No
Industrial
Economy
Equals No
Army
By Richard
McCormack
richard@manufacturingnews.com
November 13,
2008
"Manufacturing
News" --
October 17,
2008 - - It
wasn't long
ago that the
world
watched the
collapse of
the Soviet
Empire. At
the time,
the USSR had
a mighty
military
force that
was
overextended
throughout
the world
and was
bogged down
in
Afghanistan.
Within a
flash in
1989, the
Soviet Union
came
tumbling
down, not
because it
could not
produce
tanks and
nuclear
warheads,
but because
it couldn't
produce
bread. The
collapse
happened so
rapidly it
even
surprised
the U.S.
intelligence
community.
The United
States is
now
inexplicably
suffering
the same
fate. The
country can
produce a
stealth
bomber, but
it can't
produce a
pair of
shoes.
Ronald
Reagan must
be turning
in his
grave.
If Ronald
Reagan knew
one thing,
he knew that
for the
United
States to
win the Cold
War, it
would have
to win the
economic
war. The
United
States could
win an arms
race by
turning the
Soviet
Union's
economy into
a basket
case, but
only if the
United
States
economy did
not suffer
the same
fate.
What has
happened in
the short
span of 19
years since
the demise
of the
Soviet
Empire? Why
did
America's
strategic
military and
political
leaders not
learn the
principle
lesson of
ancient
history:
"rich
country,
strong
army."
For the past
seven years,
the U.S.
military has
been
repeatedly
warned about
the loss of
the U.S.
industrial
base and its
high-tech
capabilities
and its
potential to
profoundly
impact the
military. In
2005, a
Defense
Science
Board Task
Force on
High
Performance
Microchip
Supply said
the country
was losing
its
high-tech
industrial
capability
and that
"urgent
action is
recommended."
It warned
that
America's
most
strategic
industries
were not in
a position
to change
the
competitive
dynamics
that had
emerged
globally to
shift the
balance of
production
and markets
away from
the United
States.
"Addressing
this problem
is a
uniquely
government
function,"
said the
report. "The
task force
considers
DOD the
logical
steward to
lead, cajole
and
encourage a
national
solution to
this
critical
problem
regardless
of which arm
of
government
must act."
The response
from DOD's
top
political
appointees
and the
White House
National
Security
Council:
nothing.
For years,
the U.S.
military
shrugged off
similar
admonishments
from the
National
Academy of
Sciences,
the United
States-China
Economic and
Security
Review
Commission,
and the
Advisory
Group on
Electron
Devices,
which DOD
even
temporarily
shut down in
2003 because
it did not
like a
report it
produced
describing
the
wholesale
destruction
of U.S.
innovation
capability.
Anybody
raising such
issues has
been branded
with the
pejorative
label of
being a
"protectionist."
But without
an economy,
what is
there for
the U.S.
military to
protect?
Over the
past 30
years,
zealous
libertarian
free-market
economists
have won the
debate in
Washington
policy
circles.
They should
be proud:
their
intellectual
prowess has
led to the
collapse of
the American
economy,
American
capitalism
and the
American
empire.
Ever since
the end of
the Reagan
administration,
I have
watched from
a front-row
seat in
Washington,
D.C., as the
leadership
in the U.S.
government
sat back and
allowed the
wholesale
outsourcing
of key
industrial
sectors like
semiconductors,
lithography,
printed
circuit
boards,
photomasks,
machine
tools,
computers,
consumer
electronics,
foundries
and
software;
not to
mention
textiles and
apparel,
automotive
parts,
furniture,
toys,
sporting
goods, home
furnishings
and
appliances.
The U.S.
government
did not lift
a finger as
the United
States trade
deficit in
goods soared
to $838
billion in
2006, and as
tens of
thousands of
industrial
plants
closed and
millions of
high-paid
workers were
sent to the
streets.
It is
obvious that
the
political
appointees
in the
Pentagon
still do not
comprehend
the
implications
of the U.S.
financial
system
collapse as
millions of
Americans
lose their
jobs, are
forced out
of their
homes and
even die
because they
can't afford
health care.
If they did,
there would
be crash
meetings
with
officials at
the Commerce
Department
and USTR
with
proposals on
what must be
done
immediately
to start
rebuilding
the American
industrial
base,
similar to
what is
occurring
now among
Treasury and
Federal
Reserve
officials to
salvage the
banking
system.
The U.S.
government
did not
expect and
has not
planned for
a
"worst-case"
economic
scenario
such as the
one that is
currently
unfolding.
