Running Cost of Military Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan

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Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Corporate negligence in Iraq by KBR. Again!!

First the company was responsible for soldiers being electrocuted to death in showers due to their corporate greed, now the same company is being accused of exposing American soldiers to toxic chemical fumes.

Don’t you just love the corporate military industrial complex?

From the Associated Press.

A federal magistrate has ruled that a lawsuit by Oregon Army National Guard veterans against contractor Kellogg Brown & Root can continue.

U.S. District Magistrate Paul Papak denied KBR's second motion to dismiss the suit on Monday.

In 2009, 26 Oregon Guard veterans sued KBR, saying its managers downplayed or dismissed the presence of a toxic chemical. The veterans were among hundreds of U.S. soldiers in Iraq who were potentially exposed to sodium dichromate, which contains hexavalent chromium.

The Oregon soldiers and others were protecting KBR workers at a water-treatment plant in Iraq beginning in May 2003 when they say they were exposed to the chemical.

KBR denies wrongdoing. Spokeswoman Heather Browne on Monday said the company was disappointed in the ruling.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

The White House should be called the "White Tent"


According to the Associated Press, a couple from Saudi Arabia tortured their Sri Lankan domestic servant maid by hammering 24 nails into her hands, legs and forehead after she complained of a heavy workload. This type of behavior is apparently not unusual for a population in Saudi Arabia that employs a large amount of domestic servants due to the wealth created by the sale of their oil to the United States and other countries. Making this kind of story more disturbing is the fact that the U.S. military, American tax payer and the American government, protects and enables a repressive government to remain in power in Saudi Arabia by selling the Saudi Royal family billions of dollars of weapons and military training. This kind of military and political support to Saudi Arabia contradicts the ideals of democracy and freedom our country was founded upon, and with each additional weapons contract, America loses more political capital as it tries to denounce other repressive regimes like Iran and North Korea.

First reported by Bloomberg News on August 13, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia will buy 72 UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters from United Technologies estimated to be worth over $30 billion. In addition to the $30 billion for United Technologies, the top three leading defense industry conglomerates Boeing, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman will also be awarded an additional $30 billion for 84 F-15E fighter jets, munitions and electronic equipment. Although this sale will undoubtedly be celebrated by local politicians in Connecticut, Texas and Pennsylvania when the news is officially released in September, when the campaign season kicks into high gear, it is disheartening that one of the sole remaining bright spots in American manufacturing and products that America exports to the world, is related to politically connected defense corporations celebrating deals with repressive governments like Saudi Arabia.

Many United Technology employees who will celebrate the lucrative contract to build 72 UH-60 Blackhawk’s for Saudi Arabia, and an overwhelming majority of Americans, do not realize that the government of Saudi Arabia is made up an Islamic fundamentalist government that treats women as inferior human beings. While most people may know that women cannot drive a car, not many people know that it is illegal to bring a Bible into Saudi Arabia and that the laws of the country are based on the Koran. In addition to scoring as one of the most repressive regimes in the world by the Economist Magazine's Intelligence Unit World Democracy Ranking in 2008, Saudi Arabia is also one of the worst countries in the world for press freedom, human rights and corruption. Celebrating a business deal that will enable a repressive regime to remain in power contradicts the ideals of democracy and freedom our country was founded upon.

Since the end of the Cold War, instead of diversifying their product line over the last 20 years, Sikorsky Aircraft continues to rely on government contracts to sustain the local work force. It would be far more productive for Connecticut and the entire American economy if United Technologies and other companies like General Electric combined their resources to build products for the world economy such as light-rail transportation systems, high-speed trains and wind turbines, instead of weapons for repressive governments. It is a commonly accepted economic principle that defense spending is a direct drain on the economy, reducing efficiency, slowing growth and costing jobs. It means that the government is pulling away resources from the uses determined by the market and is instead using them to buy weapons and to pay for soldiers and other military personnel.

Rather than pursuing a flawed national security policy based on energy security through military protection for a finite natural resource, Connecticut voters should demand their representatives in Washington offer Sikorsky and General Electric tax incentives to build products that would be in demand in a post-fossil-fuel world economy. American companies could export to the world, and help to rebuild America's crumbling national infrastructure. Instead of rebuilding Baghdad and Kabul and transporting highly paid mercenary soldiers around the country in Black Hawk helicopters powered by General Electric engines, new mass rail transportation products by United Technologies would enable all Americans to use products bought by their taxpayer dollars, instead of only the relatively few Americans connected to the national security state apparatus who currently use them.

