Entrenched, Embedded, and Here to Stay
by
Tom
Engelhardt and Frida
Berrigan
by Tom Engelhardt
and Frida Berrigan
DIGG THIS
Here are words
to pin to the Bush years like a wilting corsage: "We don't know
what we paid for." That's a quote
from Mary Ugone, the Defense Department's deputy inspector general
for auditing, concerning massive Pentagon payments made during the
occupation and war in Iraq for which there is no existing (or grossly
inadequate) documentation. In fact, according
to the inspector general for the Defense Department, "the Pentagon
cannot account for almost $15 billion worth of goods and services
ranging from trucks, bottled water and mattresses to rocket-propelled
grenades and machine guns that were bought from contractors in the
Iraq reconstruction effort." An internal audit of $8 billion that
the Pentagon paid out to U.S. and Iraqi private contractors found
that "nearly every transaction failed to comply with federal laws
or regulations aimed at preventing fraud, in some cases lacking
even basic invoices explaining how the money was spent."
This is, admittedly,
chump change for the Pentagon in the age of Bush. And even when
"reform" is attempted, the medicine is often worse than the disease.
Congressional critics and others have, for instance, accused the
Houston-based private contractor KBR, formerly a division of Halliburton,
of "wasteful spending and mismanagement and of exploiting its political
ties to Vice President Dick Cheney" in fulfilling enormous contracts
to support U.S. troops in Iraq. Now, the Pentagon is planning to
make amends by dividing the latest contract for food, shelter, and
basic services in Iraq between KBR and two other large contractors,
Fluor Corporation and DynCorp International. According to the
New York Times, "[T]he new three-company deal could actually
result in higher costs for American taxpayers and weak oversight
by the military."
These telling
details rose last week from the subterranean depths of a bloated
Bush-era Pentagon. As Frida Berrigan indicates in one of the more
important pieces Tomdispatch has posted, the Pentagon's massive
expansion on just about every front during George W. Bush's two
terms in office may be the greatest story never told of our time.
It might, in fact, be the most important American story of the new
century and, while you can find many of its disparate parts in your
daily papers, the mainstream media has yet to offer a significant
overview of the Pentagon in our time. This suggests a great deal
about what isn't being dealt with in our world. How, for instance,
is it possible to have a presidential election campaign that goes
on for years in which the size of the Pentagon never comes up as
an issue (unless the candidates are all plunking for an expansion
of American troop strength)?
As part of
its ongoing consideration of the legacy Bush is leaving the American
people, Tomdispatch today launches a three-part exploration of the
Pentagon's role in the Bush years. (The other two parts will appear
in the coming months.) The series is in the able hands of Frida
Berrigan and Bill
Hartung, military experts at the New
America Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative. It is not
to be missed. ~ Tom
The
Pentagon's Expansion Will Be Bush's Lasting Legacy
By Frida
Berrigan
A full-fledged
cottage industry is already focused on those who eagerly await
the end of the Bush administration, offering calendars, magnets,
and t-shirts
for sale as well as counters
and graphics to download onto blogs and websites. But when the
countdown ends and George W. Bush vacates the Oval Office, he
will leave a legacy to contend with. Certainly, he wills to his
successor a world marred by war and battered by deprivation, but
perhaps his most enduring legacy is now deeply embedded in Washington-area
politics a Pentagon metastasized almost beyond recognition.
The Pentagon's
massive bulk-up these last seven years will not be easily unbuilt,
no matter who dons the presidential mantle on January 19, 2009.
"The Pentagon" is now so much more than a five-sided building
across the Potomac from Washington or even the seat of the Department
of Defense. In many ways, it defies description or labeling.
Who, today,
even remembers the debate at the end of the Cold War about what
role U.S. military power should play in a "unipolar" world? Was
U.S. supremacy so well established, pundits were then asking,
that Washington could rely on softer economic and cultural power,
with military power no more than a backup (and a domestic "peace
dividend" thrown into the bargain)? Or was the U.S. to strap on
the six-guns of a global sheriff and police the world as the fountainhead
of "humanitarian interventions"? Or was it the moment to boldly
declare ourselves the world's sole superpower and wield a high-tech
military comparable to none, actively discouraging any other power
or power bloc from even considering future rivalry?
The attacks
of September 11, 2001 decisively ended that debate. The Bush administration
promptly declared total war on every front against peoples,
ideologies, and, above all, "terrorism" (a tactic of the weak).
That very September, administration officials proudly leaked the
information that they were ready to "target" up to 60
other nations and the terrorist movements within them.
