America’s Global Military Bases Actually
Undermine National Security. Here’s How.
Time to cull the herd: America's sprawling global footprint
encourages military confrontation, makes host countries into
targets, and costs taxpayers a fortune.
By David Vine
September 28, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "FPIF"-
With the U.S. military having withdrawn
many of its forces from Iraq and Afghanistan, most Americans
would be forgiven for being unaware that hundreds of U.S. bases
and hundreds of thousands of U.S. troops still encircle the
globe. Although few know it, the United States garrisons the
planet unlike any country in history, and the evidence is on
view from Honduras to Oman, Japan to Germany, Singapore to
Djibouti.
Like most Americans, for most of my life, I
rarely thought about military bases. The late scholar and former
CIA consultant Chalmers Johnson described me well when he wrote in
2004, “As distinct from other peoples, most Americans do not
recognize — or do not want to recognize — that the United States
dominates the world through its military power. Due to
government secrecy, our citizens are often ignorant of the fact
that our garrisons encircle the planet.”
To the extent that Americans think about these
bases at all, we generally assume they’re essential to national
security and global peace. Our leaders have claimed as much
since most of them were established during World War II and the
early days of the Cold War. As a result, we consider the
situation normal and accept that U.S. military installations
exist in staggering numbers in other countries, on other
peoples’ land.
On the other hand, the idea that there would
be foreign bases on U.S. soil is unthinkable.
While there are no freestanding foreign bases
permanently located in the United States, there are now around 800
U.S. bases in foreign countries. Seventy years after World
War II and 62 years after the Korean War, there are still 174
U.S. “base sites” in Germany, 113 in Japan, and 83 in South
Korea, according
to the Pentagon. Hundreds more dot the planet in around
80 countries, including Aruba and Australia, Bahrain and
Bulgaria, Colombia, Kenya, and Qatar, among many other places.
Although few Americans realize it, the United States likely has
more bases in foreign lands than any other people, nation, or
empire in history.
Oddly enough, however, the mainstream media
rarely report or comment on the issue. For years, during debates
over the closure of the prison at the base in Guantánamo Bay,
Cuba, nary a
pundit or politician wondered why the United States has a base
on Cuban territory in the first place or questioned whether we
should have one there at all. Rarely does anyone ask if we need
hundreds of bases overseas or if, at an estimated annual cost of
perhaps $156
billion or more, the U.S. can afford them. Rarely does
anyone wonder how we would feel if China, Russia, or Iran built
even a single base anywhere near our borders, let alone in the
United States.
“Without grasping the dimensions of this
globe-girdling Baseworld,” Chalmers Johnson insisted,
“one can’t begin to understand the size and nature of our
imperial aspirations or the degree to which a new kind of
militarism is undermining our constitutional order.”
Alarmed and inspired by his work and aware
that relatively few have heeded his warnings, I’ve spent years
trying to track and understand what he called our “empire
of bases.” While logic might seem to suggest that these
bases make us safer, I’ve come to the opposite conclusion: In a
range of ways our overseas bases have made us all less secure,
harming everyone from U.S. military personnel and their families
to locals living near the bases to those of us whose taxes pay
for the way our government garrisons the globe.
We are now, as we’ve been for the last seven
decades, a Base
Nation that extends around the world, and it’s long past
time that we faced that fact.
The Base Nation’s Scale
Our 800 bases outside the 50 states and
Washington, D.C. come in all sizes and shapes.
Some are city-sized “Little
Americas” — places like Ramstein
Air Base in Germany, Kadena
Air Base in Okinawa, and the little known Navy and Air Force
base on Diego
Garcia in the Indian Ocean. These support a remarkable
infrastructure, including schools, hospitals, power plants,
housing complexes, and an array of amenities often referred to
as “Burger Kings and bowling alleys.” Among the smallest U.S.
installations globally are “lily
pad” bases (also known as “cooperative security locations”),
which tend to house drones, surveillance aircraft, or
pre-positioned weaponry and supplies. These are increasingly
found in parts of Africa and Eastern Europe that had previously
lacked much of a U.S. military presence.
Protesters hold up anti-military base signs in Okinawa.