Tea Party supporters, fiscally conservative Republicans and liberal Democrats, all give the Pentagon a huge pass in their anti-big-government political rhetoric. Relying on military contracts for business growth and using political connections to increase the corporate bottom line is what political scientists call corporatism or, the more widely used term, corporate welfare. Making this case of corporate welfare even more disturbing is the fact that it will allow a repressive regime in Saudi Arabia to remain in power, violating many of the ideals and principles Americans value.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

You don't need a flag pin to show your patriotism

Since his days on NBC when he used to send gift baskets to the CEO of General Electric who once owned NBC, Opinione has always enjoyed the unconventional humor and maverick attitude of David Letterman. Instead of wearing an American flag pin on his suit like the corporate kiss ass Jay Leno, David Letterman doesn’t have to wear a flag pin on his suit to show his patriotism.

In a recent interview with a MSNBC media personality Letterman demonstrates his patriotism when he observes how people in the media have distorted information for political gain and that Americans should be getting smarter than previous generations. As an expert in the influence and power of the military industrial complex and its effect on American foreign policy and American politics, the comments by Ms. Maddow on how fear is used to scare voters has been used since the Cold War days, beginning with the false claims of a strategic bomber gap and then subsequent missile gap during the Eisenhower years.



The following clip is perhaps the best video offering evidence of how media manipulation could allow such an unqualified and inept person to become President of the United States.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Another voice in the anti-imperial school of political science

While this blog often cites political scholars like Andrew Bacevich, Chalmers Johnson, and William Astore on a regular basis, Dennis Jett is another patriot that is a voice of reason and honesty in talking about American foreign policy.

Dennis Jett, a former US ambassador, who is now a professor at Penn State’s School of International Affairs and the author of “Why American Foreign Policy Fails: Unsafe at Home and Despised Abroad, recently published an Op-Ed in the the Christian Science Monitor.

US military support for troubled states: a dangerous doctrine returns

By Dennis C. Jett Dennis C. Jett – Fri Aug 20, 12:40 pm ET

State College, Pa. – While ambassador to the United Nations during the Reagan administration, Jeane Kirkpatrick often argued that the United States should befriend authoritarian governments if they supported Washington’s policies. Because America was in the midst of fighting the cold war, her advice was often followed. While getting into bed with dictators did nothing to help win the war, it certainly made a mockery of American claims of respect for human rights and democracy.

Today an argument is being made that the United States, in effect, has to employ an undated version of the Kirkpatrick Doctrine to win the so-called war on terrorism. In a recent article in the journal “Foreign Affairs,â€

That cannot be done without the US once again embracing repressive regimes and leaving the rest of the world with the impression that it jettisons its values the moment it perceives a threat to its security. That will not just damage America’s image abroad. It will encourage new recruits and additional support for terrorist organizations. And American intervention will often weaken the regime that is supposed to be helped by unifying and motivating its enemies.

The link between democracy and stabilityForeign Policy magazine each year publishes its Failed States Index listing those countries that are in critical condition, in danger or on the borderline when it comes to political stability. The human rights organization Freedom House also publishes an annual report that classifies the countries of the world into those that are Free, Partly Free, and Not Free.

In the most recent Freedom House ranking, 47 countries (24 percent) were rated Not Free, 58 countries (30) Partly Free and 89 Free (46 percent). Of the 60 countries on the Failed States Index, however, half are Not Free and the other half only Partly Free.

There are therefore no countries in the world that are both unstable and democratic. As a result, helping faltering regimes defend themselves because they supposedly face a terrorism problem, which may somehow morph into a threat to the United States, will often just mean assisting repressive governments defend themselves against their own people.

The key to stability is not a strong military but a strong democracy. Unfortunately Washington refuses to support that concept. Thanks to the effectiveness of the lobbyists and think tanks that shill for the military industrial complex, Congress is always willing to waste money on weapons programs, even unwanted and unworkable ones. At the same time, politicians are eager to slash programs to support democracy abroad.

