, especially a
drained economy and an empty or bankrupt treasury, might
eventually lead to the demise of the empire, just as
happened to the post-Rubicon, Old Roman Empire.[21]
6. Parasitic Imperialism
Undermines Democratic Control and Corrupts the System of
Checks and Balances
As noted earlier, powerful
beneficiaries of war dividends (the military-industrial
complex and affiliated businesses of war) have successfully
used war and military spending as a roundabout way to
reallocate national resources in their own favor.
Appropriation of public finance by these war profiteers has
reached a point where more than half of the discretionary
Federal budget, or more than one-third of the entire Federal
budget, is now earmarked for “national security.”
This perverse allocation of
national resources in the name of national security has
meant that while the increasing escalation of war and
militarism have hollowed out national treasury (and brought
unnecessary death, destruction, and disaster to millions),
it has also brought tremendous riches and resources to war
profiteers. Concealment of this subtle robbery of national
treasury from the American people requires restriction of
information, obstruction of transparency, and obfuscation or
misrepresentation of national priorities—that is,
curtailment of democracy.
Curtailment of democracy,
however, is best achieved under conditions of war, which in
turn, requires invention of enemies or manufacturing of
threats to national security. Therefore, it is not
fortuitous that, in the post-Cold War world, U.S. architects
of wars of choice have become very resourceful in invoking
all kinds of bogeymen (rogue states, global terrorism, axis
of evil, radical Islam, and more) that are allegedly
threatening “our national interests” in order to justify
their plans of increased militarization of U.S. foreign
policy. (Under the bipolar world of the Cold War era,
“threat of communism” served the purpose of continued
increases of the Pentagon budget.)
This means that U.S. wars of
choice abroad are prompted largely by metaphorical domestic
wars over allocation of public resources, or tax dollars.
From the standpoint of war profiteers, instigation or
engineering of capricious wars for profits help achieve two
closely-linked purposes: on the one hand, they will help
justify escalation of military spending, which means
escalation of their share of U.S treasury, on the other,
they will help camouflage such a cynical robbery of public
money by restricting information under the cover of war-time
circumstances.
For example, only under
conditions of war the Bush the administration could display
an attitude of cavalier contempt for lawful norms, undermine
constitutional balances, corrupt national institutions with
nefarious special interests, smear dissent as unpatriotic,
suspend traditional legal rights for certain citizens,
obstruct the free flow of information, sanction domestic
spying without legal warrant, institute military tribunals,
and promote torture in defiance of American and
international law.
Likewise, only under conditions
of war (and the self-fulfilling threats of imminent
“terrorist attacks” on the U.S.) could the administration
establish and manage a prison system outside the rule of law
where torture can be used. With this system of prison camps
in Afghanistan, Iraq, Cuba (Guantánamo), and a number of
other undisclosed overseas places, where detainees are
abused and kept indefinitely without trial and without
access to the due process of the law, the United States now
has its own gulags. President Bush and his allies in
Congress recently announced they would issue no information
about the secret CIA "black site" prisons throughout the
world, which are used to incarcerate people who have often
been seized off the street.[22]
From the vantage point of war
profiteering militarists, such prison camps are an essential
ingredient for the justification of war: they are portrayed
as evidence of the existence of terrorists, of the “enemies
of the people,” or of “enemy combatant” without, at the same
time, having to show what the alleged evidence really is, or
who the alleged “enemy combatants” really are—as would be
required in an open court of law. Combined with warrantless
wiretapping, electronic surveillance, and various types of
illegal searches, this prison system serves yet another
objective of the beneficiaries of war dividends: inspiration
of fear and cultivation of silence and obedience among
citizens, which means subversion of democracy and promotion
of authoritarianism.
James Madison warned against
such an ominous symbiosis of war and authoritarianism long
time ago: “Of all the enemies of public liberty, war is
perhaps the most to be dreaded, because it comprises and
develops the germ of every other.” The Congress of the
United States of America had earlier (1784) issued a similar
warning against authoritarian consequences of maintaining a
large military establishment during times of peace:
“standing armies in time of peace are inconsistent with the
principles of republican governments, dangerous to the
liberties of a free people, and generally converted into
destructive engines for establishing despotism.”[23]
But perhaps the strongest and
most well-known warning against the baleful consequences of
a large peace-time military establishment came from
President Dwight Eisenhower: “The conjunction of an immense
military establishment and a huge arms industry is new in
the American experience. The total influence—economic,
political, and even spiritual—is felt in every city, every
state house, and every office of the federal government. . .
. In the councils of government, we must guard against the
acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or
unsought, by the military-industrial complex” (Farewell
Address, January 17, 1961).
Eisenhower’s warning that “we
must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence”
of the military-industrial complex is more relevant today
than when it was issued nearly half a century ago. The
steadily rising—and now perhaps monopolizing and
overwhelming—power and influence of the Complex over both
domestic and foreign policies of the United States is
testament to the unfortunate realization of Eisenhower’s
nightmare. As Howard Swint, Democratic candidate for
Congress in West Virginia, put it: “The seat of power for
formulating foreign policy and defense strategy is not in
the White House but rather in the Pentagon. While a civilian
Commander-in-Chief may tweak policy in four-year increments,
it’s obvious that military careerists together with major
defense contractors effectively control the Congressional
budget process and drive defense appropriations.”[24]
7. Parasitic Imperialism
Leads to Dependence on, or Addiction to, War and Militarism
The fact that the Pentagon
appropriates and controls more than one-third of the entire
Federal budget has allowed it to forge the largest
constituency and/or dependents nationwide. Tens of thousands
of businesses, millions of jobs, and thousands of cities and
communities have become dependent on military spending.
