Guarding
the Empire
by
Laurence
M. Vance
by Laurence M. Vance
When
faced with evidence that the U.S. Global Empire has troops
and/or bases
in the majority of countries on the planet, apologists for the warfare
state and the "military-industrial
complex" attempt to dismiss this U.S. global hegemony by
claiming that it is the Marine guards at U.S. embassies overseas
that account for our presence in so many countries.
It
is traditionally believed that the United States has an embassy
in every foreign country and that every foreign country has an embassy
in the United States. Most people also think that every U.S. embassy
has an attachment of Marine guards to provide security for embassy
personnel. Both of these assumptions are wrong.
U.S.
Embassies in Foreign Countries
Of
the 191 "Independent
States in the World" besides the United States, there are
29 countries in which we do not have an embassy:
Andorra
Antigua and Barbuda
Bhutan
Comoros
Cuba
Dominica
Grenada
Guinea-Bissau
Iran
Kiribati |
Libya
Liechtenstein
North Korea
Maldives
Monaco
Nauru
Palau
Republic of the Congo
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia |
Saint
Vincent and the
Grenadines
San Marino
Sao Tome and Principe
Seychelles
Solomon Islands
Somalia
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu |
The
United States does not have an embassy in the countries of Bhutan,
Cuba, Iran, and North Korea because we do not have diplomatic relations
with them.
Many
small countries in which the United States has no embassy are "covered"
by another country. The U.S. ambassador to Spain is accredited to
Andorra. The U.S. ambassador to Barbados is accredited to Antigua
and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia,
and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. The U.S. ambassador to Mauritius
is accredited to Seychelles and Comoros. The U.S. ambassador to
Senegal is accredited to Guinea-Bissau. The U.S. ambassador to the
Marshall Islands is accredited to Kiribati. The U.S. ambassador
to Switzerland is accredited to Liechtenstein. The U.S. ambassador
to Sri Lanka is accredited to Maldives. The U.S. consul general
in Marseille, France, is accredited to Monaco. The U.S. consul general
in Florence, Italy, is accredited to San Marino. The U.S. ambassador
to Papua New Guinea is accredited to the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu.
The U.S. ambassador to Kenya is accredited to Somalia. The U.S.
ambassador to Gabon is accredited to Sao Tome and Principe. The
U.S. ambassador to Fiji is accredited to Tonga, Tuvalu, and Nauru.
The U.S. ambassador to the Philippines is accredited to Palau.
The
status of U.S. embassies sometimes changes. In some countries, like
Antigua and Barbuda, Guinea-Bissau, Iran, and the Solomon Islands,
we used to have an embassy, but it is now closed. The United States
has an ambassador to the Republic of the Congo, but the embassy
is temporarily collocated with the U.S. embassy in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (formerly called Zaire). The Afghan embassy
closed in January 1989 but then reopened in December 2001. In the
Central African Republic, the embassy is currently operating with
a minimal staff. The United States closed its embassy in Libya in
May 1980 and then resumed embassy activities in February 2004 through
a U.S. "interest section" in the Belgian embassy. Since
June 2004, the United States has maintained a "liaison office"
in Libya, but has no immediate plans for an embassy. New embassies
had to be built in Kenya and Tanzania after they were bombed in
August 1998.
Foreign
Embassies in the United States
Just
because the United States does not have an embassy in a particular
country does not necessarily mean that that country does not have
an embassy in the United States. Of the 191 "Independent
States in the World" besides the United States, there are
18 countries that do not maintain an embassy in the United States:
Andorra
Bhutan
Comoros
Cuba
Iran
Kiribati |
North
Korea
Libya
Maldives
Monaco
Nauru
San Marino |
Sao
Tome and Principe
Solomon Islands
Somalia
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu |
As
mentioned above, the United States does not have diplomatic relations
with Bhutan, Cuba, Iran, and North Korea. All of these countries
that do not maintain an embassy in Washington DC are members of
the United Nations
and have a representative of some kind at the UN in New York.
