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Murdering Butter with Guns
By David Michael Green
10/05/07 "ICH" -- - - A funny thing happened on the way to the
White House in 1981.
Ronald Reagan had been talking throughout the previous year’s
campaign about taking a meat-axe to federal taxes (and
therefore, also, revenue, but that part somehow never got
mentioned), about massively increasing military spending, and
about balancing the budget. And doing all at once, no less.
Even a Republican could figure out - if they allowed themselves
to - that the numbers couldn’t possibly add up. Indeed, no less
a Goppy than Poppy (one George Herbert Walker Bush) referred to
this preposterous suite of promises as “voodoo economics”. Er,
he did that is, during the primaries, when he was competing with
Reagan for the nomination. Once he had lost and was hungering
for the newly nice and oh-so wise Saint Ron to offer him the
vice-presidency, he all of a sudden became strangely silent on
the topic, reminding the rest of us once again what is mankind’s
second-oldest profession - a gig very much not unlike the first.
The mystery of how Reagan could possibly do all of these things
was finally solved when the administration proposed its first
budget and he absolutely didn’t. It couldn’t, of course, and not
only did Reagan fail to balance the federal budget as promised,
he actually went on to quadruple the national debt, choosing
instead to avidly pursue the two more important remaining goals
of his troika, tax-slashing and military spending.
Many people wondered at the time how the Republican Party could
sustain this debt-crazed apostasy (not to mention hypocrisy),
particularly after so many years of hammering the Democrats as
“tax-and-spend liberals”. (Oh, and by-the-way Item Number One:
The numbers involved would pale against those of today’s
borrow-spend-and-giveaway Republicans.) (Oh, and by-the-way Item
Number Two: Nevertheless, in an attempt to demonstrate that
there truly is absolutely no bottom whatsoever to the well of
GOP hypocrisy, this week we have Righteous George, Protector of
the Purse, vetoing S-CHIP legislation and replaying the party’s
tired old and now jaw-droppingly absurd tune as he claims that
the Democratic Congress is being profligate with the public’s
tax dollars. No-bid billions for the Blackwater black-hole?
Absolutely. Money for sick kids? Irresponsible!)
When Reagan first went down this path it was so weird that a
conspiracy theory of sorts arose. The notion was that
Republicans knew they could not possibly go through the front
door to successfully kill popular programs like Social Security
and Medicare, even if they were willing to risk political
suicide to do so. So Reagan’s agenda was a back-door approach,
instead. Driving up the debt to completely unsustainable levels,
the story went, America would be faced with a series of
uncomfortable choices as collectors came demanding their
payments. The country could either raise taxes, cut military
spending, or slash social programs. The idea was that, of the
three, the last of these would seem to the public like the least
worst choice. And then conservatives could surreptitiously
achieve a long-held goal, best expressed by Grover Norquist,
right-wing tax crusader extraordinaire: “I don’t want to abolish
government, I simply want to reduce it to the size where I can
drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub.” By
“government”, of course, he means the parts that help people,
not the parts that kill people. For the right, those parts are
okay. If not beloved.
Perhaps this conspiracy was real all along. Boy Bush has made
Reagan look like Leona Helmsley’s accounts-payable supervisor by
comparison when it came to deficit spending, managing to borrow
more than all other American presidents (that’s 42 of them, if
you’re keeping score here), combined. Ouch. That’s a lot of
cash, dude. Indeed, about nine trillion bucks or so now on the
national credit card, and rapidly rising. Plus, of course,
interest. Trust me, you don’t want to be handed the bill for
this party of the millennium, and neither do your children
(”Excuse me, you did what to us?”).
