The Looming Crisis at the Pentagon
by
Tom
Engelhardt
and Chalmers Johnson
by Tom Engelhardt
and Chalmers Johnson
Recently, reviewing
lobbying disclosure reports, the Washington Times discovered
"that 18 of the top 20 recipients of federal bailout money spent
a combined $12.2 million lobbying the White House, the Treasury
Department, Congress, and federal agencies during the last quarter
of 2008." Citibank alone, according to the New York Times,
fielded
"an army of Washington lobbyists," plunking down $1.77 million
in lobbying fees just in the fourth quarter of last year.
And it isn't
only sinking financial institutions begging for federal dollars
that have bolstered their Washington lobbying corps. So have the
biggest U.S. armaments companies "drastically," according
to reporter August
Cole of the Wall Street Journal. In 2008, he found, Northrop
Grumman almost doubled its lobbying budget to $20.6 million (from
$10.9 million the previous year); Boeing upped its budget from $10.6
million to $16.6 million in the same period; and Lockheed-Martin,
the company that received the most contracts from the Pentagon last
year, hiked its lobbying efforts by a whopping 54% in 2008.
If you want
to get a taste of what that means, then click here
to view an ad for that company's potentially embattled boondoggle,
the F-22, the most expensive jet fighter ever built. What you'll
discover is not just that it will "protect" 300 million people
that's you, if you live in the USA but that it will also
employ 95,000 of us. In other words, the ad's threatening message
implies, if the Obama administration cuts this program in bad times,
it will throw another 95,000 Americans out on the street. Now that's
effective lobbying for you, especially when you consider, as Chalmers
Johnson does below, that for any imaginable war the U.S. might fight
in the coming decades, the F-22 will be a thoroughly useless plane.
We don't usually
think of the Pentagon as a jobs-and-careers scam operation, a kind
of Mega-Madoff Ponzi scheme that goes BOOM!, though it is clearly
designed for the well-being of defense contractors, military officers,
and congressional representatives; nor do we usually consider the
"defense" budget as a giant make-work jobs racket, as arms experts
Bill Hartung and Christopher Preble recently
suggested, but it's never too late.
Chalmers Johnson,
author of the already-classic Blowback Trilogy, including
most recently Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic, makes vividly clear
just how little the Pentagon is organized to consider the actual
defense needs of the United States. In many ways, it remains a deadly
organization of boys with toys that now poses a distinct economic
danger to the rest of us. (Check out, as well, a TomDispatch audio
interview with Johnson on the Pentagon's economic death spiral by
clicking here). ~ Tom
How
Taxpayers Finance Fantasy Wars
By Chalmers
Johnson
Like much
of the rest of the world, Americans know that the U.S. automotive
industry is in the grips of what may be a fatal decline. Unless
it receives emergency financing and undergoes significant
reform, it is undoubtedly headed for the graveyard in which many
American industries are already buried, including those that made
televisions and other consumer electronics, many types of scientific
and medical equipment, machine tools, textiles, and much earth-moving
equipment and that's to name only the most obvious candidates.
They all lost their competitiveness to newly emerging economies
that were able to outpace them in innovative design, price, quality,
service, and fuel economy, among other things.
A similar,
if far less well known, crisis exists when it comes to the military-industrial
complex. That crisis has its roots in the corrupt and deceitful
practices that have long characterized the high command of the
Armed Forces, civilian executives of the armaments industries,
and Congressional opportunists and criminals looking for pork-barrel
projects, defense installations for their districts, or even bribes
for votes.
Given our
economic crisis, the estimated
trillion dollars we spend each year on the military and its
weaponry is simply unsustainable. Even if present fiscal constraints
no longer existed, we would still have misspent too much of our
tax revenues on too few, overly expensive, overly complex weapons
systems that leave us ill-prepared to defend the country in a
real military emergency. We face a double crisis at the Pentagon:
we can no longer afford the pretense of being the Earth's sole
superpower, and we cannot afford to perpetuate a system in which
the military-industrial complex makes its fortune off inferior,
poorly designed weapons.