There
are therefore 11 of these countries that have an embassy in the
United States even though we do not have one in their country:
Antigua
and Barbuda
Dominica
Grenada
Guinea-Bissau |
Liechtenstein
Palau
Republic of the Congo
Saint Kitts and Nevis |
Saint
Lucia
Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines
Seychelles |
There
are no countries in which the United States has an embassy that
do not likewise have one on U.S. soil.
Marine
Security Guards
The
question of Marine guards providing security at our embassies is
not an easy one to answer. All of our embassies have security measures
of some kind, but all are not guarded by U.S. Marines. For security
reasons (isn’t that always the excuse?), the government does not
like to reveal which embassies have Marine guards and which embassies
do not.
Marine
security guards are members of the Marine
Security Guard Battalion headquartered at the Marine
Corps base in Quantico, Virginia. Quantico is also the location
of the Marine
Security Guard School, where guards are trained to react to
terrorism, fires, riots, demonstrations, and evacuations.
The
stationing of Marine Security Guards at U.S. embassies can be traced
to The Foreign Service Act of 1946, which authorizes the Secretary
of the Navy, "upon the request of the Secretary of State, to
assign enlisted members of the Navy and the Marine Corps to serve
as custodians under supervision of the Principal Officer at an Embassy,
Legation or Consulate." The first Marine security guards went
to Tangier and Bangkok on January 28, 1949. By the end of May 1949,
303 Marines had been assigned to foreign posts. By 1953, this number
had increased to 6 officers and 676 enlisted men. By 1956, the number
of enlisted men was up to 850.
There
are currently over 1,200 Marines serving at over 130 posts abroad,
in over 100 countries. Exact figures are not available, but in a
report "Concerning
the Role of Marine Security Guards in Securing U.S. Embassies and
Government Personnel" given before the House Armed Services
Committee Special Oversight Panel on Terrorism on October 10, 2002,
by W. Ray Williams, the Deputy Assistant Secretary for Countermeasures
and Information Security, the number of Marine security guards was
given as 1,029 "at 131 US Missions abroad, soon to be 132 with
the reactivation of a Marine Security Guard Detachment in Belgrade
scheduled for January 2003." He further stated that 19 additional
detachments of Marine guards were to be added in the next five years,
with a long-term goal of 1,352 Marine guards at 159 detachments.
According to the U.S.
State Department, as of August 2003, the United States had "over
1,200 Marines for the internal security of 132 U.S. embassies, missions,
and consulates worldwide."
Marine
security guards are organized into 7 regional companies. Company
A headquarters is located in Frankfurt, Germany, and is responsible
for 20 detachments in Eastern Europe. Company B headquarters is
located in Nicosia, Cyprus, and is responsible for 18 detachments
in northern Africa and the Middle East. Company C headquarters is
located in Bangkok, Thailand, and is responsible for 18 detachments
located in the Far East, Asia, and Australia. Company D headquarters
is located in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, and is responsible for 26
detachments in Central and South America and the Caribbean. Company
E headquarters is also located (with Company A) in Frankfurt, Germany,
and is responsible for 16 detachments in Western Europe and Ottawa,
Canada. Company F headquarters is located in Nairobi, Kenya, and
is responsible for 11 detachments in Sub-Saharan Africa. Company
G headquarters is located in Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire, and is responsible
for 12 detachments in West and Central Africa.
Marine
security guard companies are commanded by a lieutenant colonel.
At each diplomatic post, there is a minimum of one detachment commander
and five Marine security guards. This allows them to maintain one
security post 24/7. Locations with more than one security post have
more than five guards. About 40 percent of detachments have the
1/5 ratio of commander to guards, another 40 percent are between
1/6 and 1/10, and the remaining 20 percent have something greater
than 1/10. After graduating from security guard school, a Marine
can usually expect two fifteen-month duty tours.