Short-sighted congressional cutsFor instance, congressional committees keep pushing for a second engine for the F-35 joint strike fighter and for an airborne laser that the Pentagon does not want. Meanwhile a $4 billion cut in the foreign affairs budget is being contemplated, a move Secretary Gates and Admiral Mike Mullen, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs, both testified against it, pointing out that starving the State Department and USAID would increase the chances for future conflicts. Those conflicts will be hard to avoid because any government that fears an outbreak of democracy will claim terrorists imperil it. Such arguments will make who is really worthy of being America’s friend as hard to determine as its enemies.

It should also be pointed out that Afghanistan, from which Al Qaeda launched its attack on the United States, was not a failed state in one sense. The Taliban, who were in power at the time, were firmly in charge (except for small patches in the north controlled by United Front rebels). The problem was not that they failed to control their territory, but that they actively collaborated with Al Qaeda. That would not have happened if democracy had ever had a chance.

It’s true that it is much harder to strengthen the institutions of democracy than it is to add muscle to a foreign nation’s military. It’s also harder to measure the “results” of building a nation’s capacity for self-government. That’s why there will always be greater pressure to boost military might, even though it will increase, rather than diminish, threats to America’s security. The post 9/11 hysteria still lingers among those politicians and pundits who demand that the government must “keep America safe” from any terrorist threat, real or imagined. That argues for endless foreign adventures, even when the best course of action is to do nothing at all.

Friday, August 20, 2010

U.S. Soldiers who declined attending Christian concert are punished

While most Americans have been exposed to endless news coverage and drawn into a national debate about an Islamic Culture Center being built two blocks from the site of the September 11 terrorist attack, the main stream media is being woefully silent on another story involving religious intolerance in America. The latest incidence of religious intolerance in America involves dozens of soldiers at a Virginia military base who were denied leave if they choose not to attent a Christian band concert, while other soldiers in the same unit were given leave to attend the concert.

First reported by The Military Religious Freedom Foundation, the same group that brought attention to rifle scopes used by U.S. soldiers inscribed with secret Biblical references, the following is from an associated press report on the story.


Fort Eustis spokesman Rick Haverinen told The Associated Press he couldn't comment on the specifics of the investigation. At the Pentagon, Army spokesman Col. Thomas Collins said the military shouldn't impose religious views on soldiers.

"If something like that were to have happened, it would be contrary to Army policy," Collins said.

Pvt. Anthony Smith said he and other soldiers felt pressured to attend the May concert while stationed at the Newport News base, home of the Army's Transportation Corps.

"My whole issue was I don't need to be preached at," Smith said in a phone interview from Phoenix, where he is stationed with the National Guard. "That's not what I signed up for."

Smith, 21, was stationed in Virginia for nearly seven months for helicopter electrician training when the Christian rock group BarlowGirl played as part of the "Commanding General's Spiritual Fitness Concerts."

Smith said a staff sergeant told 200 men in their barracks they could either attend or remain in their barracks. Eighty to 100 decided not to attend, he said.

"Instead of being released to our personal time, we were locked down," Smith said. "It seemed very much like a punishment."

Smith said he and the other soldiers were told not to use their cell phones or personal computers and ordered to clean up the barracks.


Sounds like a case of coercion and evangelization to this observer. The AP story goes on to report.
About 20 of the men, including several Muslims, refused to attend the concert based on their religious beliefs, he said.

Smith said he went up the chain of command and traced the concert edict to a captain, who said he simply wanted to "show support for those kind of events that bring soldiers together."

While not accepting blame, the officer apologized to the soldiers who refused to attend the concert and said it was not his intent to proselytize, he said.

"But once you get in there, you realize it's evangelization," Smith said.


This latest incident will probaly be downplayed and under reported because it will hurt the image of the military.

Bart Simpson and the Military Industrial Complex

We finally find out that Bart Simpson's behavior is because of the military industrial complex.

Lowering the Flag on the American Century

Reprinted with permission of TomDispatch.com

The Guns of August
Lowering the Flag on the American Century
By Chalmers Johnson

In 1962, the historian Barbara Tuchman published a book about the start of World War I and called it The Guns of August. It went on to win a Pulitzer Prize. She was, of course, looking back at events that had occurred almost 50 years earlier and had at her disposal documents and information not available to participants. They were acting, as Vietnam-era Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara put it, in the fog of war.

