As the editor
of Chalmers Johnson's Blowback Trilogy for the
American Empire Project, I was struck by an oddity when the
second volume, The
Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic,
was published in 2004 to splendid reviews in this country. Johnson's
focus in the book its heart and soul, you might say
was what he called our "empire
of bases," the over
700 military bases, giant to micro, that the Pentagon then
listed as ours. The book vividly laid out the Pentagon's global
basing structure, its "footprint" (to use the term the Defense
Department favors), in startling detail.
It was a
way of getting at the nature of imperial power for a country that
largely avoided colonies, but nonetheless managed to garrison
the globe. As a topic, all those bases would have seemed unavoidable
in any serious review, no less one praising the book. Yet, somehow,
review after review managed not to mention, no less substantively
discuss, this crucial aspect of Johnson's thesis. Only recently,
all these years later, has a mainstream review appeared in this
country that focused on his work on those bases. Jonathan Freedland,
reviewing the third volume in Johnson's trilogy, Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic, in the New
York Review of Books, took up the subject eloquently
and (wouldn't you know it?), he isn't an American. He works for
the British Guardian.
Isn't it
strange that we Americans can garrison the planet and yet, in
this country, bases are only a topic of discussion when some local
U.S. community suddenly hears that it might lose its special base
and an uproar ensues. Typically, we have made it through years
of war since 2001, during which untold billions of dollars have
gone into constructing massive bases in Iraq and Afghanistan,
and yet these bases (as well as the planning behind them) have,
until recently, gone almost
totally unmentioned in all the argument, debate, and uproar
over what to do about Iraq.
In reality
explain it as you will Americans have little grasp
of the enormity of the Pentagon, despite real military budgets
that, by some calculations, exceed three-quarters
of a trillion dollars yearly. (And don't forget that, since
2002, we've been piling on with a second Defense Department, the
hapless
bureaucratic morass that goes by the name of the Department
of Homeland Security.) Nick Turse, Tomdispatch associate editor
whose book, The Complex about all the newest twists
on the old Military-Industrial you-know-what will be out
in the spring of 2008, quite literally sizes the Pentagon up for
us. ~ Tom
Planet
Pentagon: How the Pentagon Came to Own the Earth, Seas, and Skies
By Nick
Turse
Recently,
the Wall Street Journal reported
on a proposal, championed by Defense Secretary Robert Gates, to
reduce the number of U.S. troops in Iraq in exchange for bipartisan
Congressional support for the long-term (read: more or less permanent)
garrisoning of that country. The troops are to be tucked away
on "large bases far from Iraq's major cities." This plan sounded
suspiciously similar to one revealed
by Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt in the New York Times
on April 19, 2003, just as U.S. troops were preparing to enter
Baghdad. Headlined "Pentagon Expects Long-Term Access to Four
Key Bases in Iraq," it laid out a U.S. plan for:
a
long-term military relationship with the emerging government of
Iraq, one that would grant the Pentagon access to…. perhaps four
bases in Iraq that could be used in the future: one at the international
airport just outside Baghdad; another at Tallil, near Nasiriya
in the south; the third at an isolated airstrip called H-1 in
the western desert, along the old oil pipeline that runs to Jordan;
and the last at the Bashur air field in the Kurdish north.
Shortly
thereafter, then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, denied any
such plans: "I have never, that I can recall, heard the subject
of a permanent base in Iraq discussed in any meeting…" – and,
while the bases were being built, the story largely disappeared
from the mainstream media.
Even with
the multi-square mile, multi-billion dollar, state-of-the-art
Balad
Air Base and Camp
Victory thrown in, however, the bases in Gates' new plan will
be but a drop in the bucket for an organization that may well
be the world's largest landlord. For many years, the U.S. military
has been gobbling up large swaths of the planet and huge amounts
of just about everything on (or in) it. So, with the latest Pentagon
Iraq plans in mind, take a quick spin with me around this Pentagon
planet of ours.