The Pentagon's
"footprint" was to be firmly planted, military base by military
base, across the planet, with a special emphasis on its energy
heartlands. Top administration officials began preparing the Pentagon
to go anywhere and do anything, while rewriting, shredding, or
ignoring whatever laws, national or international, stood in the
way. In 2002, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld officially articulated
a new U.S. military posture that, in conception, was little short
of revolutionary. It was called in classic Pentagon shorthand
the 1-4-2-1
Defense Strategy (replacing the Clinton administration's already
none-too-modest plan to be prepared to fight two major wars
in the Middle East and Northeast Asia simultaneously).
Theoretically,
this strategy meant that the Pentagon was to prepare to defend
the United States, while building forces capable of deterring
aggression and coercion in four "critical regions" (Europe, Northeast
Asia, East Asia, and the Middle East). It would be able to defeat
aggression in two of these regions simultaneously and "win
decisively" in one of those conflicts "at a time and place of
our choosing." Hence 1-4-2-1.
And that
was just going to be the beginning. We had, by then, already entered
the new age of the Mega-Pentagon. Almost six years later, the
scale of that institution's expansion has yet to be fully grasped,
so let's look at just seven of the major ways in which the Pentagon
has experienced mission creep and leap dwarfing
other institutions of government in the process.
1. The
Budget-busting Pentagon: The Pentagon's core budget
already a staggering $300 billion when George W. Bush took the
presidency has almost doubled while he's been parked behind
the big desk in the Oval Office. For fiscal year 2009, the regular
Pentagon budget will total roughly $541
billion (including work on nuclear warheads and naval reactors
at the Department of Energy).
The Bush
administration has presided over one of the largest military buildups
in the history of the United States. And that's before we even
count "war spending." If the direct costs of the wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan, as well as the Global War on Terror, are factored
in, "defense" spending has essentially tripled.
As of February
2008, according to the Congressional Budget Office, lawmakers
have appropriated $752 billion for the Iraq war and occupation,
ongoing military operations in Afghanistan, and other activities
associated with the Global War on Terror. The Pentagon estimates
that it will need another $170 billion for fiscal 2009, which
means, at $922 billion, that direct war spending since 2001 would
be at the edge of the trillion-dollar mark.
As New
York Times columnist Bob
Herbert has pointed out, if a stack of bills roughly six inches
high is worth $1 million; then, a $1 billion stack would be as
tall as the Washington Monument, and a $1 trillion stack would
be 95 miles high. And note that none of these war-fighting funds
are even counted as part of the annual military budget, but are
raised from Congress in the form of "emergency
supplementals" a few times a year.
With the
war added to the Pentagon's core budget, the United States now
spends nearly as much on military matters as the rest
of the world combined. Military spending also throws all
other parts of the federal budget into shadow, representing 58
cents of every dollar spent by the federal government on "discretionary
programs" (those that Congress gets to vote up or down on an annual
basis).
The total
Pentagon budget represents more than our combined spending on
education, environmental protection, justice administration, veteran's
benefits, housing assistance, transportation, job training, agriculture,
energy, and economic development. No wonder, then, that, as it
collects ever more money, the Pentagon is taking on (or taking
over) ever more functions and roles.
2. The
Pentagon as Diplomat: The Bush administration has repeatedly
exhibited its disdain for discussion and compromise, treaties
and agreements, and an equally deep admiration for what can be
won by threat and force. No surprise, then, that the White House's
foreign policy agenda has increasingly been directed through the
military. With a military budget more than 30 times that of all
State Department operations and non-military foreign aid put together,
the Pentagon has marched into State's two traditional strongholds
diplomacy and development duplicating or replacing
much of its work, often by refocusing Washington's diplomacy around
military-to-military, rather than diplomat-to-diplomat, relations.
Since the
late eighteenth century, the U.S. ambassador in any country has
been considered the president's personal representative, responsible
for ensuring that foreign policy goals are met. As one
ambassador explained; "The rule is: if you're in country,
you work for the ambassador. If you don't work for the ambassador,
you don't get country clearance."
