Merchants
of death: Multibillion-dollar bailout for arms industry
amid rising COVID-19 toll
By Bill Van Auken
April 24, 2020
"Information
Clearing House"
- “I have instructed the United States Navy to shoot
down and destroy any and all Iranian gunboats if they
harass our ships at sea,” US President Donald Trump
tweeted Wednesday in a startling threat that could
trigger a catastrophic war throughout the Middle East
and beyond.
The threat to
launch a war 7,000 miles from US shores in the midst of
coronavirus pandemic, whose death toll in the US is
rapidly approaching 50,000, comes on the heels of
Trump’s Monday night tweet announcing a suspension of
all immigration into the United States, a transparent
attempt to scapegoat immigrants for the ravages of the
pandemic and the layoffs of tens of millions of workers.
There is in
both of these actions an expression of desperation and a
flailing about in the face of a national and global
crisis for which the US ruling class has no viable
solution. It is a crude attempt to change the subject
and divert public attention from the catastrophic
consequences of the criminal indifference of the
government and the ruling oligarchy it represents to the
lives and well-being of the vast majority of the
population.
Pentagon
officials reported Wednesday that they had received no
prior notification of Trump’s tweet, much less any
orders for a change in the rules of engagement in the
Persian Gulf.
Nonetheless,
the brutal and fascistic rhetoric of Trump reflects a
drive to war by US imperialism that has not been
tempered, but rather intensified, by the global
pandemic.
Even as Trump
issued his tweet, US warships were sailing toward a
confrontation with China in the South China Sea. At the
same time, the Pentagon was announcing a shift in its
deployment of long-range, nuclear capable B-52 bombers
to make their presence less predictable to Beijing and
Moscow and thereby ratchet up tensions.
In recent days,
the US has sharply escalated its air strikes against the
impoverished African nation of Somalia, even as the
coronavirus pandemic threatens to ravage its population.
Escalating war threats continue against Venezuela, and
the Pentagon continues to provide support for the
near-genocidal Saudi-led war against the people of
Yemen.
Nowhere does
this war drive find more naked expression than in the
massive government bailout that is being organized for
the US arms industry. With tens of millions of workers
unemployed, many facing hunger, and a drive by both the
Trump administration and state governors to force a
premature return to work, billions upon billions of
dollars are being lavished upon military contractors to
sustain their guaranteed profits and the obscene
fortunes generated for their major shareholders.
The Pentagon’s
top weapons procurer, Undersecretary of Defense Ellen
Lord, told a press conference Monday that some $3
billion has already been funneled to the arms makers in
the form of early payments for existing contracts, in
addition to billions more approved by Congress in the
first CARES Act, which pumped trillions of dollars into
the financial markets. She indicated that much more will
be doled out once Congress passes another stimulus
package.
Asked by a
reporter how much would be need to insure Washington’s
Merchants of Death from any losses due to the
coronavirus pandemic, she replied, “We’re talking
billions and billions on that one.” Lord added that the
first priority for this aid program was the
“modernization process of the nuclear triad.”
These
industries are hardly the picture of the deserving poor.
The fact that massive financial resources that are
desperately needed to save lives and rescue millions of
workers from poverty are instead being poured into their
pockets is a crime.
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In a
conference call this week to inform Lockheed
Martin shareholders of first-quarter earnings,
the company’s CEO, Marilyn Hewson, boasted that
the corporation’s “portfolio is broad and
expanding” and its “cash generation” strong. She
said the company looked forward to “supporting
our warfighters’ needs.”
Indeed,
Lockheed Martin pulled in $2.3 billion in cash during
the single quarter and expects to top $7.6 billion—coronavirus
effects notwithstanding—over the year. It has a $144
billion backlog in orders, an all-time high.
Asked whether
she had any qualms about political fallout over
completing a $1 billion stock buyback in the midst of
the crisis, she replied, “We’re very different, I think,
than those who have experienced a very significant
impact to their demands.” Hewson announced that the
company had set aside a grand total of $10 million for
COVID-19-related relief and assistance.
