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Why All the
Foreign Bases?
By Sam Baker
23/03/08 "Lew
Rockwell" -- - On
May 14, 2005 the Associated Press reported Bulgaria's
announcement that it would provide three new military bases to
the US. General James Jones, the top commander of US and NATO
troops in Europe, said that he would propose to the US Congress
"four or five Bulgarian military facilities for use by US
forces." More recently, the US announced plans for new bases in
Romania.
Why does the US need new military bases in Bulgaria and Romania?
According to Chalmers Johnson, in his book "The Sorrows of
Empire," America already possesses more than 725 overseas bases.
This incredible estimate comes from two official sources: The
Department of Defense's "Base Structure Report," and "Worldwide
Manpower Distribution by Geographical Area." Johnson claims that
the figure is actually an underestimate, because many bases are
"secret" or otherwise not listed on official books. As an
example, Johnson quotes several sources who cite at least six US
installations in Israel which are either operating or are under
construction.
During the Cold War, it was argued that the US needed forward
basing in strategic areas of the world to counter the Soviet
position, and contain Soviet expansion. But the US continues to
aggressively pursue more bases in far-flung areas of the globe,
despite the fact that the Cold War has been over for more than a
decade. American officials have explained that the new bases in
Bulgaria and Romania are part of a broader US strategy of
shifting troops based in Western Europe further east. In other
words, now that the Soviet Union has collapsed, America is
aggressively expanding into its former sphere of influence by
recruiting former Soviet satellites into NATO, and garrisoning
them with bases and troops. In fact, since 9/11 alone the US has
acquired at least 14 new bases in Eastern Europe, Afghanistan,
Kyrgyzstan, the Persian Gulf, and Pakistan, and was evicted from
a recently procured base in Uzbekistan. This figure does not
include the newly-announced Bulgarian and Romanian bases. Are we
to believe that the US needs more military bases worldwide – not
less – now that the Cold War is over?
Apparently so. Thomas Donnelly, an archetype neoconservative
militarist, recently published a pamphlet entitled "The Military
We Need," available at http://www.aei.org/books/. Among other
things, he argues for the creation of "new networks of overseas
bases," and a "semipermanent ring of 'frontier forts' along the
American security perimeter from West Africa to East Asia." In
Counterpunch, Winslow T. Wheeler quoted Donnelly at a speech
before the neoconservative American Enterprise Institute as
saying the US "homeland" includes the area defined in the Monroe
Doctrine. In Donnelly's mind, the US has apparently already
annexed the Caribbean and Central America.
Since the end of the Cold War, the US has acquired a plethora of
new bases throughout the Persian Gulf. Some observers believe
that these bases were obtained to "secure" a strategic commodity
– oil. While oil security was certainly a main concern of the
first Gulf War, US bases in the Middle East are actually
generating the very insecurity – in the forms of terrorism and
insurgency – that they supposedly exist to combat. Certainly,
there were no terrorist or insurgent attacks on Iraqi oil
facilities before that country was invaded, occupied, and
garrisoned with US bases and troops. Furthermore, Bin Laden
cited US military occupation of Saudi Arabia as a key reason for
Al-Qaida attacks against US interests. Another problem with the
"oil security" thesis is that America only had two permanent
bases (both naval) operating in the entire region during the
Cold War, when the Middle East faced the threat of invasion by
the Soviet Union – one in Bahrain, and the other on the Indian
Ocean island of Diego Garcia, 3340 miles from Baghdad.
The invasion and occupation of Iraq is, of course, another
explanation offered for the buildup of US bases in the region.
The question then becomes why the war was necessary in the first
place. One answer is that the US seeks dominance over the few
"rogue states" in the area who refuse to follow dictates from
Washington. Before the second Gulf War began, Atlanta
Journal-Constitution columnist Jay Bookman wrote "Why does the
administration seem unconcerned about an exit strategy from Iraq
once Saddam is toppled? Because we won't be leaving. Having
conquered Iraq, the United States will create permanent military
bases in that country from which to dominate the Middle East,
including neighboring Iran." The bases Bookman portended have
already been built, and Iran now faces a likely referral to the
UN Security Council.