But even if the alleged conspiracy was actually real, it seems
likely to have been a bad bet all along. That is, I don’t think
it’s a given that, presented with these three options, Americans
would necessarily acquiesce to the destruction of the country’s
social safety net, especially the massive cohort of Baby Boomers
who are just now approaching the age where their hands are going
to be extended outward, palm up. I think that given such a stark
choice, something miraculous might occur. Americans might choose
to finally give up their empire instead, just as the British did
when they could no longer afford to pay for both guns and butter
after the two world wars. This conservative plan, if it was ever
real, could backfire quite nicely into forcing the country to
think seriously about excessive military spending for the first
time since World War II, and then perhaps to, in the words of
Colin Powell, “cut it off, and then … kill it”.
To see what I mean, let’s pull Joe Six Pack - or preferably, the
Baby Boomer version of Joe Six Pack (Joe Dime Bag?) - off the
street and ask him some basic questions about his priorities for
American government:
Joe, which would you prefer, to receive your Social Security
payments, or to bring democracy to the Middle East (even
assuming it could be done by American military force, which it
quite clearly cannot)?
Which would you prefer, Joe, to fully fund Medicare, or to
protect the ability of American corporations to pillage third
world countries unhampered by inconveniences like, say, the
governments of those countries?
Which would you prefer, education for your children and
grandchildren, or continued tax breaks for Americans who are
already fabulously wealthy?
Which would you prefer, national infrastructure that isn’t
crumbling, or corporate welfare programs for well connected
defense industry firms?
These may seem like tongue in cheek pokes at America’s national
priorities, but they will actually become very real choices in
the near future, especially if there is a progressive party or
other force in America able to articulate the obvious options,
and provided the the word can get out. Given the performance of
the Democratic Party and the media of late, these are far from
foregone conclusions. (Heck, I’m far from even being convinced
that Bush and Cheney will actually leave office on January 20,
2009. Watch for them to pull a Putin.) But apart from those
major caveats, these questions will rapidly become all too real.
When the bill for the fiscal blow out comes due, hard choices
are going to have to be made. Americans are not big on taxes,
but they don’t support the idea of the rich getting a free ride.
That hard choice is likely to be an easy choice.
Americans will never accept a weak defense apparatus that leaves
the country vulnerable to attack. But beyond that, they may well
finally be open to some thoughtful discussion about what is
needed to achieve that end - and where the rest of the money is
going - especially if such a dialogue is prompted by the
requirements imposed by an encroaching reality, forcing
decisions like the ones posited above.
Right now, it’s a safe guess that the public has only the
vaguest notion of the costs and capacities of the American
military, especially in any relative sense. Most people probably
understand that the United States has the most powerful military
in the world, and they support that. On the other hand, they
might well be horrified to learn just how expensive that
military is, how ridiculously disproportionate it is to the
others in the world, and how removed those costs are from any
real threat facing the country. In times of plenty - or faux
plenty - when your government is giving you tax money back even
while it is fighting two wars simultaneously, those questions
don’t need to be asked (or at least one can be so deluded into
thinking). But those days will soon be gone, and - as they say -
payback’s a bitch.
It’s harder than might be imagined to track federal
expenditures, because there are lots of accounting choices (and
nifty tricks, if you so desire to trick people) involved. But,
near as I can tell, the US is now contemplating a budget of $672
billion this year for ‘defense’. That, by the way, is up from
$385 billion in 2000, measured in constant (2007) dollars. And
that, of course, is nearly a doubling, from what was already a
huge amount. These numbers don’t include the costs of past wars
(principally debt from loans), estimated in 2006 to be about
$264 billion. If you add that figure to the $572 spent last year
for last year’s military, you get $837 billion spent on the
military in 2006, or 41 percent of the federal budget.
How does that stack up comparatively? Social Security took $595
billion in 2006. Twelve percent of the budget went to poverty
initiatives, five percent to community and economic development,
and two percent to science, energy and environmental programs.
How does that stack up internationally? In 2004, while the rest
of the world’s military expenditures equaled $500 billion, the
US was spending $534 billion. That is to say, more than all the
rest of the entire world. Combined.