In fact, the
U.S. did
whatever was
in its power
to foster
the eventual
financial
meltdown --
because
there was no
leadership
anywhere to
be found in
the
military/political
complex to
assure that
the United
States
remains an
industrial
powerhouse.
Five defense
"integrators"
-- Raytheon,
General
Dynamics,
Boeing,
Lockheed
Martin and
Northrop
Grumman --
do not
constitute a
robust
industrial
base.
None of this
would have
been allowed
to happen
under Ronald
Reagan in
the 1980s at
the height
of the Cold
War. After
much
ideological
debate over
free trade
and free
markets
during the
first four
years of his
presidency,
Ronald
Reagan
adopted a
robust
industrial
policy aimed
at competing
head-on with
both the
Soviet Union
and Japan.
It wasn't
easy for him
to do so,
but he
supported
important
U.S.
industries
like
semiconductors,
autos and
machine
tools, and
invested
billions of
dollars into
future U.S.
technological
capability.
For his
defense of
U.S.
industry and
its workers,
Reagan
transformed
the
country's
political
dynamic with
legions of
Reagan
Democrats,
who remain
to this day
committed to
the
Republican
Party
despite its
subsequent
repudiation
of Reagan's
industrial
embrace.
Ronald
Reagan's
industrial
legacy --
and the
enduring
dedication
of
middle-class
workers --
is the
reason why
George W.
Bush is
still in
office.
It was the
Department
of Defense
during the
Reagan
presidency
that created
the
Semiconductor
Manufacturing
Technology (SEMATECH)
consortium.
The National
Center for
Manufacturing
Sciences (NCMS)
was created
to foster
the
development
of an
advanced
machine tool
and
automation
industry.
The Defense
Advanced
Research
Projects
Agency (DARPA)
funded a
vast array
of important
industrial
technologies.
DOD's top
technologists
had a
long-term
vision that
was
unencumbered
by a
corporate
fixation on
quarterly
profits, and
they pumped
billions of
dollars into
entrepreneurial
companies
and
individuals
that were
focusing on
computational
sciences,
digital
technologies,
networking,
optics,
lasers,
advanced
materials
and global
positioning
capabilities.
There was no
place else
in the
government
that could
fund this
research,
even though
much of it
was
commercial
in nature.
DOD's
technologists
knew how to
get results.
The
investments
made during
the Reagan
years
resulted in
the
incredibly
prosperous
decade of
the 1990s.
The digital
technology
revolution
that drove
the U.S.
economy
through the
1990s was
Ronald
Reagan's
economic
legacy.
What
happened to
America's
strategic
military
thinkers and
leaders? Why
did they
fall asleep
at the helm?
Why were
they
persuaded by
free-market
economic
ideologues
that the
United
States
didn't need
to produce
anything to
be a
military
superpower
-- that it
was okay to
be a
"knowledge"
economy
based on
services and
consumption?
How did they
fail to
learn the
lesson of
the economic
collapse of
the Soviet
Union?
It all
started
changing
radically
the moment
Ronald
Reagan left
the
presidency.
As editor of
New
Technology
Week at the
time, the
biggest and
most
unexpected
shock of the
first Bush
administration
in 1989 was
its
immediate
reversal of
Reagan's
industrial
policies.
During
Reagan's
term, there
were
passionate
and
patriotic
scientists,
engineers
and
industrialists
who were
compelled to
fight for
American
industry.
Bob Costello
in the
Office of
the
Secretary of
Defense,
started the
Defense
Manufacturing
Board; Craig
Fields and
his cohorts
Arati
Prabhakar
(who later
became
director of
NIST), Lance
Glasser (who
helped
create the
National
Electronics
Manufacturing
Initiative)
and dozens
of others at
DARPA were
actively
engaged in
funding
promising
commercial
technologies;
Malcolm
Baldrige and
Bruce
Merrifield
at the
Commerce
Department
understood
the
strategic
importance
of critical
technologies;
Sens. Jeff
Bingaman,
Fritz
Hollings,
Joe
Lieberman
and Pete
Dominici and
their
trusted
aides Ed
McGaffigan,
Bill
Bonvillian
and Pat
Windham
funded
defense
technology
programs in
the Senate.
Reps. Mel
Levine, Don
Ritter and
George Brown
and aides
like Jim
Turner in
the House of
the
Representatives
pushed an
aggressive
technology
agenda.
