|
'America's Outrageous War Economy!'
Pentagon can't find $2.3 trillion, wasting trillions on
'national defense'
By Paul B. Farrell
21/08/08 -MarketWatch
- ARROYO GRANDE, Calif. -- Yes, America's
economy is a war economy. Not a "manufacturing" economy. Not an
"agricultural" economy. Nor a "service" economy. Not even a
"consumer" economy.
Seriously, I looked into your eyes, America, saw deep into your
soul. So let's get honest and officially call it "America's
Outrageous War Economy." Admit it: we secretly love our war
economy. And that's the answer to Jim Grant's thought-provoking
question last month in the Wall Street Journal -- "Why No
Outrage?"
There really is only one
answer: Deep inside we love war. We want war. Need it.
Relish it. Thrive on war. War is in our genes, deep in our
DNA. War excites our economic brain. War drives our
entrepreneurial spirit. War thrills the American soul. Oh
just admit it, we have a love affair with war. We love
"America's Outrageous War Economy."
Americans passively zone out
playing video war games. We nod at 90-second news clips of
Afghan war casualties and collateral damage in Georgia. We
laugh at Jon Stewart's dark comedic news and Ben Stiller's
new war spoof "Tropic Thunder" ... all the while silently,
by default, we're cheering on our leaders as they
aggressively expand "America's Outrageous War Economy," a
relentless machine that needs a steady diet of war after
war, feeding on itself, consuming our values, always on the
edge of self-destruction.
-
Why else are Americans so
eager and willing to surrender 54% of their tax dollars
to a war machine, which consumes 47% of the world's
total military budgets?
-
Why are there more civilian
mercenaries working for no-bid private war contractors
than the total number of enlisted military in Iraq
(180,000 to 160,000), at an added cost to taxpayers in
excess of $200 billion and climbing daily?
-
Why do we shake our
collective heads "yes" when our commander-in-chief
proudly tells us he is a "war president;" and his
party's presidential candidate chants "bomb, bomb, bomb
Iran," as if "war" is a celebrity hit song?
-
Why do our spineless
Democrats let an incompetent, blundering executive
branch hide hundreds of billions of war costs in sneaky
"supplemental appropriations" that are more crooked than
Enron's off-balance-sheet deals?
-
Why have Washington's 537
elected leaders turned the governance of the American
economy over to 42,000 greedy self-interest lobbyists?
-
And why earlier this year
did our "support-our-troops" "war president" resist a
new GI Bill because, as he said, his military might quit
and go to college rather than re-enlist in his war; now
we continue paying the Pentagon's warriors huge
$100,000-plus bonuses to re-up so they can keep
expanding "America's Outrageous War Economy?" Why?
Because we secretly love war!
We've lost our moral compass:
The contrast between today's leaders and the 56 signers of
the Declaration of Independence in 1776 shocks our
conscience. Today war greed trumps morals. During the
Revolutionary War our leaders risked their lives and
fortunes; many lost both.
Today it's the opposite: Too
often our leaders' main goal is not public service but a
ticket to building a personal fortune in the new "America's
Outrageous War Economy," often by simply becoming a
high-priced lobbyist.
Ultimately, the price of our
greed may be the fulfillment of Kevin Phillips' warning in
"Wealth and Democracy:" "Most great nations, at the peak of
their economic power, become arrogant and wage great world
wars at great cost, wasting vast resources, taking on huge
debt, and ultimately burning themselves out."
'National defense' a
propaganda slogan selling a war economy?But wait,
you ask: Isn't our $1.4
trillion war budget essential for "national defense" and
"homeland security?" Don't we have to protect ourselves?
Sorry folks, but our leaders
have degraded those honored principles to advertising
slogans. They're little more than flag-waving excuses used
by neocon war hawks to disguise the buildup of private
fortunes in "America's Outrageous War Economy."
America may be a ticking
time bomb, but we are threatened more by enemies within than
external terrorists, by ideological fanatics on the left and
the right. Most of all, we are under attack by our elected
leaders who are motivated more by pure greed than ideology.