So where are we this August of 2010, with guns blazing in one war in Afghanistan even as we try to extricate ourselves from another in Iraq? Where are we, as we impose sanctions on Iran and North Korea (and threaten worse), while sending our latest wonder weapons, pilotless drones armed with bombs and missiles, into Pakistan's tribal borderlands, Yemen, and who knows where else, tasked with endless "targeted killings" which, in blunter times, used to be called assassinations? Where exactly are we, as we continue to garrison much of the globe even as our country finds itself incapable of paying for basic services?

I wish I had a crystal ball to peer into and see what historians will make of our own guns of August in 2060. The fog of war, after all, is just a stand-in for what might be called "the fog of the future," the inability of humans to peer with any accuracy far into the world to come. Let me nonetheless try to offer a few glimpses of what that foggy landscape some years ahead might reveal, and even hazard a few predictions about what possibilities await still-imperial America.

Let me begin by asking: What harm would befall the United States if we actually decided, against all odds, to close those hundreds and hundreds of bases, large and small, that we garrison around the world? What if we actually dismantled our empire, and came home? Would Genghis Khan-like hordes descend on us? Not likely. Neither a land nor a sea invasion of the U.S. is even conceivable.

Would 9/11-type attacks accelerate? It seems far likelier to me that, as our overseas profile shrank, the possibility of such attacks would shrink with it.
Would various countries we've invaded, sometimes occupied, and tried to set on the path of righteousness and democracy decline into "failed states?" Probably some would, and preventing or controlling this should be the function of the United Nations or of neighboring states. (It is well to remember that the murderous Cambodian regime of Pol Pot was finally brought to an end not by us, but by neighboring Vietnam.)

Sagging Empire

In other words, the main fears you might hear in Washington -- if anyone even bothered to wonder what would happen, should we begin to dismantle our empire -- would prove but chimeras. They would, in fact, be remarkably similar to Washington's dire predictions in the 1970s about states all over Asia, then Africa, and beyond falling, like so many dominoes, to communist domination if we did not win the war in Vietnam.

What, then, would the world be like if the U.S. lost control globally -- Washington's greatest fear and deepest reflection of its own overblown sense of self-worth -- as is in fact happening now despite our best efforts? What would that world be like if the U.S. just gave it all up? What would happen to us if we were no longer the "sole superpower" or the world's self-appointed policeman?

In fact, we would still be a large and powerful nation-state with a host of internal and external problems. An immigration and drug crisis on our southern border, soaring health-care costs, a weakening education system, an aging population, an aging infrastructure, an unending recession -- none of these are likely to go away soon, nor are any of them likely to be tackled in a serious or successful way as long as we continue to spend our wealth on armies, weapons, wars, global garrisons, and bribes for petty dictators.

Even without our interference, the Middle East would continue to export oil, and if China has been buying up an ever larger share of what remains underground in those lands, perhaps that should spur us into conserving more and moving more rapidly into the field of alternative energies.

Rising Power

Meanwhile, whether we dismantle our empire or not, China will become (if it isn't already) the world's next superpower. It, too, faces a host of internal problems, including many of the same ones we have. However, it has a booming economy, a favorable balance of payments vis-à-vis much of the rest of the world (particularly the U.S., which is currently running an annual trade deficit with China of $227 billion), and a government and population determined to develop the country into a powerful, economically dominant nation-state.

Fifty years ago, when I began my academic career as a scholar of China and Japan, I was fascinated by the modern history of both countries. My first book dealt with the way the Japanese invasion of China in the 1930s spurred Mao Zedong and the Chinese Communist Party he headed on a trajectory to power, thanks to its nationalist resistance to that foreign invader. Incidentally, it is not difficult to find many examples of this process in which a domestic political group gains power because it champions resistance to foreign troops. In the immediate post-WWII period, it occurred in Vietnam, Indonesia, and Malaysia; with the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, all over Eastern Europe; and today, it is surely occurring in Afghanistan and probably in Iraq as well.

Once the Cultural Revolution began in China in 1966, I temporarily lost interest in studying the country. I thought I knew where that disastrous internal upheaval was taking China and so turned back to Japan, which by then was well launched on its amazing recovery from World War II, thanks to state-guided, but not state-owned, economic growth.

This pattern of economic development, sometimes called the "developmental state," differed fundamentally from both Soviet-type control of the economy and the laissez-faire approach of the U.S. Despite Japan's success, by the 1990s its increasingly sclerotic bureaucracy had led the country into a prolonged period of deflation and stagnation. Meanwhile, post-U.S.S.R. Russia, briefly in thrall to U.S. economic advice, fell captive to rapacious oligarchs who dismantled the command economy only to enrich themselves.