Americans might even be fine with a military budget that dwarfs
the sum total for entire rest of the world - nearly 200 other
countries - assuming unlimited resources to provide butter as
well as guns (though if they knew the relative figure was quite
that big, they might choke a bit on the expenditures even with
low taxes and adequate social spending). But when you reach the
point where you start having to choose one or the other - a
point we actually reached long ago, but have hidden from
ourselves by borrowing - everything is different, hence the
above alternatives for Joe Six-Pack to ponder.
What is sorely missing today, and would be even more so at the
moment when our fiscal recklessness is no longer sustainable
even under conditions of mass societal hallucination, is simply
a rational discussion of the purposes of the United States
military. Once that happens, programmatic and budgetary choices
then follow in the logical order which they should in any
universe where people are even remotely in touch with reality.
In fact, the current military budget could easily be slashed,
because the only reason for its ridiculously bloated proportions
is to pursue missions far beyond those Americans would support
even during conditions of plenty, let alone when the alternative
becomes giving up their expected benefits.
If we think about military priorities from the ground up,
without any built-in assumptions, and without the necessity of
maintaining existing programs on the basis of inertia alone, I
don’t think we’d get very far before the public would shout out
“enough”, especially if they were faced with the choice of
having their Social Security checks bounce in order to instead
fund some obscure military objective on behalf of corporate
interests in Burkina Faso.
What do Americans want? They want defense, in the true meaning
of the word. To begin with, I have little doubt that Americans
would be willing to spend whatever it takes to defend American
soil from foreign attack. When it comes to state-based violence,
that need could be fairly easily addressed by a nuclear
deterrent force a tenth of the size of the current one, along
with a moderate contingent of land and naval forces. The cost of
these represent a small fraction of the current total military
budget. No country is ever going to attack the United States in
either a traditional operation using conventional forces or by
means of non-conventional weapons, of course, because to do so
would mean their instant obliteration. Whatever else one can say
about nuclear weapons and all the real and potential horrors of
mass annihilation, they do give pause to those who would
contemplate an attack, in all but the most dire conflicts or
screw-ups. (And this works both ways, of course. It is no
accident that the US never attacked the Soviet Union or China,
for instance, or that Bush did go into Iraq, but not North
Korea.) Perhaps some day nuclear weapons can be eliminated from
the planet. In the meantime, though, a small quantity of them
could form part of a defense structure that permitted the US to
dramatically cut military spending while allowing Americans to
feel secure from external threat.
Americans would also support, I think, the military having the
capability to respond to certain emergencies abroad - say,
enough force for the early stages of a scenario where an ally
was invaded, or US diplomats or nationals needed to be rescued
from some sort of foreign incident. This means some special
forces - again, a relatively small and inexpensive portion of
the current military budget - and the same small to moderate
land and naval forces charged with defending the national
borders.
Clearly, the public would also support whatever force is
necessary to effectively attack and destroy non-state actors,
such as al Qaeda, who seek to harm the United States through
non-conventional assaults. John Kerry of course paid the price
for speaking honestly about this in 2004, back when this country
was still shaking off the hangover from the Bush Binge of 9/11
and beyond, but he was right in asserting that terrorist threats
are best resisted by means of intelligence and law enforcement
(and sometimes small scale military action, when useful), which
is also a relatively low-cost affair, comparatively speaking.
(Throw in a little global justice and economic development,
moreover, and you might find you’ve eliminated most such threats
before they ever come to exist. What a concept, eh?)
Finally, unquestionably, there would be support in the United
States for the capacity to rapidly increase US military
capability in response to a major unexpected scenario. Americans
will want a National Guard, Reserves, and the infrastructure
necessary for a Post-Pearl Harbor-like draft and rapid
militarization in the event of such an unanticipated attack. But
again, maintaining this capacity - as opposed to the actual
forces - is not a terribly expensive proposition.
And that, I suspect, is it. A moderate base force, a small
nuclear deterrent capability, the Guard and Reserves, and the
capacity to rapidly add more as needed. In sum, a vastly smaller
military than today’s.