Double
Crisis at the Pentagon
This self-destructive
system of bloated budgets and purchases of the wrong weapons has
persisted for so long thanks to the aura of invincibility surrounding
the Armed Forces and a mistaken belief that jobs in the arms industry
are as valuable to the economy as jobs in the civilian sector.
Recently,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen began
to advocate
nothing less than protecting the Pentagon budget by pegging defense
spending to a fixed percentage of gross domestic product (GDP,
the total value of goods and services produced by the economy).
This would, of course, mean simply throwing out serious strategic
analysis of what is actually needed for national defense. Mullen
wants, instead, to raise the annual defense budget in the worst
of times to at least 4% of GDP. Such a policy is clearly designed
to deceive the public about ludicrously wasteful spending on weapons
systems which has gone on for decades.
It is hard
to imagine any sector of the American economy more driven by ideology,
delusion, and propaganda than the armed services. Many people
believe that our military is the largest, best equipped, and most
invincible among the world's armed forces. None of these things
is true, but our military is, without a doubt, the most expensive
to maintain. Each year, we Americans account for nearly
half of all global military spending, an amount larger than
the next 45 nations together spend on their militaries annually.
Equally
striking, the military seems increasingly ill-adapted to the types
of wars that Pentagon strategists agree the United States is most
likely to fight in the future, and is, in fact, already fighting
in Afghanistan insurgencies led by non-state actors. While
the Department of Defense produces weaponry meant for such wars,
it is also squandering staggering levels of defense appropriations
on aircraft, ships, and futuristic weapons systems that fascinate
generals and admirals, and are beloved by military contractors
mainly because their complexity runs up their cost to astronomical
levels.
That most
of these will actually prove irrelevant to the world in which
we live matters not a whit to their makers or purchasers. Thought
of another way, the stressed out American taxpayer, already supporting
two disastrous wars and the weapons systems that go with them,
is also paying good money for weapons that are meant for fantasy
wars, for wars that will only be fought in the battlescapes and
war-gaming imaginations of Defense Department "planners."
The
Air Force and the Army are still planning as if, in the reasonably
near future, they were going to fight an old-fashioned war of attrition
against the Soviet Union, which disappeared in 1991; while the Navy,
with its eleven large aircraft-carrier battle groups, is, as William
S. Lind has written, "still structured to fight the Imperial Japanese
Navy." Lind, a prominent theorist of so-called fourth-generation
warfare (insurgencies carried out by groups such as al-Qaeda), argues
that "the Navy's aircraft-carrier battle groups have cruised on
mindlessly for more than half a century, waiting for those Japanese
carriers to turn up. They are still cruising today, into, if not
beyond, irrelevance… Submarines
are today's and tomorrow's capital ships; the ships that most directly
determine control of blue waters."
In December
2008, Franklin "Chuck" Spinney, a former high-ranking civilian
in the Pentagon's Office of Systems Analysis (set up in 1961 to
make independent evaluations of Pentagon policy) and a charter
member of the "Fighter Mafia" of the 1980s and 1990s, wrote,
"As has been documented for at least twenty years, patterns of
repetitive habitual behavior in the Pentagon have created a self-destructive
decision-making process. This process has produced a death spiral."
As a result,
concluded Spinney, inadequate amounts of wildly overpriced equipment
are purchased, "new weapons [that] do not replace old ones on
a one for one basis." There is also "continual pressure to reduce
combat readiness," a "corrupt accounting system" that "makes it
impossible to sort out the priorities," and a readiness to believe
that old solutions will work for the current crisis.
Failed
Reform Efforts
There's no
great mystery about the causes of the deep dysfunction that has
long characterized the Pentagon's weapons procurement system. In
2006, Thomas Christie, former head of Operational Test and Evaluation,
the most senior official at the Department of Defense for testing
weapons and a Pentagon veteran of half a century, detailed
more than 35 years of efforts to reform the weapons acquisition
system. These included the 1971 Fitzhugh (or Blue Ribbon) Commission,
the 1977 Steadman Review, the 1981 Carlucci Acquisition Initiatives,
the 1986 Packard Commission, the 1986 Goldwater-Nichols Department
of Defense Reorganization Act, the 1989 Defense Management Review,
the 1990 "Streamlining Review" of the Defense Science Board, the
19931994 report of the Acquisition Streamlining Task Force
and of the Defense Science Board, the late 1990s Total System Performance
Responsibility initiative of the Air Force, and the Capabilities-Based
Acquisition approach of the Missile Defense Agency of the first
years of this century.