Dozens of
high profile
executives
worked the
issue in
Washington,
D.C.,
including
Bob Galvin,
CEO of
Motorola;
Robert Noyce,
inventor of
the
integrated
circuit and
co-founder
of Intel;
Dick Elkus,
inventor of
the
videocassette
recorder;
John Young
CEO of
Hewlett
Packard; and
Ian Ross,
president of
AT&T Bell
Labs. Among
the trade
associations,
Dick Iverson
of the
American
Electronics
Association
went out on
a limb to
ensure the
United
States
remain a
viable
industrial
powerhouse.
All of these
people
sacrificed
their
careers to
put their
country
first.
Ronald
Reagan's
management
style of
allowing
people to
take big
risks with
potentially
big failures
may not have
worked in
many areas
of
government
-- resulting
in the
Iran/Contra,
HUD, EPA and
Interior
Department
scandals --
but it is
exactly the
type of
management
philosophy
needed for
success in
scientific,
engineering
and
technological
endeavors.
It all
worked until
George
Herbert
Walker Bush
took office
in 1988, and
it came
tumbling
down, driven
by
free-market
zealots who
have put the
United
States in
its current
financial
bind. A
heated and
frankly
ridiculous
debate
emerged over
"industrial
policy,
corporate
welfare and
picking
winners and
losers."
Bush's
science
advisor Alan
Bromley was
thrown in
the dog
house for
six months,
told not to
talk to any
member of
the press,
after he
confided to
the Wall
Street
Journal that
there was a
need for an
industrial
policy.
Bush's
Defense
Secretary
Dick Cheney
reflected
the "who
cares about
U.S.
industry
philosophy"
when he told
Aerospace
Daily on
January 23,
1992 that
"buy
American"
and other
similar
policies
favoring
U.S.
industry
"raise
questions
about my
spending
money on
things I
could get
cheaper
elsewhere,
and it
raises the
specter of
having to
rely upon
less than
first-rate
technology
in certain
areas."
Within the
George HW
Bush
administration
there was
the despised
economic
"troika" of
White House
chairman of
the Council
of Economic
Advisors
Michael
Boskin, OMB
director
Richard
Darman and
Bush chief
of staff
John Sununu
working
against the
long-term
technology
interests of
U.S.
industry.
Boskin is
quoted as
saying,
"Computer
chips,
potato
chips,
what's the
difference."
Bush's
Commerce
Secretary
Robert
Mossbacher
had his own
famous line
when it came
to the U.S.
government
putting in
place
policies and
funding
programs to
assure U.S.
participation
in the
high-definition
television
and
flat-panel
display
industries:
"Uncle Sam
will not be
Uncle
Sugar."
In a highly
symbolic
act, Bush's
team fired
DARPA
director
Craig
Fields, who
remains a
hero to this
day among
entrepreneurial
technologists.
Michael
Sekora, a
physicist
who directed
the Defense
Intelligence
Agency's
"Project
Socrates,"
which
monitored
advanced
technologies
of U.S.
economic
competitors,
abruptly
resigned and
his program
was
eliminated.
Bob
Costello,
former DOD
undersecretary
of
acquisition,
said upon
the
elimination
of the
Defense
Manufacturing
Board: "It
sends a
terrible
signal to
industry.
It's a step
backward, a
tragedy. I
don't know
see what we
gain by
doing away
with it."
George HW
Bush's
ideological
economic
stridency
abruptly
ended the
Reagan era
of
industrial
engagement,
and it
assured his
loss of the
presidency
after one
term to
Arkansas
Gov. Bill
Clinton in
1992 who
touted,
"it's the
economy,
stupid."
Clinton's
era started
well, but
then
fizzled. His
ambitious
Technology
Reinvestment
Project (TRP)
was quashed
by the new
Republican
majority in
Congress in
1994.
Clinton
created the
Office of
Economic
Security in
the Defense
Department,
and the
National
Economic
Council at
the White
House to
parallel the
National
Security
Council. But
without the
Soviet Union
around,
Clinton
could coast,
benefiting
from the
"peace
dividend"
that came
from cutting
the military
and plowing
the savings
into
reducing the
deficit.
Clinton also
hired Robert
Rubin from
Goldman
Sachs and
free-trade
economist
Lawrence
Summers from
Harvard to
be his chief
economic
advisors and
they
relentlessly
pursued the
same
ideological
concept of
trade at the
expense of
U.S.
industry.
Rubin and
Summers are
a good part
of the
reason Sen.