In China, Communist Party leader Deng Xiaoping and his successors were able to watch developments in Japan and Russia, learning from them both. They have clearly adopted effective aspects of both systems for their economy and society. With a modicum of luck, economic and otherwise, and a continuation of its present well-informed, rational leadership, China should continue to prosper without either threatening its neighbors or the United States.

To imagine that China might want to start a war with the U.S. -- even over an issue as deeply emotional as the ultimate political status of Taiwan -- would mean projecting a very different path for that country than the one it is currently embarked on.


Lowering the Flag on the American Century


Thirty-five years from now, America's official century of being top dog (1945-2045) will have come to an end; its time may, in fact, be running out right now. We are likely to begin to look ever more like a giant version of England at the end of its imperial run, as we come face-to-face with, if not necessarily to terms with, our aging infrastructure, declining international clout, and sagging economy. It may, for all we know, still be Hollywood's century decades from now, and so we may still make waves on the cultural scene, just as Britain did in the 1960s with the Beatles and Twiggy. Tourists will undoubtedly still visit some of our natural wonders and perhaps a few of our less scruffy cities, partly because the dollar-exchange rate is likely to be in their favor.

If, however, we were to dismantle our empire of military bases and redirect our economy toward productive, instead of destructive, industries; if we maintained our volunteer armed forces primarily to defend our own shores (and perhaps to be used at the behest of the United Nations); if we began to invest in our infrastructure, education, health care, and savings, then we might have a chance to reinvent ourselves as a productive, normal nation. Unfortunately, I don't see that happening. Peering into that foggy future, I simply can't imagine the U.S. dismantling its empire voluntarily, which doesn't mean that, like all sets of imperial garrisons, our bases won't go someday.

Instead, I foresee the U.S. drifting along, much as the Obama administration seems to be drifting along in the war in Afghanistan. The common talk among economists today is that high unemployment may linger for another decade. Add in low investment and depressed spending (except perhaps by the government) and I fear T.S. Eliot had it right when he wrote: "This is the way the world ends, not with a bang but a whimper."

I have always been a political analyst rather than an activist. That is one reason why I briefly became a consultant to the CIA's top analytical branch, and why I now favor disbanding the Agency. Not only has the CIA lost its raison d'être by allowing its intelligence gathering to become politically tainted, but its clandestine operations have created a climate of impunity in which the U.S. can assassinate, torture, and imprison people at will worldwide.

Just as I lost interest in China when that country's leadership headed so blindly down the wrong path during the Cultural Revolution, so I'm afraid I'm losing interest in continuing to analyze and dissect the prospects for the U.S. over the next few years. I applaud the efforts of young journalists to tell it like it is, and of scholars to assemble the data that will one day enable historians to describe where and when we went astray. I especially admire insights from the inside, such as those of ex-military men like Andrew Bacevich and Chuck Spinney. And I am filled with awe by men and women who are willing to risk their careers, incomes, freedom, and even lives to protest -- such as the priests and nuns of SOA Watch, who regularly picket the School of the Americas and call attention to the presence of American military bases and misbehavior in South America.

I'm impressed as well with Pfc. Bradley Manning, if he is indeed the person responsible for potentially making public 92,000 secret documents about the war in Afghanistan. Daniel Ellsberg has long been calling for someone to do what he himself did when he released the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam War. He must be surprised that his call has now been answered -- and in such an unlikely way.
My own role these past 20 years has been that of Cassandra, whom the gods gave the gift of foreseeing the future, but also cursed because no one believed her. I wish I could be more optimistic about what's in store for the U.S. Instead, there isn't a day that our own guns of August don't continue to haunt me.

Chalmers Johnson is the author of Blowback (2000), The Sorrows of Empire (2004), and Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic (2006), among other works. His newest book, Dismantling the Empire: America’s Last Best Hope (Metropolitan Books), has just been published.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

The latest book by Chalmers Johnson- Dismantling the Empire


While other people wait in a line for the latest smart phone, video game, or some other material possession, I have been anxiously waiting for a new book to arrive in the mail.