Christie
concluded: "After all these years of repeated reform efforts,
major defense programs are taking 20 to 30 years to deliver less
capability than planned, very often at two to three times the
costs and schedules planned." He also added the following observations:
"Launching
into major developments without understanding key technical issues
is the root cause of major cost and schedule problems… Costs,
schedules, and technical risks are often grossly understated at
the outset… There are more acquisition programs being pursued
than DoD [the Department of Defense] can possibly afford in the
long term…
"By the
time these problems are acknowledged, the political penalties
incurred in enforcing any major restructuring of a program,
much less its cancellation, are too painful to bear. Unless
someone is willing to stand up and point out that the emperor
has no clothes, the U.S. military will continue to hemorrhage
taxpayer dollars and critical years while acquiring equipment
that falls short of meeting the needs of troops in the field."
The inevitable
day of reckoning, long predicted by Pentagon critics, has, I believe,
finally arrived. Our problems are those of a very rich country
which has become accustomed over the years to defense budgets
that are actually jobs programs and also a major source of pork
for the use of politicians in their reelection campaigns.
Given the
present major recession, whose depths remain unknown, the United
States has better things to spend its money on than Nimitz-class
aircraft carriers at a price of $6.2 billion each (the cost of
the USS George H. W. Bush, launched in January 2009, our
tenth such ship) or aircraft that can cruise at a speed of Mach
2 (1,352 miles per hour).
However,
don't wait for the Pentagon to sort out such matters. If it has
proven one thing over the last decades, it's that it is thoroughly
incapable of reforming itself. According to Christie, "Over the
past 20 or so years, the DoD and its components have deliberately
and systematically decimated their in-house technical capabilities
to the point where there is little, if any, competence or initiative
left in the various organizations tasked with planning and executing
its budget and acquisition programs."
Gunning
for the Air Force
President
Obama has almost certainly retained Robert M. Gates as Secretary
of Defense in part to give himself some bipartisan cover as he
tries to come to grips with the bloated defense budget. Gates
is also sympathetic to the desire of a few reformers in the Pentagon
to dump the Lockheed-Martin F-22 "Raptor" supersonic stealth fighter,
a plane designed to meet the Soviet Union's last proposed, but
never built, interceptor.
The Air
Force's old guard and its allies in Congress are already fighting
back aggressively. In June 2008, Gates fired Secretary of the
Air Force Michael W. Wynne and Air Force Chief of Staff General
T. Michael Moseley. Though he was undoubtedly responding to their
fervent support for the F-22, his cover explanation was their
visible failure to adequately supervise the accounting and control
of nuclear weapons.
In 2006,
the Air Force had managed to ship to Taiwan four high-tech nose
cone fuses for Minutemen ICBM warheads instead of promised helicopter
batteries, an error that went blissfully undetected until March
2008. Then, in August 2007, a B-52 bomber carrying six armed nuclear
cruise missiles flew across much of the country from Minot Air
Force Base in North Dakota to Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana.
This was in direct violation of standing orders against such flights
over the United States.
As Julian
Barnes and Peter Spiegel of the Los Angeles Times noted
in June 2008, "Tensions between the Air Force and Gates have been
growing for months," mainly over Gates's frustration about the
F-22 and his inability to get the Air Force to deploy more pilotless
aircraft to the various war zones. They were certainly not improved
when Wynne, a former senior vice president of General Dynamics,
went out of his way to cross Gates, arguing
publicly that "any president would be damn happy to have more
F-22s around if we had to get into a fight with China." It catches
something of the power of the military-industrial complex that,
despite his clear desire on the subject, Gates has not yet found
the nerve or the political backing to pull
the plug on the F-22; nor has he even dared to bring up the
subject of canceling its more expensive and technically complicated
successor, the F-35 "Joint Strike Fighter."