The “very
different” character of these companies was also noted
in a financial column published in the New York
Times for the benefit of its well-heeled readers,
titled “Opportunity in the Military-Industrial Complex.”
Pointing to the
projected $741 billion Pentagon budget for the coming
year, the Times counsels: “That combination of
federal dollars and corporate heft may represent an
opportunity for investors who don’t mind profiting from
warfare. A modest bet on a mutual fund or
exchange-traded fund that buys military contractors and
aerospace companies may help buffer the deep recession
brought on by the coronavirus.”
In short, one
can reap substantial wealth from—and amid—mass death.
One of the
principal concerns expressed by Undersecretary of
Defense Lord as she spelled out plans for the
multibillion-dollar bailout of the arms industry was the
disruption of supply chains, particularly those
originating in the maquiladora sweatshops just
across the US border in Mexico. She also mentioned
problems in India.
Thousands of
Mexican workers have struck and protested against the
deadly conditions inside these plants, conditions that
are being prepared for workers throughout the planet as
back-to-work orders are shoved through. At a plant in
Ciudad Juárez owned by Michigan-based Lear Corporation,
16 workers have died from COIVD-19, while area hospitals
are overflowing with victims of the virus.
The Pentagon
and US Ambassador to Mexico Christopher Landau have
intervened with the Mexican government, demanding that
the maquiladora workers be forced back into the
plants as “essential” to US imperialism’s war machine,
just like their counterparts in the US. Lockheed relies
on low-paid Mexican workers in Chihuahua, Mexico to
produce electrical wiring for the US military’s Black
Hawk and S-92 helicopters and F-16 fighter jets, while
Boeing gets parts from a plant run by PCC Aerostructures
in Monterrey. General Electric, Honeywell and other
military contractors also profit off the labor of
Mexican workers across the border.
Transmitting
the dictates of the Pentagon in the language of contempt
for human life that characterizes all of the policies of
the Trump administration and the US ruling class,
Ambassador Landau launched a Twitter campaign demanding
that Mexican workers go back into the maquiladoras
for the greater good of US imperialism. He enjoys the
full collaboration of Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel
López Obrador, promoted by the pseudo-left as a
“progressive” and even “socialist,” who has prepared the
country’s National Guard for deployment against
strikers.
Warning that
workers’ jobs are tied to supply chains linking them to
US arms manufacturers, Ambassador Landau said, “if we do
not coordinate our response, these chains can
evaporate.”
He added,
“There are risks everywhere, but we don't all stay at
home for fear we are going to get in a car accident. The
destruction of the economy is also a health threat.”
These are the
same reactionary, antiscientific and misanthropic
arguments being made in the US and internationally in an
attempt to force workers back into the factories and
workplaces with the certainty that many will fall sick
and die.
Workers in the
arms industry in the US, like their counterparts in
Mexico, have also struck and protested over being forced
to work as part of the “critical infrastructure” of US
imperialism. Workers at the Bath Iron Works in Maine and
the BAE Systems shipyard in Norfolk, Virginia, both run
by General Dynamics, have struck over the failure of the
employers to provide them with protection against
infection and death. Similarly, workers at the GE
Aviation plant in Lynn, Massachusetts, which produces
engines for US Marine helicopters, picketed the plant
over the lack of protective measures or any guarantee
for workers who fall victim to COVID-19.
This resistance
of the working class across national boundaries is
directly opposed to the rabid nationalism and reaction
that characterizes the response of the ruling classes,
not only in the US, but in Europe and internationally,
to the intensification of the capitalist crisis
triggered by the coronavirus pandemic. To defend their
profit interests, they will condemn millions to sickness
and death, even as they prepare for world war and
fascist dictatorship. The only alternative is for the
international working class to put an end to the profit
system and rebuild society on socialist foundations.
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