(Photo: Chota Takamine)
Other facilities scattered across the planet
include ports and airfields, repair complexes, training areas,
nuclear weapons installations, missile testing sites, arsenals,
warehouses, barracks, military schools, listening and
communications posts, and a growing
array of drone bases. Military hospitals and prisons, rehab
facilities, CIA paramilitary bases, and intelligence facilities
(including former CIA “black site” prisons) must also be
considered part of our Base Nation because of their military
functions. Even U.S. military resorts
and recreation areas in places like the Bavarian Alps and
Seoul, South Korea are bases of a kind. Worldwide, the military
runs more than 170
golf courses.
The Pentagon’s overseas presence is actually
even larger. There are U.S. troops or other military personnel
in about 160
foreign countries and territories, including small numbers
of marines guarding embassies and larger deployments of trainers
and advisers like the roughly 3,500 now
working with the Iraqi Army. And don’t forget the Navy’s 11
aircraft carriers. Each should be considered a kind of floating
base — or as the Navy tellingly refers to
them, “four and a half acres of sovereign U.S. territory.”
Finally, above the seas, one finds a growing military presence in
space.
The United States isn’t, however, the only
country to control military
bases outside its territory.
Great Britain still has about seven bases and France five in
former colonies. Russia has around eight in former Soviet
republics. For the first time since World War II, Japan’s
“Self-Defense Forces” have a foreign base in
Djibouti in the Horn of Africa, alongside U.S. and French
bases there. South
Korea, India, Chile, Turkey,
and Israel each
reportedly have at least one foreign base. There
are also reports that China may
be seeking its first base overseas.
In total, these countries probably have about
30 installations abroad, meaning that the United States has
approximately 95 percent of the world’s foreign bases.
“Forward” Forever?
Although the United States has had bases in
foreign lands since shortly after it gained its
independence, nothing like today’s massive global deployment of
military force was imaginable until World War II.
In 1940, with the flash of a pen, President
Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a “destroyers-for-bases”
deal with Great Britain that instantly gave the United States
99-year leases to installations in British colonies worldwide.
Base acquisition and construction accelerated rapidly once the
country entered the war. By 1945, the U.S. military was building
base facilities at a rate of 112 a month. By war’s end, the
global total topped 2,000 sites. In only five years, the United
States had developed history’s first truly global network of
bases, vastly overshadowing that of the British Empire upon
which “the sun never set.”
After the war, the military returned about
half the installations but maintained what historian George
Stambuk termed a
“permanent institution” of bases abroad. Their number spiked
during the wars in Korea and Vietnam, declining after each of
them. By the time the Soviet Union imploded in 1991, there were
about 1,600 U.S. bases abroad, with some 300,000 U.S. troops
stationed on those in Europe alone.
Although the military vacated about 60
percent of its foreign garrisons in the 1990s, the overall
base infrastructure stayed relatively intact. Despite additional
base closures in Europe and to a lesser extent in East Asia over
the last decade, and despite the absence of a superpower
adversary, nearly 250,000
troops are still deployed on installations worldwide.
Although there are about half as many bases as there were in
1989, the number of countries with U.S. bases has roughly
doubled from 40
to 80. In recent years, President Obama’s “Pacific pivot”
has meant billions
of dollars in profligate spending in Asia, where the
military already had hundreds of bases and tens of thousands of
troops. Billions more have been sunk into building an
unparalleled permanent base infrastructure in every
Persian Gulf country save Iran. In Europe, the Pentagon has
been spending billions more erecting expensive
new bases at the same time that it has been closing others.
Since the start of the Cold War, the idea that
our country should have a large collection of bases and hundreds
of thousands of troops permanently stationed overseas has
remained a quasi-religious dictum of foreign and national
security policy. The nearly 70-year-old idea underlying this
deeply held belief is known as the “forward
strategy.” Originally, the strategy held that the United
States should maintain large concentrations of military forces
and bases as close as possible to the Soviet Union to hem in and
“contain” its supposed urge to expand.
But the disappearance of another superpower to
contain made remarkably little difference to the forward
strategy. Chalmers Johnson first grew concerned about our empire
of bases when he recognized that the structure of the “American
Raj” remained largely unchanged despite the collapse of the
supposed enemy.
Two decades after the Soviet Union’s demise,
people across the political spectrum still unquestioningly
assume that overseas bases and forward-deployed forces are
essential to protect the country. George W. Bush’s
administration was typical in insisting that
bases abroad “maintained the peace” and were “symbols” of “U.S.
commitments to allies and friends.” The Obama administration has
similarly declared that
protecting the American people and international security
“requires a global security posture.”