The
U.S. Global Empire
What,
then, do embassies and Marine guards have to do with the U.S. Global
Empire of troops
and bases
that garrison the planet? As mentioned at the onset of this article,
apologists for the U.S. Global Empire attempt to dismiss our troop
presence in so many countries by claiming that including Marines
guarding embassies inflates the total number of countries in which
we have a troop presence. The truth, however, is that whether Marine
guards are counted or not, the United States still has a global
empire that now encompasses 136 countries.
The
source for information on U.S. troops stationed abroad is the quarterly
publication entitled "Active
Duty Military Personnel Strengths by Regional Area and by Country."
This is published by a Department of Defense organization called
the Directorate for Information Operations and Reports (DIOR). The
latest edition that will be referenced in this article is dated
March 31, 2004. Previous editions can be seen here.
According to the DIOR, the information contained in its report of
personnel strengths is provided directly by each branch of the U.S.
Armed Forces; that is, the DIOR merely reports the information it
receives. The DIOR publication does not indicate why troops
are in a particular country, it merely reports the fact that they
are there.
The
issue here is whether the Marine Corps troops listed as deployed
on foreign soil includes Marine guards at embassies. If the figure
given for Marines in each country does not include embassy
guards, then the United States does in fact have troops in
136 countries. Case closed. There is no need for this article other
than to point out that the United States has added one more country
(Guyana) since the
first time I addressed the subject of the U.S. Global Empire.
But if the figure given for Marines in each country does
include embassy guards, then what apologists for the U.S. Global
Empire are saying is that the United States does not have
troops in 136 countries because Marine guards should not be included.
Therefore, so they say, the number of countries in which the U.S.
has troops should be limited to those countries in which we actually
have bases. Of course, that is a problem as well, but it is not
under consideration here since I have previously addressed the subject
of the bases
of the U.S. Empire.
Although
the case could be made that these guards are what Lew Rockwell calls
"armed servants for the spies and bureaucrats," I am willing
to agree with apologists for the U.S. Global Empire that Marine
guards should not be counted when determining whether the United
States has troops in other countries. This is also assuming that
the "Personnel Strengths" document is accurate.
The
issue cannot be settled by merely asking the Marine Corps how it
determines the number of Marines it has in each country. No one
I spoke with in the DOD or the Marine Corps ever heard of the "Active
Duty Military Personnel Strengths by Regional Area and by Country"
document. And no one in the DOD or the Marine Corps that I sent
the document to ever responded. Furthermore, when you start asking
questions about Marines guarding U.S. embassies, DOD and Marine
Corps officials get nervous (and sometimes downright belligerent)
and start asking you questions about why you want the information.
After
studying the "Personnel Strengths" document, and after
determining which countries have a U.S. embassy, it looks as though
the figures given for Marines deployed to foreign countries do not
include Marine guards at embassies.
Of
the 55 countries in which the United States does not have any troops
(not just Marines), the following have a U.S. embassy:
Angola
Armenia
Belarus
Benin
Brunei
Burkina Faso
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Croatia
Equatorial Guinea |
Gabon
Gambia
Holy See (The Vatican)
Lesotho
Marshall Islands
Mauritania
Mauritius
Micronesia
Moldova
Namibia |
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Rwanda
Samoa
Slovak Republic
Sudan
Swaziland
Tajikistan
Uzbekistan |
If
the figures include Marine guards, then this would mean that no
U.S. embassy in any of these 29 countries had Marine security guards.
Some
countries in which the United States has Army, Navy, and/or Air
Force troops have a U.S. embassy but no Marines are listed as being
in the country:
Belize
Cambodia
Eritrea
Guyana |
Lebanon
Madagascar
Malawi
Mongolia |
New
Zealand
Suriname
Ukraine |
If
the figures include Marine guards, then this would mean that no
U.S. embassy in any of these 11 countries had Marine security guards.
Other
countries in which the United States has troops including Marines
have a U.S. embassy but do not have the minimum number of 6 Marines
necessary for embassy security guard duty.