They terrorize us, brainwashing us into passively letting
them steal our money to finance "America's Outrageous War
Economy," the ultimate "black hole" of corruption and
trickle-up economics.
You think I'm kidding? I'm
maybe too harsh? Sorry but others are far more brutal.
Listen to the ideologies and realities eating at America's
soul.
1. Our toxic 'war within' is
threatening America's soul
How powerful is the Pentagon's
war machine? Trillions in dollars. But worse yet: Their
mindset is now locked deep in our DNA, in our collective
conscience, in America's soul. Our love of war is enshrined
in the writings of neocon war hawks like Norman Podoretz,
who warns the Iraq War was the launching of "World War IV:
The Long Struggle Against Islamofascism," a reminder that we
could be occupying Iraq for a hundred years. His WW IV also
reminded us of the coming apocalyptic end-of-days "war of
civilizations" predicted by religious leaders in
both Christian and Islamic worlds two years ago.
In contrast, this ideology
has been challenged in works like Craig Unger's "American
Armageddon: How the Delusions of the Neoconservatives and
the Christian Right Triggered the Descent of America -- and
Still Imperil Our Future."
Unfortunately, neither
threat can be dismissed as "all in our minds" nor as merely
ideological rhetoric. Trillions of tax dollars are in fact
being spent to keep the Pentagon war machine aggressively
planning and expanding wars decades in advance, including
spending billions on propaganda brainwashing naïve Americans
into co-signing "America's Outrageous War Economy." Yes,
they really love war, but that "love" is toxic for America's
soul.
2. America's war economy
financed on blank checks to greedy
Read Nobel Economist Joseph
Stiglitz and Harvard professor Linda Bilmes' "$3 Trillion
War." They show how our government's deceitful leaders are
secretly hiding the real long-term costs of the Iraq War,
which was originally sold to the American taxpayer with a
$50 billion price tag and funded out of oil revenues.
But add in all the lifetime
veterans' health benefits, equipment placement costs,
increased homeland security and interest on new federal
debt, and suddenly taxpayers got a $3 trillion war tab!
3. America's war economy has
no idea where its money goes
Read Portfolio magazine's
special report "The Pentagon's $1 Trillion Problem." The
Pentagon's 2007 budget of $440 billion included $16 billion
to operate and upgrade its financial system. Unfortunately
"the defense department has spent billions to fix its
antiquated financial systems [but] still has no idea where
its money goes."
And it gets worse: Back "in
2000, Defense's inspector general told Congress that his
auditors stopped counting after finding $2.3 trillion in
unsupported entries." Yikes, our war machine has no records
for $2.3 trillion! How can we trust anything they say?
4. America's war economy is
totally 'unmanageable'
For decades Washington has
been waving that "national defense" flag, to force the
public into supporting "America's Outrageous War Economy."
Read John Alic's "Trillions for Military Technology: How the
Pentagon Innovates and Why It Costs So Much."
A former Congressional
Office of Technology Assessment staffer, he explains why
weapon systems cost the Pentagon so much, "why it takes
decades to get them into production even as innovation in
the civilian economy becomes ever more frenetic and why some
of those weapons don't work very well despite expenditures
of many billions of dollars," and how "the internal politics
of the armed services make weapons acquisition almost
unmanageable." Yes, the Pentagon wastes trillions planning
its wars well in advance.
Click on
"comments" below to read or post comments
Comment
Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and
relevant to the story.
We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary.
Do not include personal information such as names, addresses,
phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our
guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity –
are not permitted.
See our complete
Comment
Policy and use this link
to notify us if you have concerns about a
comment. We’ll promptly
review and remove any inappropriate postings.
Send Page To a Friend
In
accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this
material is distributed without profit to those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving
the included information for research and
educational purposes. Information Clearing House
has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator
of this article nor is Information ClearingHouse
endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
|