Support for the forward strategy has remained
the consensus among politicians of both parties, national
security experts, military officials, journalists, and almost
everyone else in Washington’s power structure. Opposition of any
sort to maintaining large numbers of overseas bases and troops
has long been pilloried as peacenik idealism or the sort of
isolationism that allowed Hitler to conquer Europe.
(Photo: David B. Gleason / Flickr)
The Costs of Garrisoning the World
As Johnson showed us, there are many reasons
to question the overseas base status quo. The most obvious one
is economic.
Garrisons overseas are very expensive.
According to the RAND
Corporation, even when host countries like Japan and Germany
cover some of the costs, U.S. taxpayers still pay an annual
average of $10,000 to $40,000 more per year to station a member
of the military abroad than in the United States. The expense of
transportation, the higher cost of living in some host
countries, and the need to provide schools, hospitals, housing,
and other support to family members of military personnel mean
that the dollars add up quickly — especially with more than half
a million troops, family members, and civilian employees on
bases overseas at any time.
By my very conservative
calculations, maintaining installations and troops overseas
cost at least $85 billion in 2014 — more than the discretionary
budget of every government agency except the Defense Department
itself. If the U.S. presence in Afghanistan and Iraq is
included, that bill reaches $156 billion or more.
While bases may be costly for taxpayers,
they’re extremely profitable for
privateers of twenty-first-century war like DynCorp
International and former Halliburton subsidiary KBR.
As Chalmers Johnson noted,
“Our installations abroad bring profits to civilian industries,”
which win billions in contracts annually to “build and maintain
our far-flung outposts.”
Meanwhile, many of the communities hosting
bases overseas never see the economic windfalls that U.S. and
local leaders regularly promise. Some areas, especially in poor
rural communities, have seen short-term economic booms
touched off by base construction. In the long-term, however,
bases rarely create sustainable, healthy local economies.
Compared with other forms of economic
activity, they represent unproductive uses of land, employ
relatively few people for the expanses occupied, and contribute
little to local economic growth. Research has consistently shown
that when bases finally close, the economic
impact is
generally limited, and in some cases actually positive —
that is, local communities can end up better
off when they trade bases for housing, schools, shopping
complexes, and other forms of economic development.
Meanwhile, for the United States, investing
taxpayer dollars in the construction and maintenance of overseas
bases means forgoing investments in areas like education,
transportation, housing, and healthcare, despite the fact that
these industries are more of a boon to overall economic
productivity and create
more jobs compared to equivalent military spending. Think
about what $85 billion per year would mean in terms of
rebuilding the country’s crumbling civilian infrastructure.
The Human Toll
Beyond the financial costs are the human ones.
The families of military personnel are among
those who suffer from the spread of overseas bases, given the
strain of distant deployments, family separations, and frequent
moves. Overseas bases also contribute to the shocking rates of sexual
assault in the military: An estimated 30
percent of servicewomen are victimized during their time in
the military, and a disproportionate number of these crimes
happen at bases abroad. Outside the base gates, in places like
South Korea, one often finds exploitative prostitution industries
geared toward U.S. military personnel.
Worldwide, bases have caused widespread environmental
damage because of toxic leaks, accidents, and in some cases
the deliberate
dumping of hazardous materials. GI crime has long angered
locals. In Okinawa and elsewhere, U.S. troops have repeatedly
committed horrific acts of rape against
local women. From Greenland to
the tropical island of Diego
Garcia, the military has displaced local peoples from their
lands to build its bases.
In contrast to frequently invoked rhetoric
about spreading democracy, the military has shown a preference for
establishing bases in undemocratic and often despotic states
like Qatar and Bahrain. In Iraq, Afghanistan, and Saudi Arabia,
U.S. bases have created fertile breeding
grounds for radicalism and anti-Americanism. The presence of
bases near Muslim holy sites in Saudi Arabia was a major recruiting
tool for al-Qaeda and part of Osama bin Laden’s professed motivation for
the September 11, 2001 attacks.
Although this kind of perpetual turmoil is
little noticed at home, bases abroad have all too often generate
grievances, protest, and antagonistic relationships. Although
few here recognize it, our bases are a major part of the image
the United States presents to the world — and they often show us
in an extremely unflattering light.
(Photo: Ojo de Cineasta / Flickr)
Creating a New Cold War, Base by Base
It’s also not at all clear that bases enhance
national security and global peace in any way.