In the Bush
era, the Pentagon has overturned this model. According to a 2006
Congressional report by Senator Richard Lugar (R-IN), Embassies
as Command Posts in the Anti-Terror Campaign, civilian personnel
in many embassies now feel occupied by, outnumbered by, and subordinated
to military personnel. They see themselves as the second team
when it comes to decision-making. Even Defense Secretary Robert
Gates is aware of the problem, noting as he did last November
that there are "only about 6,600 professional Foreign Service
officers less than the manning for one aircraft carrier
strike group." But, typically, he added that, while the State
Department might need more resources, "Don't get me wrong, I'll
be asking for yet more money for Defense next year." Another ambassador
lamented that his foreign counterparts are "following the money"
and developing relationships with U.S. military personnel rather
than cultivating contacts with their State Department counterparts.
The Pentagon
invariably couches its bureaucratic imperialism in terms of "interagency
cooperation." For example, last year U.S.
Southern Command (Southcom) released Command Strategy 2016,
a document which identified poverty, crime, and corruption as
key "security" problems in Latin America. It suggested that Southcom,
a security command, should, in fact, be the "central actor in
addressing… regional problems" previously the concern of civilian
agencies. It then touted itself as the future focus of a "joint
interagency security command... in support of security, stability
and prosperity in the region."
As Southcom
head Admiral James Stavridis vividly put the matter, the command
now likes to see itself as "a big Velcro cube that these other
agencies can hook to so we can collectively do what needs to be
done in this region."
The Pentagon
has generally followed this pattern globally since 2001. But what
does "cooperation" mean when one entity dwarfs all others in personnel,
resources, and access to decision-makers, while increasingly controlling
the very definition of the "threats" to be dealt with.
3. The
Pentagon as Arms Dealer: In the Bush years, the Pentagon
has aggressively increased its role as the planet's foremost arms
dealer, pumping up its weapons sales everywhere it can
and so seeding the future with war and conflict.
By 2006
(the last year for which full data is available), the United States
alone accounted
for more than half the world's trade in arms with $14 billion
in sales. Noteworthy were a $5 billion deal for F-16s to Pakistan
and a $5.8 billion agreement to completely reequip Saudi Arabia's
internal security force. U.S. arms sales for 2006 came in at roughly
twice the level of any previous year of the Bush administration.
Number two
arms dealer, Russia, registered a comparatively paltry $5.8 billion
in deliveries, just over a third of the U.S. arms totals. Ally
Great Britain was third at $3.3 billion and those three
countries account for a whopping 85% of the weaponry sold that
year, more than 70% of which went to the developing world.
Great at
selling weapons, the Pentagon is slow to report its sales. Arms
sales notifications issued by the Pentagon's Defense Security
Cooperation Agency (DSCA) do, however, offer one crude way to
the take the Department of Defense's pulse; and, while not all
reported deals are finalized, that pulse is clearly racing. Through
May of 2008, DSCA had already
issued more than $9.1 billion in arms sales notifications
including smart bomb kits for Saudi Arabia, TOW missiles for Kuwait,
F-16 combat aircraft for Romania, and Chinook helicopters for
Canada.
To maintain
market advantage, the Pentagon never stops its high-pressure campaigns
to peddle weapons abroad. That's why, despite a broken shoulder,
Secretary of Defense Gates took to the skies in February, to push
weapons systems on countries like India and Indonesia, key growing
markets for Pentagon arms dealers.
4. The
Pentagon as Intelligence Analyst and Spy: In the area of "intelligence,"
the Pentagon's expansion the commandeering of information
and analysis roles has been swift, clumsy, and catastrophic.
Tracing
the Pentagon's take-over of intelligence is no easy task. For
one thing, there are dozens of Pentagon agencies and offices that
now collect and analyze information using everything from "humint"
(human intelligence) to wiretaps and satellites. The task is only
made tougher by the secrecy that surrounds U.S. intelligence operations
and the "black budgets" into which so much intelligence money
disappears.
But the
end results are clear enough. The Pentagon's takeover of intelligence
has meant fewer intelligence analysts who speak Arabic,
Farsi, or Pashto and more dog-and-pony shows like those four-star
generals and three-stripe admirals mouthing administration-approved
talking points on cable news and the Sunday morning talk shows.
Intelligence
budgets are secret, so what we know about them is not comprehensive
but the glimpses analysts have gotten suggest
that total intelligence spending was about $26 billion a decade
ago. After 9/11, Congress pumped a lot of new money into intelligence
so that by 2003, the total intelligence budget had already climbed
to more than $40 billion.
In 2004,
the 9/11
Commission highlighted the intelligence failures of the Central
Intelligence Agency and others in the alphabet soup of the U.S.
Intelligence Community charged with collecting and analyzing
information on threats to the country. Congress then passed an
intelligence "reform" bill, establishing the Office of the Director
of National Intelligence, designed to manage intelligence operations.
