The
U.S. Military Needs to Defend the Country, Not
Undermine American Security
By Ivan
Eland
May 17,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Huffington
Post"
-
As
President Obama visits still-communist Vietnam,
a former American rival, in his “pivot to Asia”
to recruit more countries to shelter against a
rising China, the trip only serves to illustrate
the global American Empire’s overextension. At
the same time, he is opening missile defenses in
Europe, quadrupling U.S. military spending
there, and deploying more military forces near
Russia—all of which will have the effect of
continuing to provoke that already insecure
country. Also, Obama has failed to withdraw U.S.
ground forces from Afghanistan, inserted them
into Iraq and Syria to battle the terror group
ISIS, and continued his accelerated air wars
over Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Pakistan,
Somalia, Yemen, and Libya. Finally, the
president sent the top general in the Army to
Africa to showcase U.S. efforts to train 38
countries to battle terror groups that could
attack Europe, including affiliates of ISIS and
al Qaeda. These U.S. military forces may be
valiantly battling threats to the Empire, but
most of them pose very little threat to America.
In
fact, in many cases—especially vis-a-via
terrorists—U.S. military action may be making
the largely local problems worse. For example,
in Yemen, journalists have documented that the
number of fighters of the al Qaeda affiliate
there actually increased after U.S. forces, seen
as “foreign infidels,” started bombing. Also,
retaining non-Muslim U.S. and Western occupation
forces on Muslim soil in Afghanistan and Iraq
after initial invasions respectively led to a
resurgent Islamist Taliban and the creation of
al Qaeda in Iraq, which morphed into ISIS.
Furthermore, U.S. interventions in Iraq and
Afghanistan destabilized surrounding areas, such
as Syria and the nuclear-armed state of
Pakistan, respectively. Similarly, the U.S. and
Western overthrow of Libyan dictator Muammar
Gaddafi in Libya destabilized not only Libya
(allowing chaos to reign and an ISIS affiliate
to arise), but many of Libya’s weapons and
fighters migrated to Mali and other parts of
Africa. Hence contributing to the alleged need
to send the Army’s top general to coordinate
with 38 countries in battling Islamist terror
groups in Africa.
All of
these post-9/11 brushfire wars led that
general—Gen. Mark A. Milley—to make an
astounding statement: “Today, a major in the
Army knows nothing but fighting terrorists and
guerillas, because he came into the Army after
9/11. But as we get into the higher-end threats,
our skills have atrophied over 15 years.” Milley
continued that the U.S. Army has forgotten how
to fight more sophisticated enemies, such as
Russia or China. So instead of being capable of
deterring potentially larger threats to the
United States (even this requires some
imagination), the U.S. military has become
bogged down in never-ending, faraway brushfire
wars, which make the usually low probability
threat of anti-U.S. terrorism worse.
Even in
the case of Russia and China, rich U.S. European
and East Asian allies—with combined GDPs of at
least five times and about the same size as the
threat, respectively—should take over the first
line of defense, as presidential candidate
Donald Trump has implied. However, if these
allies can’t contain these regional threats, the
U.S. military should be configured and prepared
to be a backstop of last resort in case of any
emergency—a defense posture that worked in World
War II.
Reconfiguring U.S. forces to let regional
allies’ militaries fight guerrilla and
terrorists, as well as be the first line of
defense against major potentially hostile
powers, would allow the United States to form a
coherent strategy of being a “balancer-of-last
resort.” Such a more restrained policy could
save bucket loads of money and help pay off the
nation’s $19 trillion debt. That massive debt
has impaired robust U.S. economic growth for far
too long and threatens the long-term status of
the United States as a great power. Recently,
the British, French, and Russian Empires became
financially overextended and all collapsed. The
same could happen to the more informal American
Empire of permanent and entangling alliances and
overseas military bases—and the armed
interventions and huge amounts of military and
economic aid to foreign countries needed to
maintain it. In other words, as the American
Constitution stipulates, the U.S. military needs
to defend the country, not maintain an overseas
empire that causes global instability and
undermines American security.