This is not World War II we’re in today, and it’s not the Cold
War. There is no need for a massive military armada to be
fielded or even to stand in readiness, as there is no massive
implacable enemy to be vigilant against, let alone a massive
implacable enemy which we would fight with conventional
set-piece armies to be landed at places like Normandy, and to
fight territorial struggles like the Battle of the Bulge.
What is the difference, then, between this American military
that the public would support and the one we’ve got, besides of
course hundreds of billions of dollars per year? The short
answer is the capacity to ‘protect’ American ‘interests’ abroad.
Does the American public care whether Botswana is a democracy or
not? Probably a little - not that anyone would have the
slightest clue where or what it is - but not enough to invest
their tax dollars in it, not enough to forego the government
services they want at home, and not enough to spill their
children’s blood there. Turns out their government doesn’t care
either, though it may well pretend to on occasion. It doesn’t
even care whether Botswana - democracy or autocracy - is
particularly ‘pro-American’.
What the American government cares about, above all, is that
Botswana plays ball with those economic actors (who nowadays
might not even necessarily be American-based) with a pipeline to
power in Washington. Usually that means that a neat little
dictatorship is in fact preferable to a democratically elected
government, particularly one that makes the mistake of having
the real interests of the local people in mind. Folks in Iran,
Chile, Guatemala, Nicaragua and beyond will be happy to verify
this proposition, in case you have any doubt.
Which brings us back to the absurd levels of military spending
the United States has been indulging in latter years, like an
insatiable crack addict. I hate to break up the acid test party
with a mild dose of reality, but it’s pure lunacy to spend
considerably more than all of nearly 200 other countries in the
world on your national defense. I mean, isn’t it? Is there
really no limit to the depths of America’s national paranoia?
Well, as a matter of fact, it gets far stranger yet when you
contemplate that none of those countries - not even North Korea,
Cuba or Iran - have expressed anything approaching a genuine
hostility toward your country which could plausibly lead to an
attack on their part. Then it becomes the very definition of
insane when you have a nuclear deterrent force that prevents any
of those countries from attacking you even if they wanted to.
And it makes the insane look downright wholesome when you spend
these obscene sums to fight a non-existent enemy, but cannot
afford a children’s healthcare program at home. If you needed to
write a definition of a society gone mad, surely this would be
the textbook case.
Let’s face it, probably three-fourths of the Pentagon budget is
spent to enrich contractors at home and bust down doors for
corporate predators abroad. China spends about $60 or $70
billion a year on protecting the same geographical area as the
US and more than four times the number of people. Who is going
to mess with that country? Not even the United States, with tens
times the military budget, would dare. Surely America could
easily procure the same degree of security as the Chinese do for
- let’s be generous - say, double their expenditure, if its true
interests were purely defensive.
Nor would such a formula be a prescription for disarmament or a
wimpy defense posture. This is still double the amount of any
other country in the world. Certainly many would argue that far
less than even that much should be spent. I’m one of them, but
right now I’d gladly settle for a 75 percent reduction in
military spending.
Of course, there are those who would claim that the United
States is the ‘indispensable nation’, the one that provides the
glue for keeping peace in the international system, and the only
one capable of mounting an operation like the Iraq war. Let’s
leave aside for the moment the poor performance of keeping peace
during the ‘American century’, which often seemed rather more
like the American adventure series, and let’s leave aside also
the disasters of Afghanistan, Vietnam and Iraq. What a critique
such as this actually reveals is three things. First, that other
developed countries have been able to buy butter like national
healthcare and such, while we have stupidly forsaken it for
guns. Second, that the result of our spending the last decades
undermining the creation of a legitimate and functional
international force to clean up international messes is -
surprise, surprise - that no such forces now exist to carry this
burden. And third, that we’re too arrogant and narcissistic to
pay attention to the wake-up call that non-interest in our wars
among potential allies represents.