The invasion of Iraq wasn't the first occasion for US
imperialism in the region. In 1963, the CIA backed a Ba'athist
coup in Iraq which resulted in the assassination of then Prime
Minister Abdel-Karim Kassem and many others on a CIA-supplied
hit list. These actions paved the way for Ba'ath loyalist Saddam
Hussein to assume direct dictatorship of the country by 1979. By
the early 1980's, the US had restored full diplomatic relations
with Iraq, and was providing assistance to Saddam Hussein in his
war with Iran. This assistance included, but was not limited to,
intelligence information, monetary loans, weapons and munitions
grants and sales (including helicopters which were used to
launch gas attacks on Kurds), and weapons-grade Anthrax
bacterial cultures. Current and former Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld flew to Baghdad to meet with Saddam Hussein
personally on at least two occasions during this period.
In 1953, the CIA under Eisenhower backed a successful coup in
Iran which overthrew the constitutionally and democratically
elected Mohammad Mossadeq – who had nationalized British oil
interests – and installed an American puppet, shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi, or the "Shah of Iran." Upon taking power, the Shah
awarded American and British oil companies a 40% stake each in a
new oil consortium with the rights to pump Iranian oil. To
protect their puppet, and repress all dissent, the CIA assisted
the shah in the creation of the brutal SAVAK – a secret police
force with unlimited censorship, surveillance, arrest, and
detention powers. Under the shah's reign, SAVAK operated secret
prisons, institutionalized torture, and murdered thousands of
political prisoners. Iran remained a US-sponsored totalitarian
terror-state ruled by an American puppet until the overthrow of
the shah in 1979 and the ushering in of an Islamic
fundamentalist regime under the Ayatollah Khomeini.
But US interests in the region are not limited to oil dominance
or political control. It is no secret that a cabal of prominent
neoconservatives operating at very high levels within the George
W. Bush regime, but also within the Pentagon, various
quasi-governmental boards, think tanks, special interest groups,
and political magazines, long lobbied for the US to invade Iraq
and remake the entire Middle East over to suit Israel. These
neoconservatives share a passionate attachment to the Jewish
state, and some have close connections to the Likud party and
Israeli leaders such as Ariel Sharon and Benjamin Netanyahu. The
neoconservative agenda for Iraq was made abundantly clear in
various letters to the president and congressional leaders, as
well as books, articles, position papers, reports, and other
publications written years before 9/11. For instance, in July
1996, neoconservatives Richard Perle, Douglas Feith, David
Wurmser, and others wrote a position paper for Benjamin
Netanyahu entitled "A Clean Break: A New Strategy for Securing
the Realm." Among other things, the paper advocated regime
change in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Iran. And in a September
2000 report entitled "Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy,
Forces, and Resources for a New Century," the neoconservative
Project for the New American Century wrote that they were
waiting for a "catastrophic and catalyzing event – like a new
Pearl Harbor" to provide an excuse to execute their agenda. The
two disasters which afforded them their opportunity were the
election of George W. Bush and the terrorist attacks on 9/11.
But the involvement of neoconservatives in the decision to
invade Iraq is already well-known and well-documented, and a
comprehensive analysis is far beyond the scope of this article.
The point is simply to illustrate that, whatever the motives for
the second Gulf War and virulent spread of US bases in the
region – domination of oil, subjugation and control of "rogue
states," furthering Israeli interests, or "spreading democracy"
for that matter – these are imperial motives for imperial
actions.
In addition to building new bases, the US also continues to
maintain old bases and security guarantees throughout the world.
Bases in South Korea, half a world away, were built during the
Cold War ostensibly to defend that nation against attack by
North Korea. This was part of a broader effort to "contain
communism" and stop the fulfillment of the "domino theory." But
the bases and troops remain despite the fact that the Cold War
is over and communism is a dying ideology. In fact, the US has
recently taken a more aggressive posture towards North Korea,
indicting it as a member of an "axis of evil."
Interestingly, while the US is building new bases overseas, it
is closing bases domestically. No overseas bases are slated for
closure by the 2005 Base Realignment and Closure Commission.
Because private defense contractors like Halliburton source
foreign labor when performing overseas base support, the US is
now, in effect, outsourcing defense-related jobs.
There is no great mystery regarding the US garrisoning of east
and central Asia, Japan, Eastern and Western Europe, Cuba, the
Persian Gulf, and many other areas of the globe with hundreds of
military bases. The truth of the matter is that America, "the
world's only remaining superpower," is actually the world's only
remaining global empire. And as all empires do, it will continue
to expand until it is deterred by a rival power, or until it
bankrupts the "homeland" with imperial overstretch and wars.
Indeed, the very term "homeland" itself implies that there must
be an associated "away land" component. This "away land" is the
US empire abroad.