The book, Dismantling the Empire- America’s Last Best Hope by Chalmers Johnson, is the latest book published by one of the most widely respected and admired anti-imperial scholars. If the book reviews by political scholars, former members of the military, and Pulitzer winning authors are any indication, this latest book appears to be another great addition to the trilogy of books he has already written on the condition of the American Empire.

Taken from the sleeve of the hard cover edition:

In his prophetic book Blowback, published before 9/11, Chalmers Johnson warned that our secret operations around the globe would exact a price at home. Now, in a series of essays, Johnson measures that price, assesses the dangers America faces, and shows just how the United States became a superpower living desperately beyond its means. Our reliance on Pentagon economics, a global empire of bases, and war without end, he declares in nothing short of a “suicide option”.

Dismantling the Empire explores the subjects for which Johnson is now famous, from the origins of blowback to Barack Obama’s Afghanistan conundrum, including our inept spies, our devastatingly bad behavior in other countries, our ill-fought wars, and our capitulation to a military that has taken ever more control of the federal budget. There is, he proposes, only one way out: President Obama must begin to dismantle the empire before it dismantles the American dream. If we do not learn from the fates of past empires, he suggests our decline and fall are foreordained. This is Johnson and his best: delivering both a warning and an urgent prescription for a remedy.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

How the Bush administration institutionalized the ongoing sectarian violence in Iraq


A recent car bomb explosion in Iraq where 61 Shiite Iraqis were killed is the latest tragic incident in an ongoing civil war in Iraq instigated by the Bush administration decision to invade Iraq. Started under false pretensions, the immoral and unjust attack on Iraq in 2003 was soon followed by a disastrous post conflict reconstruction effort led by inept political appointees such as Paul (Jerry) Bremmer, and served as a cash cow for highly paid private mercenary soldiers from the corporate political complex. Although conventional wisdom and most Americans believe that the United States was the victor in the 2003 Iraq War, a closer examination of the facts on the ground, such as the latest suicide bombing on 61 Shiite males, indicates that the Islamic Republic of Iran is the true winner of the Iraq War.

Although most Americans are spoon fed their news through the mainstream press and cannot see the larger picture, a book by Peter Galbraith entitled, Unintended Consequences- How War in Iraq Strengthened America’s Enemies, gives a historical perspective on the current situation in Iraq. Unlike some of the mainstream political pundits like David Brooks from the right or Thomas Friedman from the left, Peter Galbraith is an expert on the politics of Iraq and especially Kurdistan and the Kurds. He has followed the Middle East professionally since he began work as a professional staff member on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1979. In addition to his extensive time in Iraq and especially in Kurdistan, Peter Galbraith has also served as an ambassador to Croatia during the Croatia and Bosnia war and then later served as a member with the U.N. Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET).

By deconstructing all of the Bush administration’s blunders in prosecuting the war and the subsequent occupation, the book offers an informed viewpoint in how the actions of Bush political appointees like Paul Bremmer helped institutionalize the ongoing sectarian violence in Iraq today.

The most prominent and well-known examples of how the republican political appointee Paul Bremmer institutionalized the current sectarian violence in Iraq was his 2003 decision to ban members of the top four ranks of the Ba’ath party from public office. This ill-advised decision essential ended the 80-year-old rule the minority Sunnis had on the government and immediately disenfranchised all the country’s experienced bureaucrats.

His next decision dissolved the Iraqi army and security services and made enemies of hundreds of thousands of Sunni men with extensive knowledge of weapons and explosives. Although many supporters of the Bush administration down play this decision, the move dismantled a Sunni-run institution in a Shiite-majority state that had previously committed genocide against the Kurds in the northern part of Iraq and brutally suppressed a Shiite uprising encouraged by the Bush Sr. administration in 1991. Although it would have been hard for Shiites and Kurds to trust Sunni bureaucrats in a post Saddam Hussein Iraq, the firing by an American pro-consul effectively took the decision away from the Iraqis, and hampered future reconciliation between the Sunnis, Kurds, and Shiites.

A power vacuum created by the expulsion of the Ba’ath Party and the minority Sunnis who belonged to it, allowed Shiite political forces to gain control of the government after the Iraqi election in 2005. With control of the government, the Shiite political parties were then able to install Shiites into key ministry positions such as the Iraq Ministry of the Interior, which controls Iraq’s national police force. According to Peter Galbraith, the first minister of the interior in a post Saddam Iraq was Bayan Jabr, who previous job was to head the Badr Corps, a Shiite militia founded by Iran in the 1980s, proving funding, training, arms, and officers. The Bard Corps is now the Badr Organization and as Galbraith writes in Unintended Consequences,
“Iran is the winner of the war that George W. Bush lost. Iran’s closest allies in the world are the Shiite religious parties that, thanks to the American invasion, today run Iraq’s central government”.