Garrisoning
the Globe
In 2003,
Forbes magazine revealed that media mogul Ted Turner was
America's top land baron with a total of 1.8 million acres
across the U.S. The nation's ten largest landowners, Forbes reported,
"own 10.6 million acres, or one out of every 217 acres in the
country." Impressive as this total was, the Pentagon puts Turner
and the entire pack of mega-landlords to shame with over 29 million
acres in U.S. landholdings. Abroad, the Pentagon's "footprint"
is also that of a giant. For example, the Department of Defense
controls 20% of the Japanese island of Okinawa and, according
to Stars and Stripes, "owns about 25 percent of Guam."
Mere land ownership, however, is just the tip of the iceberg.
In his 2004
book, The
Sorrows of Empire, Chalmers Johnson opened the world's
eyes to the size of the Pentagon's global footprint, noting that
the Department of Defense (DoD) was deploying nearly 255,000 military
personnel at 725 bases in 38 countries. Since then, the total
number of overseas bases has increased to at least 766 and, according
to a report by the Congressional Research Service, may actually
be as high as 850. Still, even these numbers don't begin to capture
the global sprawl of the organization that unabashedly refers
to itself as "one of the world's largest ‘landlords.'"
The DoD's
"real property portfolio," according to 2006 figures, consists
of a total of 3,731 sites. Over 20% of these sites are located
on more than 711,000 acres outside of the U.S. and its territories.
Yet even these numbers turn out to be a drastic undercount. For
example, while a 2005 Pentagon report listed U.S. military sites
from Antigua and Hong Kong to Kenya and Peru, some countries with
significant numbers of U.S. bases go entirely unmentioned
Afghanistan and Iraq, for example.
In Iraq,
alone, in mid-2005, U.S. forces were deployed at some 106
bases, from the massive Camp Victory, headquarters of the
U.S. high command, to small 500-troop outposts in the country's
hinterlands. None of them made the Pentagon's list. Nor was there
any mention of bases in Jordan on that list or in the 20012005
reports either. Yet that nation, as military analyst William Arkin
has pointed out, allowed the garrisoning of 5,000 U.S. troops
at various bases around the country during the build-up to the
war in Iraq. In addition, some 76 nations have given the U.S.
military access to airports and airfields in addition to
who knows where else that the Pentagon forgot to acknowledge or
considers inappropriate for inclusion in its list.
Even without
Jordan, Iraq, Afghanistan, and the more than 20 other nations
that, Arkin noted in early 2004, were "secretly or quietly providing
bases and facilities," the available statistics do offer a window
into a bloated organization bent on setting up franchises across
the globe. According to 2005 documents, the Pentagon acknowledges
39 nations with at least one U.S. base, stations personnel in
over 140 countries around the world, and boasts a physical plant
of at least 571,900 facilities, though some Pentagon figures show
587,000 "buildings and structures." Of these, 466,599 are located
in the United States or its territories. In fact, the Department
of Defense owns or leases more than 75% of all federal buildings
in the U.S.
According
to 2006 figures, the Army controls the lion's share of DoD land
(52%), with the Air Force coming in second (33%), the Marine Corps
(8%) and the Navy (7 %) bringing up the rear. The Army is also
tops in total number of sites (1,742) and total number of installations
(1,659). But when it comes to "large installations," those whose
value tops $1,584 billion, the Army is trumped by the Air Force,
which boasts 43 mega-bases compared to the Army's 39. The Navy
and Marines possess only 29 and 10, respectively. What
the Navy lacks in big bases of its own, however, it more than
makes up for in borrowed foreign naval bases and ports
some 251 across the globe.
Diversification
Land and
large installations, however, are not all that the Defense Department
owns. Until relatively recently, the U.S. Navy operated its own
dairy, complete with a herd of Holsteins. Even though it did get
rid of those cows in 1998, it kept the 865-acre farm tract in
Gambrills, Maryland, and now leases it to Horizon Organic Dairy.
While it
doesn't have a dairy, the Army still operates stables such
as the John C. McKinney Memorial Stables where many of the 44
horses from its ceremonial Caisson Platoon live. It also has a
big farm (the Large Animal Research Facility). In fact, the Pentagon
owns hundreds of thousands of animals from rats to dogs
to monkeys. In addition to an unknown number of animals used for
unexplained "other purposes," in 2001 alone, the DoD utilized
330,149 creatures for various types of experimentation.