Is America really an empire? Empires have taken many forms
throughout history. Empires based on one extreme – the Roman
model for instance – built their empires through outright
annexation of conquered territories. The English, French, Dutch,
and Spanish based their empires upon the institution of
colonization. Dr. Ivan Eland, in his book "The Empire has no
Clothes: US Foreign Policy Exposed," has concluded that,
structurally, the American empire is modeled on another extreme
– that of the ancient Greek city-state Sparta. Sparta did not
conquer and annex other peoples, with the exception of the
Helots. Rather, it used its superior military prowess to
dominate allied oligarchic factions through its military
alliance, the Peloponnesian League. Sparta's de facto control
over the foreign policy of the Peloponnesian League gave it
effective control over the foreign policies of the city-states
comprising the alliance. Sparta demanded that the city-states
within its orbit maintain their oligarchic form of government,
and it reserved the right to impose this restriction by force.
But Sparta did not micromanage the domestic affairs of its
alliance members on a day-to-day basis. In this regard, the
Spartan model of empire is one of "looser control" over states
comprising an empire.
Like Sparta, the US has de facto control over the foreign policy
of its military alliance, NATO. And presumably, the US would not
allow an objectionable form of government to take power in a key
strategic ally. In fact, the US has sought to instigate or
prevent regime change in many states it has wanted to control,
whether strategic or non-strategic, allied or non-allied.
Examples include Afghanistan, Cambodia, Chile, Columbia, Cuba,
Dominican Republic, Greece, Grenada, Guam, Guatemala, Haiti,
Hawaii, Honduras, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Korea, Mexico,
Nicaragua, Panama, Philippines, Samoa, Serbia, Spain, Taiwan,
Venezuela, and Vietnam, among others.
But while the US empire resembles Sparta structurally, Eland
points out that in its offensive orientation it more closely
resembles Athens. Sparta was a defensive, status-quo power that
did not seek to enlarge, control non-strategic non-allied
states, or remake the world in its image. Athens did.
Coincidentally, Athenians believed their divine calling in life
was to "spread democracy."
The US has also employed other models in building empire. After
the Spanish-American war, Hawaii, the Panama Canal Zone, Puerto
Rico, and Guam were annexed outright, and the Philippines were
subjected to an American form of colonial rule not unlike that
employed by European colonial powers at the time. The advent of
the Cold War hailed the superpower practice of spawning
satellites and client states. The American empire really
represents a conglomeration of different approaches to empire
building.
In a sense, the American empire is worldwide. The US dollar, as
the world's reserve currency, allows the US to tax other
countries by issuing depreciating pieces of paper in exchange
for real goods and services. Rome imposed a comparable form of
taxation by debasing its gold and silver coinage.
There are two imperial schools of thought operating within the
American empire. The old globalist, Woodrow Wilson, New World
Order Establishment, consisting of both Democrats and
Republicans, prefers to disguise the iron fist of empire beneath
a soft velvet glove of multilateralism, alliances, the UN, and
humanitarianism. The new neoconservative imperialists –
comprised of Republicans – care little for disguises,
subtleties, pretenses, and diplomatic niceties. While not direct
descendants, they are more similar in style to the unabashed
Theodore Roosevelt school of imperialism. They prefer a more
unilateral approach to empire, brandishing a naked iron fist
devoid of any velvet glove. Because they are unapologetic hawks
– chicken hawks in fact, as they use other people to fight their
wars for them while they stack up deferments – neoconservative
imperialists seem to relish the thought of using imperial power
with a little more glee than their Wilsonian counterparts.
Within the Republican party at least, and for the time being,
the neoconservatives are waxing and ascendant, and the old
Wilsonian Establishment is waning. But it is important to
recognize that the differences between the two factions are
differences of order, rather than kind. There is no
anti-imperial constituency of any remote political significance
operating within the American empire.
But the mystery of American empire is a lesser conundrum to
contemplate. The greater mystery is why Americans have never
questioned the fact that their republic has become an empire.
Americans, as a people, seem to be quite uniquely ignorant in
this regard, as every other empire in the annals of recorded
human history was known to be an empire by its own citizens.
Thus it would seem that Americans have earned quite a historical
distinction for themselves, happily munching away on fast food
while watching the latest reality TV shows, completely oblivious
to the world around them and to their complicity in their own
destruction.
March 17, 2006
Samuel L. Baker
send him mail is
a Computer Engineering graduate of Auburn University. He
currently works as a freelance political analyst and
commentator.
Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com
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