The latest sectarian attack by Sunni militants is another tragic by-product of American militarism and Imperial hubris. In embarking on their flawed policy of trying to reshape the Middle East, as advocated by neoconservatives like William Kristol, Dick Cheney and Robert Kagan, the invasion of Iraq has only given Iran it most important strategic victory in over 400 years.

The attack on Shiite men waiting in line for a job with the Iraqi government by al-Qaida, a Sunni fundamentalist terrorist organization, is the latest fallout from inept decisions made by Bush political appointees in the critical post conflict period of 2003 and 2004. Although American voters have a short term and selective memory towards republican leadership during the Bush Administration years, the Sunnis and Shiites do not have that luxury.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Art imitating Life?

Thanks to MikeB302000 for thinking of me when he recently posted this video over at his blog. It is an eerie coincidence that the national security state bad guy in this movie released in 1998 was born on 9-11.

Monday, August 16, 2010

A Gangster for Capitalism


As detailed in a groundbreaking book entitled, War is a Racket, one of the military’s most decorated generals from the Marine Corps; Major General Smedley Butler published a book in 1935 detailing how the U.S. military has been often used like mafia muscle for private corporate interests. The book was so shocking to the American public, that it prompted then Senator Harry Truman to establish a congressional committee in 1941 to investigate the fraud and corruption charges presented by General Smedley Butler in the book.

Butler, a two-time Medal of Honor recipient and the most decorated Marine in U.S. history, wrote in his book:

“I spent 33 years and four months in active military service and during that period I spent most of my time as a high class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism. I helped make Mexico and especially Tampico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street. I helped purify Nicaragua for the International Banking House of Brown Brothers in 1902-1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for the American sugar interests in 1916. I helped make Honduras right for the American fruit companies in 1903. In China in 1927 I helped see to it that Standard Oil went on its way unmolested. Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents”.


I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism. That one sentence says it all. Making the sentence and phrase even the more powerful and alarming at the same time, is that it was written by a man who spent his entire life in the military. This was no bleeding heart liberal politician or some idealistic academic scholar; this was written by a man who was sworn to uphold the principles of the Constitution.

The 1935 book by General Smedley Butler provides historical evidence that using the military for private corporate interests was nothing new for American politicians and decision makers in Washington D.C. However, with the passing of the National Security Act in 1947 and the creation of the Central Intelligence Agency, the decade’s long practice of using American hard power for corporate interests now fell behind a curtain of secrecy during the Cold War era. It is ironic that at about the same time Winston Churchill declared to an American audience at Westminster College, in Fulton, Missouri that an Iron Curtain had fallen across Eastern Europe, a curtain of secrecy enabling a subversion of the U.S. Constitution was occurring in Washington D.C.

One of the first Cold War era examples of how the new National Security Act of 1947 enabled American politicians to continue their decade’s long practice of helping politically connected corporate interests maintain their profit margins in foreign countries, was a decision made by Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1953 to over throw a democratically elected government in Iran. In what has become one of the first examples of a private corporate interest influencing American foreign policy in the Cold War, the 1953 decision by the Eisenhower administration to over throw the government of Mohammed Mossadegh is perhaps the best case example of the negative consequences associated with secrecy united with a corporate political alliance. The 1953 move was so bold that one insightful CIA analyst at the time, warned against possible future “blowback” from installing a leader in Iran supported by the United States.

Clink here to access declassified CIA documents posted by the National Security Archive related to Mohammad Mosaddeq and the 1953 Coup in Iran.

Ranging from acting as a force to gain access to new markets or to over throw any government that might infringe upon corporate profits from politically connected corporations, excuses given by politicians like Dick Cheney to bring democracy to Iraq by military force could not be further from the truth.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Japan's exploding debt bubble and its similarity to America today


The Christian Science Monitor recently published an interesting article on Japan’s exploding debt bubble and the similarities to the current American economy were frightening. Unless the American government and political establishment immediately begin to make the difficult and long overdue decisions related to its own long-term economic health, the United States economy will assuredly face a similar fate.