In the absence of a superpower enemy, the
argument that bases many thousands of miles from U.S. shores are
necessary to defend the United States — or even its allies — is
a hard argument to make. On the contrary, the global collection
of bases has generally enabled the launching of military
interventions, drone strikes, and wars of choice that have
resulted in repeated disasters, costing millions of lives and
untold destruction from Vietnam to Iraq.
By making it easier to wage foreign wars,
bases overseas have ensured that military action is an ever more
attractive option — often the only imaginable option — for U.S.
policymakers. As the anthropologist Catherine Lutz has
said, when all you have in your foreign policy toolbox is a
hammer, everything starts to look like a nail. Ultimately, bases
abroad have frequently made war more likely rather than less.
Proponents of the long-outdated forward
strategy will reply that overseas bases “deter” enemies and help
keep the global peace. As supporters of the status quo, they’ve
been proclaiming such security benefits as self-evident truths
for decades. Few have provided anything of substance to support
their claims. While there’s some evidence that military forces
can indeed deter imminent threats, little
if any research suggests that overseas bases are an
effective form of long-term deterrence.
Studies by both the Bush
administration and the RAND
Corporation — not exactly left-wing peaceniks — indicate
that advances in transportation technology have largely erased
the advantage of stationing troops abroad. In the case of a
legitimate defensive war or peacekeeping operation, the military
could generally deploy troops just as quickly from domestic
bases as from most bases abroad. Rapid sealift and airlift
capabilities coupled with agreements allowing the use of bases
in allied nations and, potentially, pre-positioned supplies are
a dramatically less expensive and less inflammatory alternative
to maintaining permanent bases overseas.
It is also questionable whether such bases
actually increase the security of host nations. The presence of
U.S. bases can turn a country into an explicit target for
foreign powers or militants — just as U.S. installations have
endangered Americans overseas.
Similarly, rather than stabilizing dangerous
regions, foreign bases frequently heighten military tensions and
discourage diplomatic solutions to conflicts. Placing U.S. bases
near the borders of countries like China, Russia, and Iran, for
example, increases threats to their security and encourages them
to respond by boosting their own military spending and activity.
Imagine how U.S. leaders would respond if China were to build
even a single small base in Mexico, Canada, or the Caribbean.
Notably, the most dangerous moment during the Cold War — the
1962 Cuban missile crisis — revolved around the construction of
Soviet nuclear missile facilities in Cuba, roughly 90 miles from
the U.S. border.
The creation and maintenance of so many U.S.
bases overseas likewise encourages other nations to build their
own foreign bases in what could rapidly become an escalating “base
race.” Bases near the borders of China and Russia, in
particular, threaten to fuel new cold wars. U.S. officials may
insist that building yet more bases in East Asia is a defensive
act meant to ensure peace in the Pacific, but tell that to the
Chinese. That country’s leaders are undoubtedly not “reassured”
by the creation of yet more bases encircling their borders.
Contrary to the claim that such installations increase global
security, they tend to ratchet up regional tensions, increasing
the risk of future military confrontation.
In this way, just as the war on terror has
become a global conflict that only seems to spread terror, the
creation of new U.S. bases to protect against imagined future
Chinese or Russian threats runs the risk of becoming a
self-fulfilling prophecy. These bases may ultimately help create
the very threat they are supposedly designed to protect against.
In other words, far from making the world a safer place, U.S.
bases can actually make war more likely and the country less
secure.
Behind the Wire
In his farewell
address to the nation upon leaving the White House in 1961,
President Dwight D. Eisenhower famously warned the nation about
the insidious economic, political, and even spiritual effects of
what he dubbed “the military-industrial-congressional complex,”
the vast interlocking national security state born out of World
War II. As Chalmers
Johnson’s work reminded us in this new century, our
70-year-old collection of bases is evidence of how, despite
Ike’s warning, the United States has entered a permanent state
of war with an economy, a government, and a global system of
power enmeshed in preparations for future conflicts.
America’s overseas bases offer a window onto
our military’s impact in the world and in our own daily lives.
The history of these hulking “Little Americas” of concrete, fast
food, and weaponry provides a living chronicle of the United
States in the post-World War II era. In a certain sense, in
these last seven decades, whether we realize it or not, we’ve
all come to live “behind the wire,” as military personnel like
to say.
We may think such bases have made us safer. In
reality, they’ve helped lock us inside a permanently militarized
society that has made all of us — everyone on this planet — less
secure, damaging lives at home and abroad.