Then, there's
the equipment the DoD owns, loads of it. For instance, it is the
unlikely owner of "over 2,050 railcars, know[n] as the Defense
Freight Rail Interchange Fleet." The DoD also reportedly ships
100,000 sea containers each year and spends $800 million annually
on domestic cargo, primarily truck and rail shipments. And when
it comes to trucks, the Army, alone, has a fleet of 12,700 Heavy
Expanded Mobility Tactical Trucks (huge, eight-wheeled vehicles
used to supply ammunition, petroleum, oils, and lubricants to
other combat vehicles and weapons systems in the field) and 120,000
Humvees. All told, according to a 2006 Pentagon report, the DoD
had a total of at least "280 ships, 14,000 aircraft, 900 strategic
missiles, and 330,000 ground combat and tactical vehicles."
The Defense
Logistics Agency (DLA), the DoD's largest combat support agency
(with operations in 48 of the 50 states and 28 foreign countries)
boasts: "If America's forces eat it, wear it, maintain equipment
with it, or burn it as fuel…. DLA probably provides it." In fact,
the DLA claims that it "manages" some 5.2 million items and maintains
an inventory, in its Defense Distribution Depots (which stretch
from Italy and Japan to Korea and Kuwait), valued at $94.1 billion.
The DLA
runs the Defense National Stockpile Center (DNSC) which stores
42 "strategic and critical materials" from zinc, lead,
cobalt, chromium, and mercury (more than 9.7 million pounds of
it in 2005) to precious metals such as platinum, palladium, and
even industrial diamonds at 20 locations across the U.S.
With a stockpile valued at over $1.5 billion and $5.7 billion
in sales of excess commodities since 1993, the DNSC claims that
there is "no private sector company in the world that sells this
wide range of commodities and materials."
All told,
the Department of Defense owns up to having "[o]ver $1 trillion
in assets [and] $1.6 trillion in liabilities." This is, no doubt,
a gross underestimate given the DoD's historic penchant for flawed
book-keeping and the fact that, according to a study by its own
inspector general, it cannot even account for at least $1 trillion
dollars in money spent or perhaps, according to former
Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, as much as $2.3 trillion. Cooking
the books and stashing cash is fitting enough for an American
organization, in the age of Enron, that thinks of itself not just
as a government agency but, in its own words,
as "America's oldest company, largest company, busiest company
and most successful company." In fact, on its website, the DoD
makes the point that it easily bests Wal-Mart, Exxon-Mobil, and
General Motors in terms of budget and staff.
It's
Got the Whole World in Its Hands
In addition
to assembling a dizzying array of assets, from tungsten to tubas
in 2005 alone, it spent more than $6 million on sheet music,
musical instruments, and accessories the Pentagon owns
a great deal of housing: 300,000 units worldwide. By its own admission,
it is also a slumlord par excellence with an inventory
of "180,000 inadequate family housing units." According to the
Office of the Deputy Undersecretary of Defense (Installations
& Environment):
Approximately
33 percent of all [military] families live on-base, in housing
that is often dilapidated, too small, lacking in modern facilities
almost 49 percent (or 83,000 units) are substandard.
Meanwhile,
the Department of Defense's own home, the Pentagon, bests the
Sultan of Brunei's Istana Nurul Iman palace, the largest private
residence in the world 3,705,793 to 2,152,782 square feet
of occupiable space. The DoD likes to boast that the Pentagon
is "virtually a city in itself" with 30 miles of access
highways, 200 acres of lawn space. It includes a five-acre center
courtyard, 17.5 miles of corridors, 16 parking lots (with an estimated
8,770 parking spaces), seven snack bars, two cafeterias, one dining
room, a post office, "credit union, travel agency, dental offices,
ticket offices, blood donor center, housing referral office, and
30 other retail shops and services," a chapel, a heliport, and
numerous libraries. Moreover, says the DoD, the Pentagon consumed
a huge portion of its natural environment, its concrete reportedly
contains "680,000 tons of sand and gravel from the nearby Potomac
River."