More than
20 years ago, Chuck Spinney wrote a classic account of the now-routine
bureaucratic scams practiced within the Pentagon to ensure that
Congress will appropriate funds for dishonestly advertised and
promoted weapons systems and then prevent their cancellation when
the fraud comes to light. In a paper he entitled
"Defense Power Games," of which his superiors deeply disapproved,
Spinney outlined two crucial Pentagon gambits meant to lock in
such weaponry: "front-loading" and "political engineering."
It should
be understood at the outset that all actors involved, including
the military officers in charge of projects, the members of Congress
who use defense appropriations to buy votes within their districts,
and the contractors who live off the ensuing lucrative contracts,
utilize these two scams. It is also important to understand that
neither front-loading nor political engineering is an innocent
or morally neutral maneuver. They both involve criminal intent
to turn on the spigot of taxpayer money and then to jam it so
that it cannot be turned off. They are de rigueur practices
of our military-industrial complex.
Front-loading
is the practice of appropriating funds for a new weapons project
based solely on assurances by its official sponsors about what
it can do. This happens long before a prototype has been built
or tested, and invariably involves the quoting of unrealistically
low unit costs for a sizeable order. Assurances are always given
that the system's technical requirements will be simple or have
already been met. Low-balling future costs, an intrinsic aspect
of front-loading, is an old Defense Department trick, a governmental
version of bait-and-switch. (What is introduced as a great bargain
regularly turns out to be a grossly expensive lemon.)
Political
engineering is the strategy of awarding contracts in as many different
Congressional districts as possible. By making voters and Congressional
incumbents dependent on military money, the Pentagon's political
engineers put pressure on them to continue supporting front-loaded
programs even after their true costs become apparent.
Front-loading
and political engineering generate several typical features in
the weapons that the Pentagon then buys for its arsenal. These
continually prove unnecessarily expensive, are prone to break
down easily, and are often unworkably complex. They tend to come
with inadequate supplies of spare parts and ammunition, since
there is not enough money to buy the numbers that are needed.
They also force the services to repair older weapons and keep
them in service much longer than is normal or wise. (For example,
the B-52 bomber, which went into service in 1955, is still on
active duty.)
Even though
extended training would seem to be a necessary corollary of the
complexity of such weapons systems, the excessive cost actually
leads to reductions in training time for pilots and others. In
the long run, it is because of such expedients and short-term
fixes that American casualties may increase and, sooner or later,
battles or wars may be lost.
For example,
Northrop-Grumman's much-touted B-2 stealth bomber has proven to
be almost totally worthless. It is too delicate to deploy to harsh
climates without special hangars first being built to protect it
at ridiculous expense; it cannot fulfill any combat missions that
older designs were not fully adequate to perform; and at
a total cost of $44.75 billion for only 21 bombers it wastes
resources needed for real combat situations.
Instead,
in military terms, the most unexpectedly successful post-Vietnam
aircraft has been the Fairchild A-10, unflatteringly nicknamed
the "Warthog." It is the only close-support aircraft ever developed
by the U.S. Air Force. Its task is to loiter over battlefields
and assist ground forces in disposing of obstinate or formidable
targets, which is not something that fits comfortably with the
Air Force's hot-shot self-image.
Some 715
A-10s were produced and they served with great effectiveness in
the first Persian Gulf War. All 715 cumulatively cost less than
three B-2 bombers. The A-10 is now out of production because the
Air Force establishment favors extremely fast aircraft that fly
in straight lines at high altitudes rather than aircraft that
are useful in battle. In the Afghan war, the Air Force has regularly
inflicted heavy casualties on innocent civilians at least in part
because it tries to attack ground targets from the air with inappropriately
high-performance equipment.
Using
the F-22 to Fight the F-16
The military-industrial
complex is today so confident of its skills in gaming the system
that it does not hesitate to publicize how many workers in a particular
district will lose their jobs if a particular project is cancelled.
Threats are also made and put into effect to withhold
political contributions from uncooperative congressional representatives.
As Spinney
recalls, "In July 1989, when some members of Congress began to
build a coalition aimed at canceling the B-2, Northrop Corporation,
the B-2's prime contractor, retaliated by releasing data which
had previously been classified showing that tens of thousands
of jobs and hundreds of millions in profits were at risk in 46
states and 383 congressional districts." The B-2 was not cancelled.
