The US in
2016: No Money For Social Programs, Cash To Burn For
The Military
By Andre Damon
January 13,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"WSWS"
- The
US Navy’s “goals and objectives” outline for 2016,
released last week, does not mince words: the first
goal listed in the second subhead reads: “Buy more
ships.”
The US
government has poured hundreds of billions of
dollars into into military programs like the
F-35 fighter, while slashing assistance for the
poor, homeless, and hungry.
And that is
exactly what the world’s most powerful navy is
doing. On Wednesday, the Defense Department
announced it was moving forward with plans to
replace its Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines,
the most lethal killing machines in the history of
mankind, with a completely new design beginning in
2021.
Each
Ohio-class ballistic submarine is, by itself, the
fifth most powerful military in the world. The Navy
operates 14 of them. Each submarine carries 24
Trident II missiles, with each missile carrying
eight warheads with a yield six times greater than
the “little boy” bomb that killed over a hundred
thousand people in the US bombing of Nagasaki,
Japan, in 1945.
With an
effective range of more than 7,456 miles, a single
Ohio-class submarine in the waters outside of San
Diego could obliterate 192 cities in western China,
with a combined population of 400 million people, if
the commander-in-chief were so inclined.
A
comparison of the world's aircraft and
helicopter carriers
But the
Ohio class is apparently in need of an upgrade, and
the White House gave the Pentagon the go-ahead last
Monday to send a “Request for Proposal” to the
ship’s contractor, General Dynamics Electric Boat,
approving funds for the building of a prototype.
Each submarine, of which there will be 12, will cost
an estimated $6-8 billion—not including research and
development costs, the price of each submarine’s
nearly 200 nuclear warheads, and associated
operating costs—up from $2 billion for the Ohio
class.
The day
after the White House gave the go-ahead for
replacing the Ohio-class submarines, the Center on
Budget and Policy Priorities (CBPP) reported Monday
that up to a million people will lose food stamp
benefits in 2016.
Twenty-three states are expected this year to lift a
moratorium on one of the harshest austerity measures
imposed by the Clinton administration’s 1996
“welfare reform” program, which caps the amount of
time many people are eligible for food stamps at
three months. The time limits were halted during the
recession, but under the pretense that there is “no
money,” to pay for food stamps, states all over the
country are re-imposing the time limits.
“The loss
of this food assistance, which averages
approximately $150 to $170 per person per month for
this group, will cause serious hardship among many,”
reported the organization. The CBPP notes, “USDA
data show that the individuals likely to be cut off
by the three-month limit have average monthly income
of approximately 17 percent of the poverty line, and
they typically qualify for no other income support.”
In
announcing the food stamp cuts, Bill Clinton pledged
to “spend the taxpayers’ money wisely and with
discipline, that we can spend more money on the
future.” If he had been telling the truth, he would
have declared that he was proposing the cuts so that
the Navy could “Buy more ships.”
After all,
the money has to come from somewhere. And it’s
easiest to take from those who are the least capable
of defending themselves. In addition to the poor
people who depend on food stamps to survive, working
class children have been targeted.
The same
day that the White House gave the go-ahead for the
design of the new submarines, the CBPP released a
report showing that funding for schools has been
slashed in most states since 2008, and in 15 states
by more than 10 percent. Arizona has cut education
spending by 23.3 percent, Alabama by 21.4 percent,
Idaho by 16.9 percent, and Georgia by 16.5 percent.
States
have slashed education spending since 2008
While there
is, of course, no money for children and the poor,
defense contractors are licking their chops over the
expected uptick in global military spending
resulting from the wars flaring out of control in
the Middle East and the growing standoff in Eastern
Europe and the Pacific.
Defense
industry analyst Deloitte gleefully declared earlier
this month that military spending is “poised for a
rebound” as a result of “heightened tensions” around
the world.
It notes,
“2015 was a pivotal year that saw heightened
tensions between China, its neighbors and the US
over ‘island building’ in the South and East China
Seas, and the related claims of sovereign ocean
territory rights by China. In addition, Russia and
the Ukraine are at odds related to Russia’s takeover
of Crimea and their military actions in Eastern
Ukraine,” while “The recent tragic bombings in
Paris, Beirut, Mali, the Sinai Peninsula, and other
places have emboldened nations to join in the fight
against terrorism.”
The US
spends more on its military than the next seven
countries combined
The report
notes that “improved profitability” will result from
“renewed interest from buyers” in acquiring “armored
ground vehicles, ground attack munitions, light air
support aircraft” and “maritime patrol ships and
aircraft,” as “the military operations tempo is
likely to increase and more missions are executed.”
The global
uptick in military spending coincides with a major
new shopping spree by the United States, which
spends as much money on its military as the next
seven countries—China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, France,
the UK, India and Germany—combined. The US expends
$609.9 billion out of the $1.7 trillion spent
worldwide by all countries each year on war.
But this
figure is slated to surge as “Many large, mainly US
[Department of Defense] programs representing
billions of US dollars, are likely to start soon,
enter the engineering manufacturing design phase,
and reach low-rate or full-scale production over the
next few years. These programs include Ohio Class
Submarine replacement, F-35 fighter jet, KC-46A
aerial refueling tanker, and Long Range Strike
Bomber.”
Just one of
these programs, the F-35 “Lightning II,” plagued
with delays and cost-overruns, will cost $1.45
trillion over its lifecycle, more than twice the
amount that state, federal, and local governments
spend educating 50 million children each year.
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