Hillary
Clinton did
not make it
out of this
year's
presidential
primaries --
due to the
baggage from
her
husband's
embrace of
unfettered
"free"
trade. Yet,
amazingly,
both men are
now seen
standing
astride
Barack Obama
-- making it
difficult
for an
otherwise
articulate
person to
present a
viable way
out of this
economic
mess other
than through
tired ideas
of tax cuts
and
additional
spending
that will
lead to
further
debt.
John McCain
seems just
as bad. For
the past 10
years, he
was the
leader in
the Senate
in opposing
any program
aimed at
ensuring a
healthy
American
industrial
base. He was
always the
first
senator to
rush to the
Senate floor
whenever any
bill came
over from
concerned
Republican
members of
the House
that
included
"Buy
American"
provisions
and other
proposals
that would
favor the
U.S.
industrial
base over
foreign
sources of
supply. He
killed
almost all
of them.
The last
eight years
have been a
washout.
Bush's tax
cuts did
nothing to
encourage
U.S.
industrial
innovation
or high-tech
domestic
production.
The
government
relentlessly
pursued
free-trade
policies
with
marginal
countries
and
encouraged
outsourcing
of virtually
every
important
industrial
sector.
There has
been an
unwillingness
to
aggressively
enforce
trade laws
in favor of
remaining
U.S.
producers.
The
government
has overseen
reductions
in spending
on research
and
development
in the
physical
sciences and
engineering.
It has
created a
despondent
government
workforce
whose work
has been
doctored by
political
appointees
and has been
told to shut
up and do
nothing and
wait for
retirement.
It has
aggressively
attacked
U.S.
companies
like
Microsoft
and it put
others like
Arthur
Anderson out
of business.
And the
political
leadership
at the
Department
of Defense
both forgot
what it
takes for a
nation to be
a military
superpower
and, like
the Soviet
Union, got
lost in Iraq
and
Afghanistan.
And yet over
the past
month as
major U.S.
financial
institutions
failed,
there has
been little
discussion
about real
proposals
aimed at
extricating
the country
from what
could
potentially
be an
impending
economic
calamity.
There is no
articulation
of a viable
vision of
how to right
the sinking
ship, other
than
proposing
tax cuts or
spending
more money
the country
doesn't have
to go deeper
into debt to
cover bad
debts that
have still
not been
written off.
Few talking
heads have
said
anything
about the
importance
of reviving
the U.S.
high-tech
manufacturing
base and of
rebuilding
U.S.
industrial
capacity for
the
"environmental"
era that
will demand
a new
generation
of radical
innovation
and
efficiency
in product
design,
production
and use.
Without a
viable
industry how
is the
United
States going
to pay off
even more
debt? By
selling
lollipops to
the world's
suckers who
continue
buying
America's
financial
"paper"?
Wall Street
needs to
have its
knuckles
rapped
publicly by
the
country's
top
political
leaders --
and rapped
incredibly
hard -- for
its
continuing
insistence
on rewarding
companies
for laying
off
Americans
and moving
production
offshore;
for placing
such undue
emphasis on
pennies-per-share
quarterly
profits at
the expense
of
good-paying
American
jobs and
America's
continued
economic
viability.
When Hewlett
Packard
announced
three weeks
ago in the
midst of the
financial
crisis that
it was
laying off
24,000
workers its
stock price
went up.
Then,
incredibly,
last week
Hewlett
Packard
announced
plans to
build a new
computer
plant -- in
China! This
has to stop.
Who will be
able to
afford HP
computers?
The trade
numbers
released on
Friday,
October 10
show that
the trade
deficit did
not go down.
The deficit
in goods
remained at
a staggering
$71 billion
for the
month of
September.
Yet there is
still
happy-talk
among
America's
"leaders"
about the
marginal
growth of
U.S.
exports.
Such talk
obfuscates
what is a
bad
situation:
combined
with the
federal
budget
deficit,
America
continues to
go deeper
into debt to
the tune of
more than $3
billion a
day. As
Nucor CEO
Dan DiMicco
said
recently:
"We'll be
indentured
to foreign
creditors if
this madness
persists. We
have lost
our minds."
Without a
vibrant
industrial
sector,
America's
economy
became
hollowed
out.
Americans
stopped
making
enough money
to afford
all of the
things they
were buying
from
overseas
producers.
They over
borrowed.
Without a
solid
industrial
economic
core the
financial
sector
collapsed.
The military
structure of
the United
States will
be next.
It took only
19 years for
the United
States to
follow the
USSR into an
economic
ditch.
Ronald
Reagan,
please come
back.