Southern
California's biggest private employers are Boeing Corporation
and Northrop-Grumman. They are
said to employ more than 58,000 workers in well-paying jobs,
a major political obstacle to rationalizing defense expenditures
even as recession is making such steps all but unavoidable.
Both front-loading
and political engineering are alive and well in 2009. They are,
in fact, now at the center of fierce controversies surrounding
the extreme age of the present fleet of Air Force fighter aircraft,
most of which date from the 1980s. Meanwhile the costs of the
two most likely successors to the workhorse F-16 the F-22
Raptor and the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter have run up so
high that the government cannot afford to purchase significant
numbers of either or them.
The F-16
made its first flight in December 1976, and a total of 4,400 have
been built. They have been sold, or given away, all over the world.
Planning for the F-22 began in 1986, when the Cold War was still
alive (even if on life support), and the Air Force was trumpeting
its fears that the other superpower, the USSR, was planning a
new, ultra-fast, highly maneuverable fighter.
By the time
the prototype F-22 had its roll-out on May 11, 1997, the Cold
War was nearly a decade in its grave, and it was perfectly apparent
that the Soviet aircraft it was intended to match would never
be built. Lockheed Martin, the F-22's prime contractor, naturally
argued that we needed it anyway and made plans to sell some 438
airplanes for a total tab of $70 billion. By mid-2008, only 183
F-22s were on order, 122 of which had been delivered. The numbers
had been reduced due to cost overruns. The Air Force still wants
to buy
an additional 198 planes, but Secretary Gates and his leading
assistants have balked. No wonder. According
to arms experts Bill Hartung and Christopher Preble, at more
than $350 million each, the F-22 is "the most expensive fighter
plane ever built."
The F-22
has several strikingly expensive characteristics which actually
limit its usefulness. It is allegedly a stealth fighter
that is, an airplane with a shape that reduces its visibility
on radar but there is no such thing as an airplane completely
invisible to all radar. In any case, once it turns on its own
fire-control radar, which it must do in combat, it becomes fully
visible to an enemy.
The F-22
is able to maneuver at very high altitudes, but this is of limited
value since there are no other airplanes in service anywhere that
can engage in combat at such heights. It can cruise at twice the
speed of sound in level flight without the use of its afterburners
(which consume fuel at an accelerated rate), but there are no
potential adversaries for which these capabilities are relevant.
The plane is obviously blindingly irrelevant to "fourth-generation
wars" like that with the Taliban in Afghanistan the sorts
of conflicts for which American strategists inside the Pentagon
and out believe the United States should be preparing.
Actually,
the U.S. ought not to be engaged in fourth-generation wars at
all, whatever planes are in its fleet. Outside powers normally
find such wars unwinnable, as the history of Afghanistan, that
"graveyard of empires" going back to Alexander the Great, illustrates
so well. Unfortunately, President Obama's approach to the Bush
administration's Afghan War remains deeply flawed and will only
entrap us in another quagmire, whatever planes we put in the skies
over that country.
Nonetheless,
the F-22 is still being promoted as the plane to buy almost entirely
through front-loading and political engineering. Some apologists
for the Air Force also claim
that we need the F-22 to face the F-16. Their argument goes this
way: We have sold so many F-16s to allies and Third World customers
that, if we ever had to fight one of them, that country might
prevail using our own equipment against us. Some foreign air forces
like Israel's are fully equipped with F-16s and their pilots actually
receive more training and monthly practice hours than ours do.
This, however,
seems a trivial reason for funding more F-22s. We should instead
simply not get involved in wars with former allies we have armed,
although this is why Congress prohibited Lockheed from selling
the F-22 abroad. Some Pentagon critics contend that the Air Force
and prime contractors lobby for arms sales abroad because they
artificially generate a demand for new weapons at home that are
"better" than the ones we've sold elsewhere.
Thanks to
political engineering, the F-22 has parts suppliers in 44 states,
and some 25,000 people have well-paying jobs building it. Lockheed
Martin and some in the Defense Department have therefore proposed
that, if the F-22 is cancelled, it should be replaced by the F-35
Joint Strike Fighter, also built by Lockheed Martin.