Thanks to stiff resistance from pro-military lawmakers, the National
Intelligence Directorate never assumed that role, however, and
the Pentagon kept control of three key collection agencies
the National Security Agency, the National Geospatial-Intelligence
Agency, and the National Reconnaissance Agency.
As a result,
according to Tim Shorrock,
investigative journalist and author of Spies
for Hire: The Secret World of Intelligence Outsourcing,
the Pentagon now controls more than 80% of U.S. intelligence spending,
which he estimated at about $60 billion in 2007. As Mel
Goodman, former CIA official and now an analyst at the Center
for International Policy, observed, "The Pentagon has been the big
bureaucratic winner in all of this."
It is such
a big winner that CIA Director Michael Hayden now controls only
the budget for the CIA itself about $4 or 5 billion a year
and no longer even gives the President his daily helping of intelligence.
The Pentagon's
intelligence shadow looms large well beyond the corridors of Washington's
bureaucracies. It stretches across the mountains of Afghanistan
as well. After the U.S. invaded that country in 2001, Defense
Secretary Rumsfeld recognized that, unless the Pentagon controlled
information-gathering and took the lead in carrying out covert
operations, it would remain dependent on and therefore
subordinate to the Central Intelligence Agency with its
grasp of "on-the-ground" intelligence.
In one of
his now infamous memos, labeled "snowflakes"
by a staff that watched them regularly flutter down from on high,
he asserted that, if the War on Terror was going to stretch far
into the future, he did not want to continue the Pentagon's "near
total dependence on the CIA." And so Rumsfeld set up a new, directly
competitive organization, the Pentagon's Strategic
Support Branch, which put the intelligence gathering components
of the U.S. Special Forces under one roof reporting directly to
him. (Many in the intelligence community saw the office as illegitimate,
but Rumsfeld was riding high and they were helpless to do anything.)
As Seymour
Hersh, who repeatedly broke stories in the New Yorker on
the Pentagon's misdeeds in the Global War on Terror, wrote in
January
2005, the Bush administration had already "consolidated control
over the military and intelligence communities' strategic analyses
and covert operations to a degree unmatched since the rise of
the post-Second World War II national-security state."
In the rush
to invade Iraq, the civilians running the Pentagon also fused
the administration's propaganda machine with military intelligence.
In 2002, Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith established the
Office
of Special Plans (OSP) in the Pentagon to provide "actionable
information" to White House policymakers. Using existing intelligence
reports "scrubbed" of qualifiers like "probably" or "may," or
sometimes simply fabricated
ones, the office was able to turn worst-case scenarios about
Saddam Hussein's supposed programs to develop weapons of mass
destruction into
fact, and then, through leaks, use the news media to validate
them.
Former CIA
Director Robert Gates, who took over the Pentagon when Donald Rumsfeld
resigned in November 2006, has been critical of the Pentagon's "dominance"
in intelligence and "the decline in the CIA's central role." He
has also signaled his intention to roll back the Pentagon's long
intelligence shadow; but, even if he is serious, he will have his
work cut out for him. In the meantime, the Pentagon continues to
churn out "intelligence" which is, politely put, suspect
from torture-induced
confessions of terrorism suspects to exposés of the Iranian
origins of sophisticated explosive devices found in Iraq.
5. The
Pentagon as Domestic Disaster Manager: When the deciders
in Washington start seeing the Pentagon as the world's problem
solver, strange things happen. In fact, in the Bush years, the
Pentagon has become the official first responder of last resort
in case of just about any disaster from tornadoes, hurricanes,
and floods to civil unrest, potential outbreaks of disease, or
possible biological or chemical attacks. In 2002, in a telltale
sign of Pentagon mission creep, President Bush established the
first domestic military command since the civil war, the U.S.
Northern Command (Northcom). Its mission: the "preparation for,
prevention of, deterrence of, preemption of, defense against,
and response to threats and aggression directed towards U.S. territory,
sovereignty, domestic population, and infrastructure; as well
as crisis management, consequence management, and other domestic
civil support."
If it sounds
like a tall order, it is.
In the last
six years, Northcom
has been remarkably unsuccessful at anything but expanding its
theoretical reach. The command was initially assigned 1,300 Defense
Department personnel, but has since grown into a force of more
than 15,000. Even criticism only seems to strengthen its domestic
role. For example, an April 2008 Government Accountability Office
report found that Northcom had failed to communicate effectively
with state and local leaders or National Guard units about its
newly developed disaster and terror response plans. The result?
