On
War, Obama Has Been Worse Than Bush
by
Anthony Gregory
Recently
by Anthony Gregory: Libertarian
Vampires and the Importance of Fiction
This is
a transcript of a lecture given at the Austrian Scholars Conference,
March 7, 2011
The real critique
of the wars certainly goes beyond the numbers. It is good, however,
to look at the figures. Most people in the country know that Obama
hasn't exactly ended the wars. I'm sure people say, Yeah, but Obama
is ending the wars.
This claim
is not obviously 100 percent false in every respect, perhaps. And
so we need to be careful when we get into the details.
So, during
the run-up to the ascension of Obama to the throne, he was critical
of the Iraq war. He said things like This war's lasted longer
than World War I, II, the Civil War; 4,000 Americans have died (and
of course Americans are the only people that matter in the war).
More than 60,000 have been injured; we spent trillions of dollars;
we're less safe.
These were
very sound critiques of the Iraq war. A lot of us made these kinds
of utilitarian critiques. They're almost utilitarian anyway. I don't
think they are the most important reasons to oppose the Iraq war,
but they are important reasons; they are sufficient reasons on their
own, certainly. And Obama did sound better on the Iraq war than
Bush or McCain.
At the same
time and this is forgotten he always was worse on
Afghanistan. The Democrats, from Kerry to Obama, were always worse
on Afghanistan. Obama's position paper said he's been calling for
more troops and resources for the war in Afghanistan for years;
he would divert resources from Iraq to Afghanistan. To his everlasting
shame, he has not broken this promise.
Another point
I want to make is on Iraq. He wasn't antiwar; he was always slippery
on this war. I want to just relay a couple of interesting points.
In 2004, the
position of the Democrats was always We shouldn't have gone in;
now we're in, we're going to have to get out one day, but it sure
isn't responsible to talk about getting out now, because we need
to be responsible; we need to fix the country, and then we'll get
out.
In
'04, in the Chicago Tribune, Obama said, "There's not
much of a difference between my position on Iraq and George Bush's
position at this stage."
Throughout
the years, he voted for war funding once he was senator, and he
defended his votes. Presumably it would be wrong to defund an immoral
war. And in 2008, Obama hailed the Iraq surge a controversial
policy harshly criticized by many Democrats the year before
going so far as to tell Bill O'Reilly that the surge "succeeded
beyond our wildest dreams."
In December
of '08, when he was the lame-duck president, Bush signed the Status
of Forces Agreement with the Iraqi leadership, which set the timetable
for withdrawal. It was almost precisely the timetable for withdrawal
that Obama had proposed, within a couple months.
So the official
US policy, by the time Obama took office, was that the United States
would withdraw the troops from the cities by June of 2009; and by
the end of this year, 2011, the troops would leave Iraq entirely.
That was the policy when Obama took power. He did not expedite that.
To his credit,
he hasn't put all his political capital into stopping it, although
even there I would qualify my statements.
Boots on
the Ground
In Iraq, at
the height of the surge, which worked beyond our wildest dreams,
there were 170,000 US troops in Iraq, and now there are fewer than
50,000. Which, by the way, is about the number that Rumsfeld and
those clowns said that we would need for the war. So, now that the
war is kind of wrapping up, we're at the level that they thought
we'd need to invade and conquer and occupy and win.
In Afghanistan,
meanwhile, Obama has fulfilled his promises, unfortunately. Before
2006, except for a blip in July, there were about 10 to 20,000 troops.
And then by the time Bush left office, unfortunately he ramped it
up to 33,000 troops. By mid-2010, there were almost three times
as many 91,000 troops. Throughout 2009, Obama has almost
tripled the presence in Afghanistan.
Obama's first
defense secretary, Robert Gates, who by the way was Bush's defense
secretary too, floated the idea the United States might have to
stay beyond 2011. And some Democrats on the Armed Services Committee
have said, Yeah, we can't just withdraw. (I suppose you can't
just go into a country and bomb it and stay there for only eight
years that would be reckless.)
Figure
1. US Military Fatalities in Afghanistan and Iraq, Per Year

Source: Calculated
from data gathered at icasualties.org
The total number
of troops fighting wars under Obama has been higher than it was
under Bush except at the end of Bush's term. At the first half of
the Bush administration, which is when there were people in the
streets shouting, "Bush is a war criminal" when
the Left was correct about something there were fewer troops.
There were
more US fatalities in Iraq under Bush, although the total number
of US fatalities in 2009 and 2010 was higher than it was in 2003,
and higher than it was in 2008, the last Bush year.
Let's say we
had a third Bush term. If he was planning to withdraw gradually
from Iraq and leave Afghanistan alone, I think the trajectory would
have been much better than it is today, where Iraq is about where
I think it would have been, and Afghanistan is much worse.