In value,
the Pentagon's other properties are almost as impressive. The
combined worth of the world's two most expensive homes, the $138
million 103-room "Updown
Court" in Windlesham, Surrey in the United Kingdom and Saudi
Prince Bandar bin Sultan's $135 million Aspen ski lodge don't
even come close to the price tag on Ascension Auxiliary Airfield,
located on a small island off the coast of St. Helena (the place
of Napoleon Bonaparte's exile and death). It has an estimated
replacement value of over $337 million. Other high-priced facilities
include Camp Ederle in Italy at $544 million; Incirlik Air Base
in Turkey at almost $1.2 billion; and Thule Air Base in Greenland
at $2.8 billion; while the U.S. Naval Air Station in Keflavik,
Iceland is appraised at $3.4 billion and the various military
facilities in Guam are valued at more than $11 billion.
Still, to
begin to grasp the Pentagon's global immensity, it helps to look,
again, at its land holdings all 120,191 square kilometers
which are almost exactly the size of North Korea (120,538 square
kilometers). These holdings are larger than any of the following
nations: Liberia, Bulgaria, Guatemala, South Korea, Hungary, Portugal,
Jordan, Kuwait, Israel, Denmark, Georgia, or Austria. The 7,518
square kilometers of 20 micro-states the Vatican, Monaco,
Nauru, Tuvalu, San Marino, Liechtenstein, Saint Kitts and Nevis,
Maldives, Malta, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Barbados, Antigua
and Barbuda, Seychelles, Andorra, Bahrain, Saint Lucia, Singapore,
the Federated States of Micronesia, Kiribati and Tonga
combined pales in comparison to the 9,307 square kilometers
of just one military base, White Sands Missile Range.
Downsizing?
While it
has been setting up hundreds of bases across the globe to support
ongoing wars, the Pentagon has also been restructuring its forces
in an effort to reduce troop levels at old Cold War mega-bases
and close down less strategically useful sites. Does this mean
less Pentagon control in the world?
Don't bet
on it. In fact, the U.S. military is exploring long-term options
to dominate the planet as never before. Previously, the DoD has
only maintained a moving presence on the high seas. This may change.
The Pentagon is now considering and planning for
future "sea-basing." No longer just a ship, a fleet, or "prepositioned
material" stationed on the world's oceans, sea-bases will be "a
hybrid system-of-systems consisting of concepts of operations,
ships, forces, offensive and defensive weapons, aircraft, communications
and logistics." The notion of such bases is increasingly popular
within the military due to the fact that they "will help to assure
access to areas where U.S. military forces may be denied access
to support [land] facilities." After all, as a report by the Defense
Science Board pointed out, "[S]eabases are sovereign [and] not
subject to alliance vagaries." Imagine a future where the people
of countries at odds with U.S. policies suddenly find America's
"massive seaborne platforms" floating just outside their territorial
waters.
With a real-estate
portfolio that includes the earth and the sea, the sky would,
quite literally, be the limit for the DoD. According to Noah Shachtman,
editor of Wired's "Danger Room" blog, the "U.S. Air Force Transformation
Flight Plan" of 2004 outlined what "analysts call the most detailed
picture since the end of the Cold War of the Pentagon's efforts
to turn outer space into a battlefield…. the report makes U.S.
dominance of the heavens a top Pentagon priority in the new century."
As the U.S. military's outer-space policy statement puts it, "Freedom
of action in space is as important to the United States as air
power and sea power."
When
you're focused on effectively controlling a planet, the idea of
occupying Iraq, a country about the size of the state of California,
for the next decade or five, must seem like a small thing. In
practice, however, the global landlord on the Potomac has found
property values in Iraq steep indeed. As all now know, it has
been fought to a standstill there by modest-sized bands of guerillas
lacking air power, sea power, or high-tech spy satellites in outer
space. The Pentagon may be landlord to massive swaths of the globe,
but from Vietnam to Laos, Beruit to Somalia, U.S. forces have
also found themselves evicted by neighborhood residents from properties
they were prepared to consider their own. The question remains:
Will Iraq be added to the list of permanently occupied territories
and take on the look of long-garrisoned South Korea as Secretary
of Defense Gates and President Bush have urged or will
it be added to a growing list of places that have effectively
resisted paying the rent on Planet Pentagon?