Northcom says it will have its first brigade-sized unit of military
personnel trained to help local authorities respond to chemical,
biological, or nuclear incidents by this
fall. Mark your calendars.
More than
anything else, Northcom has provided the Pentagon with the opening
it needed to move forcefully into domestic disaster areas previously
handled by national, state and local civilian authorities.
For example,
Northcom's deputy director, Brigadier General Robert Felderman,
boasts that the command is now the United States's "global
synchronizer the global coordinator for pandemic
influenza across the combatant commands." Similarly, Northcom
is now hosting annual hurricane preparation conferences and assuring
anyone who will listen that it is "prepared to fully engage" in
future Katrina-like situations "in order to save lives, reduce
suffering and protect infrastructure."
Of course,
at present, the Pentagon is the part of the government gobbling
up the funds that might otherwise be spent shoring up America's
Depression-era public works, ensuring that the Pentagon will have
failure aplenty to respond to in the future.
The American
Society for Civil Engineers, for example, estimates that $1.6
trillion is badly needed to bring the nation's infrastructure
up to protectable snuff, or $320 billion a year for the next five
years. Assessing present water systems, roads, bridges, and dams
nationwide, the engineers gave the infrastructure a series of
C and D grades.
In the meantime,
the military is marching in. Katrina, for instance, made landfall
on August 29, 2005. President Bush ordered troops deployed to
New Orleans on September 2nd to coordinate the delivery of food
and water and to serve as a deterrent against looting and violence.
Less than a month later, President Bush asked Congress to shift
responsibility for major future disasters from state governments
and the Department of Homeland Security to the Pentagon.
The next
month, President Bush again offered the military as his solution
this time to global fears about outbreaks of the avian
flu virus. He suggested that, to enforce
a quarantine, "One option is the use of the military that's able
to plan and move."
Already
sinking under the weight of its expansion and two draining wars,
many in the military have been cool to such suggestions, as has
a Congress concerned about maintaining states' rights and civilian
control. Offering the military as the solution to domestic natural
disasters and flu outbreaks means giving other first responders
the budgetary short shrift. It is unlikely, however, that Northcom,
now riding the money train, will go quietly into oblivion in the
years to come.
6. The
Pentagon as Humanitarian Caregiver Abroad: The U.S. Agency
for International Development and the State Department have traditionally
been tasked with responding to disaster abroad; but, from Indonesia's
tsunami-ravaged shores to Myanmar after the recent cyclone, natural
catastrophe has become another presidential opportunity to "send
in the Marines" (so to speak). The Pentagon has increasingly taken
up humanitarian planning, gaining an ever larger share of U.S.
humanitarian missions abroad.
From Kenya
to Afghanistan,
from the Philippines to Peru, the U.S. military is also now regularly
the one building schools and dental clinics, repairing roads and
shoring up bridges, tending to sick children and doling out much
needed cash and food stuffs, all civilian responsibilities once
upon a time.
The Center
for Global Development finds that the Pentagon's share of "official
development assistance" think "winning hearts and minds"
or "nation-building" – has increased from 6% to 22% between 2002
and 2005. The Pentagon is fast taking
over development from both the NGO-community and civilian
agencies, slapping a smiley face on military operations in Iraq,
Afghanistan, and beyond.
Despite
the obvious limitations of turning a force trained to kill and
destroy into a cadre of caregivers, the Pentagon's mili-humanitarian
project got a big boost from the cash that was seized from Saddam
Hussein's secret coffers. Some of it was doled out to local American
commanders to be used to deal with immediate Iraqi needs and seal
deals in the months after Baghdad fell in April 2003. What was
initially an ad hoc program now has an official name
the Commander Emergency Response Program (CERP) and a line
in the Pentagon budget.
Before the
House Budget Committee last summer, Gordon England, the Deputy
Secretary of Defense, told members of Congress that the CERP was
a "particularly effective initiative," explaining that the program
provided "limited but immediately available funds" to military
commanders which they could spend "to make a concrete difference
in people's daily lives." This, he claimed, was now a "key part
of the broader counter insurgency approach." He added that it
served the purpose of "complementing security initiatives" and
that it was so successful many commanders consider it "the most
powerful weapon in their arsenal."
In fact,
the Pentagon doesn't do humanitarian work very well. In Afghanistan,
for instance, food-packets dropped by U.S. planes were the same
color as the cluster munitions also dropped by U.S. planes;
while schools and clinics built by U.S. forces often became targets
before they could even be put into use. In Iraq, money doled out
to the Pentagon's sectarian-group-of-the-week
for wells and generators turned out to be just as easily spent
on explosives and AK-47s.
