At the Pentagon, meanwhile, the
bloody-thirty feast of the war profiteers
continues unabated.
By Norman Solomon
December 21, 202:
Information Clearing House
-- "Common
Dreams" -
Top U.S.
officials want us to believe that
the Pentagon carefully spares civilian lives
while making war overseas. The notion is
pleasant. And with high-tech killing far
from home, the physical and psychological
distances have made it even easier to
believe recent
claims that American warfare has become
“humane.”
Such pretenses should be grimly laughable
to anyone who has read high-quality
journalism from eyewitness reporters like
Anand Gopal and Nick Turse. For instance,
Gopal’s article for The New Yorker
in September, “The
Other Afghan Women,” is an in-depth,
devastating piece that exposes the slaughter
and terror systematically inflicted on rural
residents of Afghanistan by the U.S. Air
Force.
Overall, military
spending accounts for about half of the
federal government’s total discretionary
spending—while programs for helping instead
of killing are on short rations for local,
state and national government agencies.
Turse, an incisive author and managing
editor at TomDispatch,
wrote this fall: “Over the last 20
years, the United States has conducted more
than 93,300 air strikes -- in Afghanistan,
Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, and
Yemen—that killed between 22,679 and 48,308
civilians, according to figures recently
released by
Airwars, a U.K.-based airstrike
monitoring group. The total number of
civilians who have died from direct violence
in America’s wars since 9/11 tops out at
364,000 to
387,000, according to Brown University’s
Costs of War Project.”
Those deaths have been completely
predictable results of U.S. government
policies. And in fact, evidence of
widespread civilian casualties emerged soon
after the “war on terror” started two
decades ago. Leaks with extensive
documentation began to surface
more than 10 years ago, thanks to stark
revelations from courageous
whistleblowers and the independent media
outlet WikiLeaks.
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The retribution for their truth-telling
has been fierce and unrelenting. WikiLeaks
publisher Julian Assange is in a British
prison, facing imminent extradition to the
United States, where the chances of a fair
trial are essentially zero. Former U.S. Army
intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning spent
seven years in a military prison. Former
U.S. Air Force analyst
Daniel Hale, who revealed murderous
effects of U.S. drone warfare, is currently
serving a 45-month prison sentence. They had
the clarity of mind and heart to share vital
information with the public, disclosing not
just “mistakes” but patterns of war crimes.
Such realities should be kept in mind
when considering how the New York Times
framed its
blockbuster scoop last weekend, drawing
on more than 1,300 confidential documents.
Under the big headline “Hidden Pentagon
Records Reveal Patterns of Failure in Deadly
Airstrikes,” the Times assessed
U.S. bombing in Iraq, Syria and
Afghanistan—and
reported that “since 2014, the American
air war has been plagued by deeply flawed
intelligence, rushed and imprecise targeting
and the deaths of thousands of civilians,
many of them children.”
What should not get lost in all the
bold-type words like “failure,” “flawed
intelligence” and “imprecise targeting” is
that virtually none of it was unforeseeable.
The killings have resulted from policies
that gave very low priority to prevention of
civilian deaths.
The gist of those policies continues. And
so does the funding that fuels the nation’s
nonstop militarism, most recently in the
$768 billion National Defense Authorization
Act that spun through Congress this month
and landed on President Biden’s desk.
Dollar figures are apt to look abstract
on a screen, but they indicate the extent of
the mania. Biden had “only” asked for $12
billion more than President Trump’s last
NDAA, but that wasn’t enough for the
bipartisan hawkery in the House and Senate,
which provided a boost of $37 billion
instead.
Actually, factoring in other outlays for
so-called “defense,” annual U.S. military
spending is in the vicinity of $1 trillion.
Efforts at restraint have hit a wall. This
fall, in a vote on a bill to cut 10 percent
of the Pentagon budget, support came from
only
one-fifth of the House, and
not one Republican.
In the opposite direction, House support
for jacking up the military budget was
overwhelming, with a vote of 363-70. Last
week, when it was the Senate’s turn to act
on the measure, the vote was 88-11.
Overall, military spending accounts for
about half of the federal government’s total
discretionary spending—while programs for
helping instead of killing are on short
rations for local, state and national
government agencies. It’s a destructive
trend of warped priorities that serves the
long-term agendas of neoliberalism, aptly
defined as policies that “enhance the
workings of free market capitalism and
attempt to place limits on government
spending, government regulation, and public
ownership.”
While the two parties on Capitol Hill
have major differences on domestic issues,
relations are lethally placid beyond the
water’s edge. When the NDAA cleared the
Senate last week, the leaders of the Armed
Services Committee were both
quick to rejoice. “I am pleased that the
Senate has voted in an overwhelming,
bipartisan fashion to pass this year’s
defense bill,” said the committee’s chair,
Sen. Jack Reed, a Democrat from Rhode
Island. The ranking Republican on the panel,
Jim Inhofe from Oklahoma, chimed in: “This
bill sends a clear message to our
allies—that the United States remains a
reliable, credible partner—and to our
adversaries—that the U.S. military is
prepared and fully able to defend our
interests around the world.”
The bill also sends a clear message to
Pentagon contractors as they drool over a
new meal in the
ongoing feast of war profiteering.
It’s a long way from their glassed-in
office suites to the places where the bombs
fall.