Albania
Botswana
Bulgaria
Cameroon
Democratic Republic
of the Congo
Guinea |
Iceland
Laos
Luxembourg
Malaysia
Mexico
Morocco
Romania |
Serbia
and Montenegro
Sri Lanka
Sweden
Tanzania
Zambia
Zimbabwe |
If
the figures include Marine guards, then this would mean that no
U.S. embassy in any of these 19 countries had Marine security guards.
There
are 13 countries in which the only troops listed are Marines:
Azerbaijan
Burundi
Fiji
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia |
Mali
Malta
Mozambique
North Korea |
Sierra
Leone
Togo
Trinidad and Tobago
Turkmenistan |
The
countries of Azerbaijan, Burundi, Fiji, Sierra Leone, and Trinidad
and Tobago do not have the minimum number of 6 Marines necessary
for embassy security guard duty. If the figures include Marine guards,
then this would mean that no U.S. embassy in these 5 countries had
Marine security guards. We do not have an embassy in North Korea
for Marines to guard. Likewise, there are 167 Marines in Cuba but
the United States has no embassy there either.
But
supposing that the figure given for Marines in each country does
include Marine security guards at embassies, we still have a problem.
Most of the countries with a U.S. embassy that have the minimum
number of 6 Marines that are necessary to provide embassy security
guard duty also have Army, Navy, and/or Air Force troops as well.
So whether the figures include Marine guards is irrelevant. The
following countries have a U.S. embassy, troops from the Army, Navy,
and/or Air Force, and at least 6 Marines:
Afghanistan
Algeria
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belgium
Bolivia
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Brazil
Burma
Canada
Chad
Chile
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
Cote d’lvoire
Cyprus
Czech Republic
Denmark
Djibouti
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Estonia |
Ethiopia
Finland
France
Georgia
Germany
Greece
Guatemala
Guinea
Haiti
Honduras
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia/East Timor
Iraq
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kuwait
Liberia
Lithuania
Macedonia
Nepal
Netherlands
Nicaragua
Niger |
Nigeria
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Qatar
Russia
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Singapore
Slovenia
Spain
South Africa
South Korea
Switzerland
Syria
Thailand
Tunisia
Turkey
Uganda
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
Uruguay
Venezuela
Vietnam
Yemen |
The
"Personnel Strengths" document includes the country of
East Timor under Indonesia so it is impossible to determine exactly
how the 10 Marines in that region are divided between the countries.
Of
the 13 countries in which the only troops listed are Marines, 6
were previously eliminated because either the United States did
not have an embassy in the country or there was not the minimum
number of 6 Marines necessary for embassy security guard duty. This
leaves only the following seven countries as potential examples
of countries with a U.S. embassy guarded by Marines that should
not be included in the total of 136 countries in which the United
States has troops:
|
Kyrgyzstan
Latvia
Mali
|
Malta
Mozambique
|
Togo
Turkmenistan
|
But
a comparison of the current "Personnel Strengths" document
with the previous quarterly editions shows that this is not the
case. For example, Kyrgyzstan, which is now listed as having 8 Marines,
had 14 Marines three months ago and 27 Marines six months ago. And
Malta, which is now listed as having 4 Marines, had 7 Marines three
months ago and 3 Marines six months ago. This could not possibly
be just Marine embassy guards. The next quarterly report of "Active
Duty Military Personnel Strengths by Regional Area and by Country"
is sure to have similar changes.
So
the fact remains: Marine guards or no Marine guards, the United
States has troops in 136 countries.
But
even that figure is too low, for the United States also has troops
in Dependencies
and Areas of Special Sovereignty. These are territories controlled
by countries that may be located thousands of miles away from the
mother country. For example, the United States has troops in Great
Britain and areas controlled by Great Britain such as Gibraltar
(on the southern coast of Spain), Diego Garcia (an atoll in the
Indian Ocean), and St. Helena (an island in the South Atlantic Ocean).
The United States has a 234,022-acre Air Force Base in Greenland,
a region controlled by Denmark since 1721. Then there is Kosovo
(an autonomous province of Serbia) and Hong Kong (a special administrative
region of China).
