U.S. Takes Gold in Arms Olympics
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Frida Berrigan
by Tom Engelhardt and
Frida Berrigan
DIGG THIS
Hey, aren't
we the most exceptional nation in history? George Bush and his pals
thought so and they were in a great American tradition of
exceptionalism. Of course, they were imagining us as the most exceptional
empire in history (or maybe at the end of it), the ultimate
New Rome. Anyway, explain this to me: Among all the exceptional
things we claim to do, how come we never take credit for what may
be the most exceptional of all, our success of successes, the thing
that makes us uniquely ourselves on this war-ridden planet
peddling more arms to Earthlings than anyone else in the neighborhood?
Why do we hide this rare talent under a bushel? In the interest
of shining a proud light on an under-rated national skill, I asked
Frida Berrigan to return the United States to its rightful place
in the Pantheon of arms-dealing nations. ~ Tom
We're
# 1!: A Nation of Firsts Arms the World
By Frida
Berrigan
They don't
call us the sole superpower for nothing. Paul Wolfowitz might be
looking for a new job right now, but the term he used to describe
the pervasiveness of U.S. might back when he was a mere deputy secretary
of defense hyperpower still fits the bill.
Face it, the
United States is a proud nation of firsts. Among them:
First in
Oil Consumption:
The
United States burns up 20.7
million barrels per day, the equivalent of the oil consumption
of China, Japan, Germany, Russia, and India combined.
First in
Carbon Dioxide Emissions:
Each
year, world polluters pump 24,126,416,000 metric tons of carbon
dioxide (CO2) into the environment. The United
States and its territories are responsible for 5.8 billion metric
tons of this, more than China (3.3 billion), Russia (1.4 billion)
and India (1.2 billion) combined.
First in
External Debt:
The
United States owes $10.040 trillion, nearly
a quarter of the global debt total of $44 trillion.
First in
Military Expenditures:
The
White House has requested $481 billion for the Department of Defense
for 2008, but this huge figure does not come close to representing
total U.S. military expenditures projected for the coming year.
To get a sense of the resources allocated to the military, the costs
of the global war on terrorism, of the building, refurbishing, or
maintaining of the U.S. nuclear arsenal, and other expenses also
need to be factored in. Military analyst Winslow Wheeler did
the math recently: "Add $142 billion to cover the anticipated
costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; add $17 billion requested
for nuclear weapons costs in the Department of Energy; add another
$5 billion for miscellaneous defense costs in other agencies…. and
you get a grand total of $647 billion for 2008."
Taking another
approach to the use of U.S. resources, Columbia University economist
Joseph Stiglitz and Harvard Business School lecturer Linda Bilmes,
added
to known costs of the war in Iraq invisible costs like its impact
on global oil prices as well as the long-term cost of health care
for wounded veterans and came up with a price tag of between 1
trillion and $2.2 trillion.
If we turned
what the United States will spend on the military in 2008 into
small bills, we could give each one of the world's more than 1
billion teenagers and young adults an Xbox 360 with wireless controller
(power supply in remote rural areas not included) and two video
games to play: maybe Gears of
War and Command
and Conquer would be appropriate. But if we're committed to
fighting
obesity, maybe Dance Dance Revolution would be a better
bet. The United States alone spends what the rest of the world
combined devotes to military expenditures.
First in
Weapons Sales:
Since
2001, U.S. global military sales have normally totaled between $10
and $13 billion. That's a lot of weapons, but in fiscal year 2006,
the Pentagon broke its own recent record, inking arms sales agreements
worth $21 billion. It almost goes without saying that this is significantly
more than any other nation in the world.
In this gold-medal
tally of firsts, there can be no question that things that go bang
in the night are our proudest products. No one makes more of them
or sells them more effectively than we do. When it comes to the
sorts of firsts that once went with a classic civilian manufacturing
base, however, gold medals are in short supply. To take an example:
Not First
in Automobiles:
Once,
Chrysler, General Motors, and Ford ruled the domestic and global
roost, setting the standard for the automotive industry. Not any
more. In 2006, the U.S. imported almost
$150 billion more in vehicles and auto parts than it sent abroad.
Automotive analyst Joe Barker told the Boston
Globe, "it's a very tough environment" for the so-called
Detroit Three. "In times of softening demand, consumers typically
will look to brands that they trust and rely on. Consumers trust
and rely on Japanese brands."
Not Even
First in Bulk Goods:
The
Department
of Commerce recently announced total March exports of $126.2
billion and total imports of $190.1 billion, resulting in a goods
and services deficit of $63.9 billion. This is a $6 billion increase
over February.
But why be
gloomy? Stick with arms sales and it's dawn in America every day
of the year. Sometimes, the weapons industry pretends that it's
like any other trade especially when it's pushing our congressional
representatives (as it always does) for fewer restrictions and regulations.
But don't be fooled. Arms aren't automobiles or refrigerators. They're
sui generis; they are the way the USA can always be number
one and everyone wants them. The odds that, in your lifetime,
there will ever be a $128 billion trade deficit in weapons are essentially
nil.
Arms are our
real gold-medal event.
First in
Sales of Surface-to-Air Missiles:
Between
2001 and 2005, the United States delivered 2,099 surface-to-air
missiles like the "Sparrow" and the "AMRAAM" to nations in the developing
world, 20% more than Russia, the next largest supplier.