Most serious
observers believe that this would only make a bad situation worse.
So far the F-35 shows every sign of being, in Chuck Spinney's
words, "a far more costly and more troubled turkey" than the F-22,
"even though it has a distinction that even the F-22 cannot claim,
namely it is tailored to meet the same threat that… ceased to
exist at least three years before the F-35 R&D [research and development]
program began in 1994."
The F-35
is considerably more complex than the F-22, meaning that it will
undoubtedly be even more expensive to repair and will break down
even more easily. Its cost per plane is guaranteed to continue
to spiral upwards. The design of the F-22 involves 4 million lines
of computer code; the F-35, 19 million lines. The Pentagon sold
the F-35 to Congress in 1998 with the promise of a unit cost of
$184 million per aircraft. By 2008, that had risen to $355 million
per aircraft and the plane was already two years behind schedule.
According
to Pierre M. Sprey, one of the original sponsors of the F-16,
and Winslow T. Wheeler, a 31-year veteran staff official on Senate
defense committees, the F-35 is
overweight, underpowered, and "less maneuverable than the
appallingly vulnerable F-105 'lead sled' that got wiped out over
North Vietnam in the Indochina War." Its makers claim that it
will be a bomber as well as a fighter, but it will have a payload
of only two 2,000-pound bombs, far less than American fighters
of the Vietnam era. Although the Air Force praises its stealth
features, it will lose these as soon as it mounts bombs under
its wings, which will alter its shape most un-stealthily.
It is a
non-starter for close-air-support missions because it is too fast
for a pilot to be able to spot tactical targets. It is too delicate
and potentially flammable to be able to withstand ground fire.
If built, it will end up as the most expensive defense contract
in history without offering a serious replacement for any of the
fighters or fighter-bombers currently in service.
The Fighter
Mafia
Every branch
of the American armed forces suffers from similar "defense power
games." For example, the new Virginia-class fast-attack submarines
are expensive and not needed. As the New York Times wrote
editorially, "The program is little more than a public works
project to keep the Newport News, Va., and Groton, Conn., naval
shipyards in business."
I have,
however, concentrated on the Air Force because the collapse of
internal controls over acquisitions is most obvious, as well as
farthest advanced, there and because the Air Force has
a history of conflict over going along with politically easy decisions
that was recently hailed by Secretary of Defense Gates as deserving
of emulation by the other services. The pointed attack Gates launched
on bureaucratism was, paradoxically, one of the few optimistic
developments in Pentagon politics in recent times.
On April
21, 2008, the Secretary of Defense caused a storm of controversy
by giving
a speech to the officers of the Air War College at Maxwell
Air Force Base, Alabama. In it, he singled out for praise and
emulation an Air Force officer who had inspired many of that service's
innovators over the past couple of generations, while being truly
despised by an establishment and an old guard who viewed him as
an open threat to careerism.
Colonel John
Boyd (19271997) was a significant military strategist, an
exceptionally talented fighter pilot in both the Korean and Vietnamese
war eras, and for six years the chief instructor at the Fighter
Weapons School at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas. "Forty-Second
Boyd" became a legend in the Air Force because of his standing claim
that he could defeat any pilot, foreign or domestic, in simulated
air-to-air combat within 40 seconds, a bet he never lost even though
he was continuously challenged.
Last April,
Gates said, in part:
"As
this new era continues to unfold before us, the challenge I pose
to you today is to become a forward-thinking officer who helps
the Air Force adapt to a constantly changing strategic environment
characterized by persistent conflict.
"Let me
illustrate by using a historical exemplar: the late Air Force
Colonel John Boyd. As a 30-year-old captain, he rewrote the
manual for air-to-air combat. Boyd and the reformers he inspired
would later go on to design and advocate for the F-16 and the
A-10. After retiring, he would develop the principals of maneuver
warfare that were credited by a former Marine Corps Commandant
[General Charles C. Krulak] and a Secretary of Defense [Dick
Cheney] for the lightning victory of the first Gulf War….