Aside
from the 50 states of the United States, there are also U.S. troops
in areas we control like Guam (an island in the Pacific Ocean),
Johnston Atoll (an atoll in the Pacific Ocean), Puerto Rico (an
island commonwealth in the Caribbean Sea), and the U.S. Virgin Islands
(islands between the Caribbean Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean,
east of Puerto Rico).
According
to the "Personnel Strengths" document, the United States
also maintains 23 army personnel in the Trust Territory of the Pacific
Islands. After World War II, these island groups in the Pacific
Ocean came under the control of the United States. This "Trust
Territory" now consists of three sovereign countries (Marshall
Islands, Micronesia, and Palau) and the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands, a commonwealth of the United States.
If
these additional areas that have U.S. troops are counted, then it
could be said that the United States has troops in 150 countries
or territories. It is now easier to list the countries in which
the United States does not have troops instead of the other way
around. So, although this list could change tomorrow, the following
countries are not officially reported as having any U.S. troops:
Andorra
Angola
Armenia
Belarus
Benin
Bhutan
Brunei
Burkina Faso
Cape Verde
Central African Republic
Comoros
Croatia
Dominica
Equatorial Guinea
Gabon
Gambia
Grenada
Guinea-Bissau |
Holy
See (The Vatican)
Iran
Kiribati
Lesotho
Libya
Liechtenstein
Maldives
Mauritania
Mauritius
Moldova
Monaco
Namibia
Nauru
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Republic of the Congo
Rwanda
Saint Kitts and Nevis |
Saint
Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Sao Tome and Principe
Seychelles
Slovak Republic
Solomon Islands
Somalia
Sudan
Swaziland
Tajikistan
Tonga
Tuvalu
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu |
U.S.
Foreign Policy
In
his Farewell
Address, George Washington warned against "permanent alliances
with any portion of the foreign world" and said that the United
States should have "as little political connection as possible"
with foreign nations. But he also warned us about "those overgrown
military establishments which, under any form of government, are
inauspicious to liberty, and which are to be regarded as particularly
hostile to republican liberty."
If
any country ever had an overgrown military establishment, it is
the United States and its military juggernaut. Before the recent
Iraq war, the United States outspent the "evil" rogue
nations of Iraq, Syria, Iran, North Korea, Libya, and Cuba on defense
spending by a ratio of twenty-two to one. The actual amount that
the United States spent on "defense" during fiscal year
2004 has been estimated by Robert
Higgs to be about $695 billion. The United States is also the
biggest arms exporter, accounting for about half of all global arms
exports.
Most
of this spending could be eliminated if the United States returned
to the foreign policy ideas of the Founders. Current U.S. foreign
policy can only be described as reckless, interventionist, militaristic,
and belligerent. This can lead to severe consequences, as Chalmers
Johnson has pointed out in his incredible book Blowback:
The Costs and Consequences of American Empire, "The
suicidal assassins of September 11, 2001, did not ‘attack America,’
as political leaders and news media in the United States have tried
to maintain; they attacked American foreign policy."
The
U.S. Empire is greatly overextended. Buried on page
362 of the 9/11 Commission
Report is an admission that the entire planet is our manifest
destiny:
Now threats
can emerge quickly. An organization like al Qaeda, headquartered
in a country on the other side of the earth, in a region so poor
that electricity or telephones were scarce, could nonetheless
scheme to wield weapons of unprecedented destructive power in
the largest cities of the United States. In this sense, 9/11 has
taught us that terrorism against American interests "over
there" should be regarded just as we regard terrorism against
America "over here." In this same sense, the American
homeland is the planet.
The
9/11 attacks were just the beginning of a worldwide revolt against
the current U.S. foreign policy of a global empire. Only a Jeffersonian
foreign policy of peace, commerce, friendship, and no entangling
alliances can arrest the menacing U.S. Empire.
October
4, 2004
Laurence
M. Vance [send him mail]
is a freelance writer and an adjunct instructor in accounting and
economics at Pensacola Junior College in Pensacola, FL. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2004 LewRockwell.com
Laurence
M. Vance Archives
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