Pentagon Holding America Hostage
To Its Ceaseless War-Making
by Sherwood Ross
Besides
holding Afghanistan and Iraq hostage, the Pentagon today is holding
American civilization itself hostage to its imperial designs. That’s
because war beggars civilized life and ceaseless war beggars
civilization unceasingly.
As the great political commentator Walter
Lippman put it during the Viet Nam War, “All the plans of the Great
Society here at home, all the plans for the rebuilding of backward
countries in other continents will all be put on the shelf, because war
interrupts everything.”
In the American Warfare State that prevails
today most of every tax dollar collected goes to wage war and the
Pentagon spends more for war than all 50 states combined spend for
peace. No better example exists than the protest of 750 scientists at
the National Institutes of Health who said their basic infectious
disease research had been subverted by spending on bioterror research.
War interrupts everything: rebuilding our cities, public schools and
community colleges, water-works and sewerage systems, housing, mass
transit, hospitals, new business start-ups, and the funding of the fine
arts.
Lippman
went on to give advice that nearly every occupant of the White House
has since disregarded: “We are not the policeman of mankind. We are not
able to run the world, and we shouldn’t pretend that we can. Let us tend
to our own business, which is great enough as it is. It is very great.
We have neglected our own affairs. Our education is inadequate, our
cities are badly built, our social arrangements are unsatisfactory. We
can’t wait another generation.”
Today,
with 30 million Americans unemployed, underemployed, or dropped out of
the labor market, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich writes, “America’s
biggest---and only major---jobs program is the U.S. military.” If you
want to enlist to kill people, Uncle Sam has got a warplane for you to
fly; if you’d prefer to make living room furniture, forget it. Adding up
1.4 million troops on active duty, 833,000 in the reserves, and 1.6
million more employed by defense contractors, Reich calls this a “giant
undercover military jobs program,” asserting that it is “an insane way
to keep Americans employed” because “it creates jobs we don’t need.” “We
don’t have an overt jobs program based on what’s really needed,” the
labor authority writes.
Instead,
workers we do need are losing their jobs by the millions. Calling the
job picture “A Horror Show,” Bob Herbert wrote August 10th in The New York Times, “Government
workers are walking the plank from coast to coast.” The paper reported
the nation lost 133,000 more jobs just in July. And Allen Sinai, chief
global economist at Decision Economics, told the paper that while
corporate earnings have been “spectacular” that “the job market just
stinks.” What a fine arrangement! Karl Marx could have cited it as proof
of reckless capitalists gone mad and that capitalists need wars to survive. Marx would have also pointed to the amazing high profits of the top “defense” contractors.
In an editorial last May 17, The New York Times observed,
“There has been a feeding frenzy at the Pentagon budget trough since
the 9/11 attacks. Pretty much anything the military chiefs and industry
lobbyists pitched, Congress approved---no matter the cost and no matter
if the weapons programs were over budget, underperforming or no longer
needed in the post-cold-war world.”
Rather
than renounce America’s imperial direction, President Obama has
escalated the senseless war in Afghanistan, requesting the Congress hike
defense spending next year by two percent to $708 billion and, says
Reich, including Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs, nuclear weapons,
and intelligence, the total national security bill will push $950
billion.
And
proving that vaudeville is not dead, Defense Secy. Robert Gates said
last week he’d like to shut one military command and reduce the number
of admirals and generals to cut spending. This bit of public showmanship
will entertain those who do not realize Gates is only switching dollars
around. “The funds saved will help us sustain the current force
structure and make needed investments in modernization in a fiscally
responsible way,” President Obama said, letting the tiger out of the
bag.
The Nation magazine got it right when it editorialized last Nov. 9th
“The ballooning debt is forcing the administration to match every new
expenditure with a spending cut. As a practical matter, that means every
dollar we spend on the war in Afghanistan will be one less dollar to
create jobs or provide health insurance at home…”
Studies
have repeatedly shown that investing money in education, or for that
matter, in public works, will create more jobs and prosperity than
military outlays, which feed the military-industrial complex. So will
investing money in new inventions, in small business startups and in a
number of other peaceful, capitalist pursuits. If the economy is limp,
if bankruptcies and home foreclosures are setting records, it’s because
taxpayers’ bucks that might be fueling full employment and the
rebuilding of America are being squandered in the Middle East, whose
people are suffering death rates, homeless rates, infrastructure
breakdowns and unemployment and poverty as a result of U.S. aggression
that the American public can barely comprehend.
Those
who have touted war-making over diplomacy have been shown by history to
be the scum of the earth. “War alone brings up to its highest tension
all human energy and puts the stamp of nobility upon the peoples who
have the courage to face it,” said one such warmonger. His name was
Benito Mussolini. Pentagon recruiters put it another way, advertising,
“Be all you can be.” Unfortunately, the only thing you can be in a grave
is a corpse. The promise of America should be loftier than a death wish
in some war of aggression.
Sherwood
Ross is a Miami-based writer and former wire service columnist who was
also active in the civil rights movement.