Liquidating
the Empire
By
Patrick j.
Buchanan
14/10/08 "Information
Clearinghouse"
--- “Liquidate
labor,
liquidate
stocks,
liquidate
the
farmers.”
So Treasury
Secretary
Andrew
Mellon
advised
Herbert
Hoover in
the Great
Crash of
‘29.
Hoover did.
And the
nation
liquidated
him — and
the
Republicans.
In the Crash
of 2008, 40
percent of
stock value
has
vanished,
almost $9
trillion.
Some $5
trillion in
real estate
value has
disappeared.
A recession
looms with
sweeping
layoffs,
unemployment
compensation
surging, and
social
welfare
benefits
soaring.
America’s
first
trillion-dollar
deficit is
at hand.
In Fiscal
Year 2008
the deficit
was $438
billion.
With tax
revenue
sinking, we
will add to
this year’s
deficit the
$200 to $300
billion
needed to
wipe the
rotten paper
off the
books of
Fannie and
Freddie, the
$700 billion
(plus the
$100 billion
in add-ons
and pork)
for the Wall
Street
bailout, the
$85 billion
to bail out
AIG, and $37
billion more
now needed,
the $25
billion for
GM, Chrysler
and Ford,
and the
hundreds of
billions
Hank Paulson
will need to
buy
corporate
paper and
bail out
banks to
stop the
panic.
As Americans
save
nothing,
where are
the feds
going to get
the money?
Is the Fed
going to
print it and
destroy the
dollar and
credit
rating of
the United
States?
Because the
nations
whose vaults
are full of
dollars and
U.S. debt —
China,
Japan, Saudi
Arabia, the
Gulf Arabs —
are
reluctant to
lend us
more.
Sovereign
wealth funds
that plunged
billions
into U.S.
banks have
already been
burned.
Uncle Sam’s
VISA card is
about to be
stamped
“Canceled.”
The budget
is going to
have to go
under the
knife. But
what gets
cut?
Social
Security and
Medicare are
surely
exempt.
Seniors have
already
taken a huge
hit in their
401(k)s. And
as the
Democrats
are crafting
another $150
billion
stimulus
package for
the working
poor and
middle
class,
Medicaid and
food stamps
are
untouchable.
Interest on
the debt
cannot be
cut. It is
going up.
Will a
Democratic
Congress
slash
unemployment
benefits,
welfare,
education,
student
loans,
veterans
benefits —
in a
recession?
No way. Yet,
that is
almost the
entire U.S.
budget —
except for
defense, the
wars in
Afghanistan
and Iraq,
and foreign
aid. And
this is
where the
axe will
eventually
fall.
It is the
American
Empire that
is going to
be
liquidated.
Retrenchment
has begun
with Bush’s
backing away
from
confrontations
with
Axis-of-Evil
charter
members Iran
and North
Korea over
their
nuclear
programs,
and will
likely
continue
with a
negotiated
peace in
Afghanistan.
Gen.
Petraeus and
Secretary
Gates are
already
talking
“reconciliation”
with the
Taliban.
We no longer
live in
Eisenhower
or Reagan’s
America.
Even the
post-Cold
War world of
George H. W.
Bush, where
America was
a global
hegemon, is
history. In
both
relative and
real terms,
the U.S.A.
is a
diminished
power.
Where Ike
spent 9
percent of
GDP on
defense,
Reagan 6
percent, we
spend 4
percent. Yet
we have two
wars
bleeding us
and many
more nations
to defend,
with
commitments
in the
Baltic,
Eastern
Europe, and
the Balkans
we did not
have in the
Cold War. As
U.S. weapons
systems are
many times
more
expensive
today, we
have fewer
strategic
aircraft and
Navy ships
than Ike or
Reagan
commanded.
Our
active-duty
Army and
Marine Corps
consist of
700,000
troops, 15
percent
women, and a
far higher
percentage
of them
support
rather than
combat
troops.
With so few
legions, we
cannot
police the
world, and
we cannot
afford more.
Yet, we have
a host of
newly
hostile
nations we
did not have
in 1989.
U.S.
interests in
Latin
America are
being
challenged
not only by
Cuba, but
Venezuela,
Bolivia,
Ecuador,
Nicaragua
and
Honduras.
Brazil,
Argentina
and Chile go
their own
way. Russia
is
reasserting
hegemony in
the
Caucasus,
testing new
ICBMs,
running
bomber
probes up to
U.S. air
space.
China,
growing at
10 percent
as we head
into
recession,
is bristling
over U.S.
military
sales to
Taiwan. Iran
remains
defiant.
Pakistan is
rife with
anti-Americanism
and al-Qaida
sentiment.
The American
Empire has
become a
vast
extravagance.
With U.S.
markets
crashing and
wealth
vanishing,
what are we
doing with
750 bases
and troops
in over 100
countries?
With a
recession of
unknown
depth and
duration
looming, why
keep
borrowing
billions
from rich
Arabs to
defend rich
Europeans,
or billions
from China
and Japan to
hand out in
Millennium
Challenge
Grants to
Tanzania and
Burkina
Faso?
America
needs a
bottom-up
review of
all
strategic
commitments
dating to a
Cold War now
over for 20
years.
Is it
essential to
keep 30,000
troops in a
South Korea
with twice
the
population
and 40 times
the wealth
of the
North? Why
are McCain
and Obama
offering
NATO
memberships,
i.e., war
guarantees
against
Russia, to a
Georgia run
by a hothead
like Mikheil
Saakashvili,
and a
Ukraine,
millions of
whose people
prefer their
kinship to
Russia to an
alliance
with us?
We must put
“country
first,” says
John McCain.
Right you
are,
Senator.
Time to look
out for
America
first
This article was first published at http://buchanan.org