First in
Sales of Military Ships:
During
that same period, the U.S. sent 10 "major surface combatants" like
aircraft carriers and destroyers to developing nations. Collectively,
the four major European weapons producers shipped thirteen. (And
we were first in the anti-ship missiles that go along with such
ships, with nearly double (338) the exports of the next largest
supplier Russia (180).
First in
Military Training:
A
thoughtful empire knows that it is not enough to send weapons; you
have to teach people how to use them. The Pentagon plans on training
the militaries of 138 nations in 2008 at a cost of nearly $90 million.
No other nation comes close.
First in
Private Military Personnel:
According
to bestselling author Jeremy
Scahill, there are at least 126,000 private military personnel
deployed alongside uniformed military personnel in Iraq alone. Of
the more than sixty major companies that supply such personnel worldwide,
more than 40 are U.S.-based.
Rest assured,
governments around the world, often at each others' throats, will
want U.S. weapons long after their people have turned up their noses
at a range of once dominant American consumer goods.
Just a few
days ago, for instance, the "trade" publication Defense News
reported that Turkey and the United States signed a $1.78 billion
deal for Lockheed Martin's F-16 fighter planes. As it happens, these
planes are already ubiquitous Israel flies them, so does
the United Arab Emirates, Poland, South Korea, Venezuela,
Oman and Portugal, not to speak about most other modern air forces.
In many ways, F-16 is not just a high-tech fighter jet, it's also
a symbol of U.S. backing and friendship. Buying our weaponry is
one of the few ways you can actually join the American imperial
project!
In order to
remain number one in the competitive jet field, Lockheed Martin,
for example, does far more than just sell airplanes. TAI
Turkey's aerospace corporation will receive a boost with
this sale, because Lockheed Martin is handing over responsibility
for parts of production, assembly, and testing to Turkish workers.
The Turkish Air Force already has 215 F-16 fighter planes and plans
to buy 100 of Lockheed Martin's new F-35 Joint Strike Fighter as
well, in a deal estimated at $10.7 billion over the next 15 years.
$10.7 billion
on fighter planes for a country that ranks 94th on the United Nations'
Human Development Index, below Lebanon, Colombia, and Grenada, and
far below all the European nations that Ankara is courting as it
seeks to join the European Union now that's a real American
sales job for you!
Here's the
strange thing, though: This genuine, gold-medal manufacturing-and-sales
job on weapons simply never gets the attention it deserves. As a
result, most Americans have no idea how proud they should be of
our weapons manufacturers and the Pentagon essentially our
global sales force that makes sure our weapons travel the
planet and regularly demonstrates their value in small wars from
Latin America to Central Asia.
Of course,
there's tons of data on the weapons trade, but who knows about any
of it? I'm typical here. I help produce one of a dozen or so sober
annual (or semi-annual) reports quantifying the business of war-making.
In my case: the Arms Trade Resource Center report, U.S.
Weapons at War: Fueling Conflict or Promoting Freedom? These
reports get desultory, obligatory press attention but only
once in a blue moon do they get the sort of full-court-press treatment
that befits our number-one product line.
Dense collections
of facts, percentages, and comparisons don't seem to fit particularly
well into the usual patchwork of front-page stories. And yet the
mainstream press is a glory ride, compared to the TV News, which
hardly acknowledges most of the time that the weapons business even
exists.
In any case,
that inside-the-fold, fact-heavy, wonky news story on the arms trade,
however useful, can't possibly convey the gold-medal feel of a business
that has always preferred the shadows to the sun. No reader checking
out such a piece is going to feel much except maybe overwhelmed
by facts. The connection between the factory that makes a weapons
system and the community where that weapon "does its duty" is invariably
missing-in-action, as are the relationships among the companies
making the weapons and the generals (on-duty and retired) and politicians
making the deals, or raking in their own cut of the profits for
themselves and/or their constituencies. In other words, our most
successful (and most deadly) export remains our most invisible one.
Maybe the
only way to break through this paralysis of analysis would be to
stop talking about weapons exports as a trade at all. Maybe we shouldn't
be using economic language to describe it. Yes, the weapons industry
has associations, lobby groups, and trade shows. They have the same
tri-fold exhibits, scale models, and picked-over buffets as any
other industry; still, maybe we have to stop thinking about the
export of fighter planes and precision-guided missiles as if they
were so many widgets and start thinking about them in another language
entirely the language of drugs.
After all,
what does a drug dealer do? He creates a need and then fills it.
He encourages an appetite or (even more lucratively) an addiction
and then feeds it.
Arms dealers
do the same thing. They suggest to foreign officials that their
military just might need a slight upgrade. After all, they'll point
out, haven't you noticed that your neighbor just upgraded in jets,
submarines, and tanks? And didn't you guys fight a war a few years
back? Doesn't that make you feel insecure? And why feel insecure
for another moment when, for just a few billion bucks, we'll get
you suited up with the latest model military… even better than what
we sold them or you the last time around.
Why does Turkey,
which already has 215 fighter planes, need 100 extras in an even
higher-tech version? It doesn't… but Lockheed Martin, working the
Pentagon, made them think they did.
We don't need
stronger arms control laws, we need a global sobriety coach
and some kind of 12-step program for the dealer-nation as well.
May
22, 2007
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Frida Berrigan is a Senior Research Associate at the
World Policy Institute's
Arms Trade Resource Center.
Copyright
© 2007 Frida Berrigan
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