"In accomplishing
all these things, Boyd a brilliant, eccentric, and stubborn
character had to overcome a large measure of bureaucratic
resistance and institutional hostility. He had some advice that
he used to pass on to his colleagues and subordinates that is
worth sharing with you. Boyd would say, and I quote: 'One day
you will take a fork in the road, and you're going to have to
make a decision about which direction you want to go. If you
go one way, you can be somebody. You will have to make compromises
and you will have to turn your back on your friends. But you
will be a member of the club and you will get promoted and get
good assignments. Or you can go the other way and you can do
something something for your country and for your Air
Force and for yourself. If you decide to do something, you may
not get promoted and get good assignments and you certainly
will not be a favorite of your superiors. But you won't have
to compromise yourself. To be somebody or to do something. In
life there is often a roll call. That's when you have to make
a decision. To be or to do'… We must heed John Boyd's advice
by asking if the ways we do business make sense."
Boyd's
many accomplishments are documented in Robert Coram's excellent
biography, Boyd:
The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War. They need
not be retold here. It was, however, the spirit of Boyd and "the
reformers he inspired," a group within Air Force headquarters who
came to be called the "Fighter Mafia," that launched the defense
reform movement of the 1980s and 1990s. Their objectives were to
stop the acquisition of unnecessarily complex and expensive weapons,
cause the Air Force to take seriously the idea of a fourth generation
of warfare, end its reliance on a strategy of attrition, and expose
to criticism an officer's corps focused on careerist standards.
Unless Secretary
Gates succeeds in reviving it, their lingering influence in the
Pentagon is just about exhausted today. We await the leadership
of the Obama administration to see which way the Air Force and
the rest of the American defense establishment evolves.
Despite Gates's
praise of Boyd, one should not underestimate the formidable obstacles
to Pentagon reform. Over a quarter-century ago, back in 1982, journalist
James Fallows outlined the most serious structural obstacle to any
genuine reform in his National Book Award-winning study, National
Defense. The book was so influential that at least one commentator
includes Fallows as a non-Pentagon member of Boyd's "Fighter Mafia."
As Fallows
then observed (pp. 6465):
"The
culture of procurement teaches officers that there are two paths
to personal survival. One is to bring home the bacon for the service
as the manager of a program that gets its full funding. 'Procurement
management is more and more the surest path to advancement' within
the military, says John Morse, who retired as a Navy captain after
twenty-eight years in the service….
"The other
path that procurement opens leads outside the military, toward
the contracting firms. To know even a handful of professional
soldiers above the age of forty and the rank of major is to
keep hearing, in the usual catalogue of life changes, that many
have resigned from the service and gone to the contractors:
to Martin Marietta, Northrop, Lockheed, to the scores of consulting
firms and middlemen, whose offices fill the skyscrapers of Rosslyn,
Virginia, across the river from the capital. In 1959, Senator
Paul Douglas of Illinois reported that 768 retired senior officers
(generals, admirals, colonels, and Navy captains) worked for
defense contractors. Ten years later Senator William Proxmire
of Wisconsin said that the number had increased to 2,072."
Almost 30
years after those words were written, the situation has grown far
worse. Until we decide (or are forced) to dismantle
our empire, sell
off most of our 761 military bases (according to official statistics
for fiscal year 2008) in other people's countries, and bring our
military expenditures into line with those of the rest of the world,
we are destined to go bankrupt in the name of national defense.
As of this moment, we are well on our way, which is why the Obama
administration will face such critical and difficult
decisions when it comes to the Pentagon budget.
February
3, 2009
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who
runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com, is the co-founder of
the American Empire
Project. His book, The
End of Victory Culture, has recently been updated in a newly
issued edition. He edited, and his work appears in, the first best
of TomDispatch book, The
World According to TomDispatch: America in the New Age of Empire
(Verso), a collection of some of the best pieces from his site and
an alternative history of the mad Bush years now ending. Chalmers
Johnson is the author of three linked books on the crises of American
imperialism and militarism. They are Blowback
(2000), The
Sorrows of Empire (2004), and Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic (2006). All are available
in paperback from Metropolitan Books. To listen to a TomDispatch
audio interview with Johnson on the Pentagon's potential economic
death spiral, click here.
Copyright
© 2009 Chalmers Johnson
Tom
Engelhardt Archives
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