( – promoted by buhdydharma )
The low-key announcements of several military retrenchment measures suggest to me that the US plutocracy is sufficiently frightened by the negative economic diagnosis to abandon its recreational drug of choice: military spending. Here are the clues:
1. Today brought news of the abandonment of a costly “missile shield” to be deployed in Europe. Not only does this remove an irritant in diplomatic relations with Russia and Europe, but it portends big cutbacks in the development and deployment budgets for all Star Wars missile defense programs.
2. America has suddenly developed a lively interest in free and fair elections in Afghanistan. This is consistent with the need to de-legitimize our puppet government in order to prepare for exiting this costly and futile “war.”
3. Iraq withdrawal plans appear to be picking up speed, with no signs that an upsurge of violence in Iraq will lead to second thoughts.
4. A few bloated defense procurement programs have actually been cancelled, including F22 production and an alternate engine for the F35.
The plutocrats are very afraid that they will not be able to make the bellicose American public go cold turkey when huge defense cuts come. But defense is the only place left to cut, and they know that a hard economic rain is going to fall when the current Fed cash-for-everything bubble pops.
The British and Soviet empires did not give up their military toys until their economies collapsed. We are following a similar course. We should have done so much sooner.
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abandoned – it’s been re-tasked — to create more instability vis a vis Iran.
Pentagon Study Proposes Overhaul of Defense Base Act to Cover Care for Injured Contractors
September 15, 2009
Although, I suppose the Pentagon could just as well decide that they’d save even more money by simply not providing any medical care at all to civilians, an idea which would seem to be more in line with current thinking in Washington.
This is a great essay, but I just don’t see it in the political or even the public zeitgeist that military budget cuts are anywhere on the horizon.
Whenever the talk is of defecits, government spending, the collapsing dollar, etc., nobody EVER, with the exception of a few Austrian-school economists who aren’t even from this country, seems to even consider the massive billions that we spend on war toys and imperialism.
But I sure hope somebody figures it out.
My fear is that America’s military won’t go down without a big nasty fight.
It is hard to imagine that the military-industrial complex will have to pare down. But we can’t look at this in isolation. It seems to me that the most interesting struggle in the middle part of this decade has been between the international financiers and the American militarists. War and instability are bad for the international economy–some war is good but the sort of nonsense the American military had been up to threatened to sour the international markets–and I think it did. Besides, the U.S. military did very poorly in Iraq and Afghanistan (bribing Sunni leaders with American and Saudi money is not a military strategy). The financial community must find new enforcers that can do the job efficiently. I think they have found it in the rapidly expanding netherworld of private armies, mercenaries and the black ops/organized crime. The only reason the U.S. military has for being is that they provide jobs for people–they have a poor record of fighting.
The oligarchy is now international not national so they don’t care so much about American hegemony and American jobs and prosperity. I suspect we in this country are about to experience increasing privations if we are lucky and social chaos if we are not. But this won’t seriously effect the oligarchy unless it happens too suddenly.
Also, the “missle shield” was always aimed at Russia not Iran. Part of the reason for this change is that it looks like this administration wants to stop trying to confront the Russian oligarchy and live with them instead.