This is where multilateralism comes into play in a crucial and
cognitive fashion. If we can’t attract serious allied support
for a war, it’s certainly worth asking whether we should be
engaged in such a conflict at all. Neocon blowhards love to
argue that Europeans have gone soft and are all from Venus,
while tough-guy Americans are from Mars. The truth is that
Europeans were fighting wars long before America was even in
diapers, and they’ve learned more from the experience than have
we. They’re not soft. Rather, it’s that they’re not
indiscriminate. They went to Afghanistan. They didn’t go to
Iraq. Or at least a lot of them didn’t. The others only went
because they wanted to keep the hyperpower happy. The next stop
was regret, followed by withdrawal of what were mostly token
forces anyhow. In any case, for a legitimate threat or a
legitimate emergency (the antithesis of Iraq), the Europeans and
many others would stand shoulder to shoulder with America, as
has happened many times previously, including those wimpy
cheese-eating French who were there at America’s birth, and
without whom, indeed, the country would likely not have been
born at all.
But wouldn’t cutting American military spending dramatically
make the country weaker? To the contrary, our current approach
makes us weaker. We have lost the capacity to exert soft power
by over-reliance on hard power. Nobody follows us anymore unless
they have to because we have twisted their arm nearly out of its
socket, or unless they’re into committing career suicide, like
Tony Blair did. And, increasingly, that simply means that nobody
follows us anymore at all. The tauntings of Hugo Chávez or
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad would have been inconceivable not so long
ago. Now they represent leadership to a resentful world where
the arrogant and impotent superpower has hobbled itself, and can
do nothing to respond. Meanwhile, China and Russia quietly build
power and influence, wondering what they ever did to get so
lucky as to have a rival apparently quite devoted to destroying
itself.
In addition to being so diplomatically, we are also weakened
economically. Dollars spent on bombs instead of education mean a
dummer ‘Muricah, bro. Dollars spent on napalm instead of
education mean a sicker America. And ask the Soviets what
happens to a national economy when it is dominated by military
spending. If you can find the Soviets, that is, which you can’t
(hint, hint). National security in the modern era depends on
economic power as well as on legions and hardware. In a very
real sense, therefore, we are diminishing our capacity to
provide sustained military security should we need it tomorrow,
by bloating it out of all recognition today.
Finally, it is pretty impossible to argue that recent choices
have made the America militarily stronger in even the most
narrow sense. When all your land forces are bogged down in a
worse than useless war, you’ve got a problem should a real
crisis come ‘round the corner. When even a sycophant like Colin
Powell can say that your Army is “broken”, surely it is and
worse. When your own intelligence agencies affirm that your
actions in Mesopotamia are actually creating terrorists with a
vengeance (and with a vengeance), you screwed up bad, pal. When
nobody believes you anymore including your own public, and you
have to pay exorbitant sums to get people otherwise headed to
jail to join your ‘volunteer’ military, it’s no longer clear
which is scarier - your army or theirs. Hey everybody, raise
your hand right now if you feel safer today than before Bush,
Cheney and Rumsfeld got hold of US national security policy.
Yeah, that’s what I thought.
All this obscenely exorbitant military spending represents one
helluva lot of bad news, but the good news is that the entire
scenario is unsustainable. One day, not long from now, Americans
will have to make tough choices that they are avoiding (and
therefore exacerbating) today. But in all probability, such
choices may not actually wind up being so tough, after all.
We want our MTV, and we want our Social Security.
And if we have to sacrifice protecting Chiquita Brands’
exorbitant profits in Guatemala or Colombia to get them, we
will.
David Michael Green
is a professor of political science at Hofstra
University in New York.
He is delighted to receive readers'
reactions to his articles (dmg@regressiveantidote.net),
but regrets that time constraints do not always
allow him to respond.
More of his work can be found at his
website,
www.regressiveantidote.net.
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