While a handful of major contractors take the lion’s share
of military spending, millions more have become dependent on
it as the source of their livelihood.
It is not surprising then that
not many people are willing to oppose the continuing rise in
the Pentagon budget—even if they might philosophically be
opposed to militarism and large military spending. Because
of the widespread presence of military installations and
production sites nationwide, few politicians can afford not
to support a continued rise in military spending lest that
should hurt their communities or constituencies
economically.
This helps explain the vicious
and spiraling circle of war, international political
convulsions, and military spending: Major Pentagon
contractors and other powerful beneficiaries of war
dividends are dependent on continued war and militarism in
order to maintain and expand hefty profits. This dependence
has, in turn, created a secondary (or derived) dependence;
it is the dependence of millions of Americans on military
spending as the source of their livelihood, which then plays
into the hands of war profiteers in their perennial quest
for ever newer enemies, newer wars, and bigger
appropriations for the Pentagon—hence the addiction to and
the vicious circle of war profiteering, international
political tension, war, and military spending.
Concluding Remarks—Parasitic
Imperialism: A Most Dangerous Type of Imperialism
Dependence on, or addiction to,
war and militarism for profitability makes U.S military
imperialism (that is, imperialism driven by military
capital, or arms conglomerates, vis-à-vis non-military
transnational capital) a most dangerous kind of imperialism.
Under the rule of the past imperial powers, the conquered
and subjugated peoples or nations could live in
peace—imposed peace, to be sure—if they respected the
interests and the needs of those imperial powers and simply
resigned to their political and economic ambitions.
Not so in the case of the U.S.
military-industrial empire: the interests of this empire are
nurtured through “war dividends.” Peace, imposed or
otherwise, is viewed by the beneficiaries of war dividends
inimical to their interests as it would make justification
of continued increases of their share of national resources
(in the form of Pentagon appropriations) difficult.
Of course, tendencies to build
bureaucratic empires have always existed in the ranks of
military hierarchies. By itself, this is not what makes the
U.S. military-industrial complex more dangerous than the
military powers of the past. What makes it more dangerous is
the “industrial,” or business, part of the Complex. In
contrast to the United States' military or war industries,
arms industries of past empires were not subject to
capitalist market imperatives. Furthermore, those industries
were often owned and operated by imperial governments, not
by market-driven giant corporations. Consequently, as a
rule, arms production was dictated by war requirements, not
by market or profit imperatives, which is the case with
today’s U.S. armaments industry.
Ismael Hossein-zadeh is an economics
professor at Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa. This
article draws upon his recently published book,
The Political Economy of U.S. Militarism
(Palgrave-Macmillan Publishers)
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[1] William D. Hartung, “Bush
Military Budget Highest Since WW II,” Common Dreams
(10 February 2007), <
http://www.commondreams.org/views07/0210-26.htm >.
[2] Bill Rigby, “Defense stocks
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>.
[3] Shakir F. et al., Center
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[4] Robert Greenstein, “Despite
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[5] Ibid.
[6] Richard Du Boff, “What
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[7] Congressional Budget
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<
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[8] Tax Policy Center, Table
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http://taxpolicycenter.org/TaxModel/TMDB/TMTemplate.cfm?Docid=1361
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http://taxpolicycenter.org/TaxModel/TMDB/TMTemplate.cfm?Docid=1355
[9] American Society of Civil
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[10] Seymour Melman, “They Are
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http://www.counterpunch.org/melman03152003.html
[11] Ibid.
[12] M. Rothschild, “Katrina
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[13] Ibid.
[14] Ibid.
[15] AME Info,
“Coke and Pepsi battle it out,” (8 April
2004),
http://www.ameinfo.com/news/Detailed/37492.html
[16] Ibid.
[17] Jim Lobe, “Poll: War Bad
for Business,” antiwar.com (30 December 2004),
http://www.antiwar.com/lobe/?articleid=4235
[18] Ibid.
[19] James Cox, “Financially
ailing companies point to Iraq war,” USA Today (14
July 2004): <
http://www.usatoday.com/money/companies/2004-06-14-iraq_x.htm?POE=click-refer
>.
[20] Ibid.
[21] Paul Kennedy, The Rise
and Fall of the Great Powers (New York, NY: Vintage
Books 1989); Chalmers Johnson, The Sorrows of Empire
(New York, NY: Metropolitan Books 2004); Ismael
Hossein-zadeh, The Political Economy of U.S. Militarism
(Palgrave-Macmillan2006).
[22] Naomi Wolf, “Fascist
America, in 10 Easy Steps,” AlterNet.org (28 April
2007), http://www.alternet.org/story/51150/
[23] Sidney Lens, The
Military-Industrial Complex (Kansas City, Missouri:
Pilgrim Press & the National Catholic Reporter 1979).
[24] Swint, Howard, “The
Pentagon Ruled by Special Interests,” http://www.swintforcongress.us/Pentagon%20Waste%20Op%20Ed.htm