7. The
Pentagon as Global Viceroy and Ruler of the Heavens: In the
Bush years, the Pentagon finished dividing the globe into military
"commands," which are functionally viceroyalties. True, even before
9/11, it was hard to imagine a place on the globe where the United
States military was not, but until recently, the continent of
Africa largely qualified.
Along with
the creation of Northcom, however, the establishment of the U.S.
Africa Command (Africom) in 2008 officially filled in the last
Pentagon empty spot on the map. A key military document, the 2006
National Security Strategy for the United States signaled the
move, asserting that "Africa holds growing geo-strategic importance
and is a high-priority of this administration." (Think: oil and
other key raw materials.)
In the meantime,
funding for Africa under the largest U.S. military aid program,
Foreign Military Financing, doubled from $10 to $20 million between
2000 and 2006, and the number of recipient nations grew from two
to 14. Military training funding increased by 35% in that same
period (rising from $8.1 million to $11 million). Now, the militaries
of 47 African nations receive U.S. training.
In Pentagon
planning terms, Africom
has unified the continent for the first time. (Only Egypt remains
under the aegis of the U.S. Central Command.) According to President
Bush, this should "enhance our efforts to bring peace and security
to the people of Africa and promote our common goals of development,
health, education, democracy, and economic growth in Africa."
Theresa Whelan,
assistant secretary of defense for African affairs, continues to
insist that Africom has been formed neither to facilitate the fighting
of wars ("engaging kinetically in Africa"), nor to divvy up the
continent's raw materials in the style of nineteenth-century colonialism.
"This is not," she says, "about a scramble for the continent." But
about one thing there can be no question: It is about increasing
the global reach of the Pentagon.
Meanwhile,
should the Earth not be enough, there are always the heavens to
control. In August 2006, building on earlier documents like the
1998 U.S.
Space Command's Vision for 2020 (which called for a policy
of "full spectrum dominance"), the Bush administration unveiled
its "national space policy." It advocated establishing, defending,
and enlarging U.S. control over space resources and argued for
"unhindered" rights in space unhindered, that is, by international
agreements preventing the weaponization of space. The document
also asserted that "freedom of action in space is as important
to the United States as air power and sea power."
As the document
put it, "In the new century, those who effectively utilize space
will enjoy added prosperity and security and will hold a substantial
advantage over those who do not." (The leaders of China, Russia,
and other major states undoubtedly heard the loud slap of a gauntlet
being thrown down.) At the moment, the Bush administration's rhetoric
and plans outstrip the resources being devoted to space weapons
technology, but in the recently announced budget, the President
allocated nearly a billion dollars to space-based weapons programs.
Of all the
frontiers of expansion, perhaps none is more striking than the
Pentagon's sorties into the future. Does the Department of Transportation
offer a Vision for 2030? Does the Environmental Protection Agency
develop plans for the next fifty years? Does the Department of
Health and Human Services have a team of power-point professionals
working up dynamic graphics for what services for the elderly
will look like in 2050?
These
agencies project budgets just around the corner of the next decade.
Only the Pentagon projects power and possibility decades into the
future, colonizing the imagination with scads of different scenarios
under which, each year, it will continue to control hundreds of
billions of taxpayer dollars.
Complex
2030, Vision 2020, UAV Roadmap 2030, the Army's Future Combat
Systems – the names, which seem unending, tell the tale.
As the clock
ticks down to November 4, 2008, a lot of people are investing hope
(as well as money and time) in the possibility of change at 1600
Pennsylvania Avenue. But when it comes to the Pentagon, don't count
too heavily on change, no matter who the new president may be. After
all, seven years, four months, and a scattering of days into the
Bush presidency, the Pentagon is deeply entrenched in Washington
and still aggressively expanding. It has developed a taste for unrivaled
power and unequaled access to the treasure of this country. It is
an institution that has escaped the checks and balances of the nation.
May
28, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com,
is the co-founder of the American
Empire Project. 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 blog is The
Notion. Frida Berrigan [send
her mail] is a Senior Program Associate at the
New America Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative. She is
a columnist for Foreign Policy in
Focus and a contributing editor at In These Times magazine.
She is the author of reports on the arms trade and human rights,
U.S. nuclear weapons policy, and the domestic politics of U.S. missile
defense and space weapons policies.
Copyright
© 2008 Frida Berrigan
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Engelhardt Archives
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