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Cheering for Ron Paul
By Robert Scheer
11/22/07 "The
Nation" -- -- What can you get for a trillion
bucks? Or make that $1.6 trillion, if you take the cost of the
Iraq and Afghanistan wars as tallied by the majority staff of
Congress's Joint Economic Committee (JEC). Or is it the
$3.5-trillion figure cited by Ron Paul, whose concern about the
true cost of this war for ordinary Americans shames the leading
Democrats, who prattle on about needed domestic programs that
will never find funding because of future war-related government
debt?
Given that the overall defense budget is now double what it was
when President Bush's father presided over the end of the cold
war--even though we don't have a militarily sophisticated enemy
in sight--you have to wonder how this president has managed to
exceed cold war spending levels. What has he gotten for the
trillions wasted? Nothing, when it comes to capturing Osama bin
Laden, bringing democracy to Iraq or preventing oil prices from
tripling and enriching the ayatollahs of Iran while messing up
the American economy.
That money could have paid for a lot of things we could have
used here at home. As Rep. Paul points out, for what the Iraq
war costs, we could present each family of four a check for
$46,000--which exceeds the $43,000 median household income in
his Texas district. He asks: "What about the impact of those
costs on education, the very thing that so often helps to
increase earnings? Forty-six thousand dollars would cover 90
percent of the tuition costs to attend a four-year public
university in Texas for both children in that family of four.
But, instead of sending kids to college, too often we're sending
them to Iraq, where the best news in a long time is they [the
insurgents] aren't killing our men and women as fast as they
were last month."
How damning that it takes a libertarian Republican to remind the
leading Democratic candidates of the opportunity costs of a war
that most Democrats in Congress voted for. But they don't need
to take Paul's word for it; last week, the majority staff of the
Joint Economic Committee in Congress came up with similarly
startling estimates of the long-term costs of this war.
The White House has quibbled over the methods employed by the
JEC to calculate the real costs of our two foreign wars, because
the Democrats in the majority dared to include in their
calculations the long-term care of wounded soldiers and the
interest to be paid on the debt financing the war. Of course,
you need to account for the additional debt run up by an
administration that, instead of raising taxes to pay for the
war, cut them by relying on the Chinese Communists and other
foreigners who hold so much of our debt. As concluded by the JEC
report, compiled by the committee's professional staff, "almost
10 percent of total federal government interest payments in 2008
will consist of payments on the Iraq debt accumulated so far."
However, even if you take the hard figure of the $804 billion
the administration demanded for the past five years, and ignore
all the long-run costs like debt service, we're still not
talking chump change here. For example, Bush has asked for an
additional $196 billion in supplementary aid for his wars, which
is $60 billion more than the total spent by the US government
last year on all of America's infrastructure repairs, the
National Institutes of Health, college tuition assistance and
the SCHIP program to provide health insurance to kids who don't
have any.
On this matter of covering the uninsured, it should be pointed
out to those who say we (alone among industrialized nations)
can't afford it that we could have covered all 47 million
uninsured Americans over the past six years for what the Iraq
war cost us. How come that choice--war in Iraq or full medical
coverage for all Americans--was never presented to the American
people by the Democrats and Republicans who voted for this war
and continue to finance it?
Those now celebrating the supposed success of the surge might
note that, as the JEC report points out, "[m]aintaining
post-surge troop levels in Iraq over the next ten years would
result in costs of $4.5 trillion." Until the leading Democratic
candidate faces up to the irreparable harm that will be done to
needed social programs over the next decades by the red-ink
spending she supported, I will be cheering for the libertarian
Republican. At least he won't throw more money down some foreign
rat hole.
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