Obama also
boosted private contractors by about a quarter in both Iraq and
Afghanistan. As of January 2011 of course, this is government
data and you'd be surprised how much they don't know what they are
talking about there are 87,000 contractors in Afghanistan;
71,000 in Iraq.
There were
more civilian contractors (including foreigners) that died in the
first half of 2010 than there were soldiers. And some people are
pointing out that shifting some of the burden to contractors obscures
what is going on.
Costly Wars
Obama always
said that we are spending way too much; we're going to go line by
line in the budget. And one of the only good promises he made was
to save money on Iraq. That's how he was planning to support everyone
from cradle to grave. It doesn't really add up that way, but at
least he wanted to cut spending on something big.
And he did
cut the spending in Iraq. But the spending has gone up enormously
in Afghanistan. Even adjusted for inflation, we see that, other
than Bush's last two years with the surge, total spending was lower
for most of the Bush term on the two wars.
Figure
2. Estimated War Funding by Operation FY2001FY2011
(in billions of dollars, adjusted for in!ation in
constant 2011 dollars, as of Feb 2011)
*
Calculated using FY02 metrics.
Note: CPI years and budget fiscal years might be off by a few months,
but this chart is still illustrative of trends with inflation.
Source: Amy Belasco, The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other
Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11, Congressional
Research Service, March 29, 2011, p. 3. Consumer Price Index inflation
calculated using the Bureau of Labor Statistics's Inflation Calculator,
available
online.
Obama criticized
Bush for financing wars off budget. In his first year Obama had
a big supplemental-funding bill another broken promise.
The Afghanistan
war has expanded out of control, and the war makes no sense. The
government says there are 100 Al-Qaeda members in Afghanistan, and
so the troop levels are higher, more people are dying and they want
to stamp out the opium trade. They can't even stop people from buying
crack four blocks from the White House, not that they should try.
This is the most ridiculous war. It's even a more ridiculous war
than the Iraq war in terms of the idea behind it.
Meanwhile,
Obama is drone-attacking Pakistan. He's expanded this war greatly.
One or 2 million Pakistani refugees have had to leave the Swat Valley.
It's one of the greatest refugee crises since Rwanda. Obama's bombed
Yemen; he's bombed Somalia; he even threatened Eritrea, this tiny
little country near Ethiopia, with invasion.
In a normal
country, when your government says it might invade another country,
people have a clue, but we're at war so much with so many countries
no one even knows any of this stuff.
And on Iran,
Obama continues to be belligerent when he caught Iran "red-handed"
with that Qom nuclear facility. Iran reported that they had this
facility that they hadn't really started working on yet, according
to the Non-Proliferation Treaty, in which the National Intelligence
Estimate, the administration, and the International Atomic Energy
Agency all say Iran's basically following the law.
Civil Liberties
Warrantless
surveillance has continued, and it's been normalized. The TSA outrages
have gotten worse. Now the Left thinks that you're crazy if you
oppose the police state, and the Right is finally realizing the
federal government shouldn't get to touch us like this.
Detention without
charge has continued. Habeas corpus is gutted. Obama was supposed
to close Guantanamo within a year; now it looks as if they are never
going to close it. And even at their best they'll say we'll have
a "Guantanamo Lite" within the United States.
Even when they
said they would try Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in civil court, the administration's
position was We'll try him, and we'll convict him, and if we
don't convict him we'll still detain him. So of course the American
Right goes crazy because how dare he be soft on terrorism.
Renditioning,
this outsourcing of people to be tortured, has continued, at least
on some level. In 2009, they renditioned a guy who wasn't even accused
of terrorism. He was accused of knowing about supposed fraud related
to defense contracting.
So they tied
him to a chair; they deprived him of sleep; they told him his family
was in danger, that he'll never see them again all the horrible
stuff that happened under Bush, but he was basically a white-collar
criminal at worst.
The drone attacks
are through the roof; there's robot killing. Bradley Manning, the
likely whistleblower with WikiLeaks, has been detained. And Obama
used to say his administration would protect whistleblowers. I guess
he meant protect them with steel cages.
We have the
same basic trajectory on war, on spending, on civil liberties, on
foreign policy; the Defense Department is as bloated as ever. People
forget that both parties are the same on pretty much everything,
and foreign policy maybe more than anything else.
For the full
research, including a discussion of the Libya war, see the policy
report, "What
Price War?: Afghanistan, Iraq, and the Costs of Conflict."
Reprinted
from Mises.org.
August
26, 2011
Anthony
Gregory [send him mail]
is research editor at the Independent
Institute. He
lives in Oakland, California. See his
webpage for more articles and personal information.

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