In reading some of the following paragraphs from the article, all one has to do is replace the years in the Japanese example, and insert the years the stock market, housing and credit bubbles all exploded in America over the last few years.
The prelude to Japan's current crisis began in the early 1990s when its housing and stock market bubbles popped, leading to recession. For the next 20 years, using flashy names like Fiscal Structural Reform Act, and Emergency Employment Measures, and Policy Measures of Economic Rebirth, the government cut taxes, increased spending, and borrowed money to finance itself. Once or twice the government found fiscal religion and raised taxes; however, the economy stuttered and taxes again were lowered and the stimulus story continued.

Today, 20 years into endless stimuli, the Japanese economy is beset by the same rot it was then, except that its debt has tripled – the ratio of debt to gross domestic product (GDP) stands at almost 200 percent, double those of the United States and Germany, and second only to Zimbabwe.

Washington should take heed, because the current US course is disturbingly similar to Japan's. There are several key lessons from Japan's decline, but the most important one is this: We must stop looking for government to be the source of sustainable growth.

What the report by the Christian Science Monitor and nearly every other mainstream media news report always exclude is the amount of U.S. taxpayer dollars that have been pumped into the Japanese economy since the end of the Cold War. The article fails to mention that a large portion of our current national debt is the result of military spending. Instead of getting a peace dividend for all the over priced and unneeded weapons systems the American taxpayer has bought from the military industrial complex during the Cold War, all America has gotten in return are economic contraction and a lower standard of living. The current Great Recession is a brilliant example of how out of control military spending continues to hurt the American economy.

First begun by Ronald Reagan in the 1980s and then by George H.W. Bush, the national debt in America really began to explode under George Bush and Dick Cheney. Over three trillion dollars of America’s debt is a direct result of Bush’s ill advised and disastrous adventure in nation building. Instead of rebuilding Detroit and Buffalo, the Bush administration and the entire political establishment in Washington D.C. decided to rebuild Baghdad and Kabul with high priced military contractors working for politically connected firms like Halliburton, DynCorp, and Blackwater.

At least in Japan its citizens will have their high-speed trains as a legacy of their national debt. What will America and her citizens have to show for its debt?

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Why I like Ike- Part II


A look back at the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower reveals a President who strived to check the growing power of the national security state and the inclination toward militarism in America. Although his record was not perfect during his time in the executive branch and was the first President to abuse the power given to the executive in the newly created National Security Act of 1947, Dwight D. Eisenhower was perhaps the last president to forcibly stand up to the gratuitous power of the military industrial complex. Ironically, in trying to courageously fight the powerful domestic influence of the military industrial complex, a decision made by Eisenhower would contribute to one of his administration’s most embarrassing international moments with the Soviet Union on May 1, 1960, the downing of a U-2 spy plane piloted by CIA officer, Francis Gary Powers.

As it is the case with nearly all historical events, the May 1, 1960 shooting down of the U-2 spy plane was set in motion a year after Dwight D. Eisenhower gave his “Chance for Peace” speech in 1954. Although, unknown to the American public at the time, between 1954 and 1957, a powerful defense corporation in an alliance with Air Force generals and the political support of a U.S. Senator, sought more money to build strategic bombers to fill a supposed strategic bomber gap. This collusion of a politician, a defense contractor and members of the military all shared a common goal to undermine Eisenhower’s New Look defense cuts.

Stuart Symington, a Missouri Democratic who was a fierce opponent of Dwight D. Eisenhower,had his own political aspirations of becoming president. During the debate on Eisenhower's New Look defense cuts, Symington was getting a lot of his information about a strategic bomber gap from Thomas G. Lanphier, a defense contractor executive at Convair, a division of General Dynamics. Perhaps making Eisenhower so suspicious of a strategic bomber gap was Ike’s knowledge that when Senator Stuart Symington was the first Secretary of the U.S. Air Force from 1947 to 1950, Thomas Lanphier was his special assistant. Although Eisenhower suspected the strategic bomber gap between the United States and the Soviet Union might not exist, Eisenhower was unable to counter the political lobbying for more defense appropriations and the fear mongering associated with the false information.

As Eugene Jarecki writes in his book, The American Way of War,
“In many ways Symington is the prototype of the role played by many members of Congress today in lobbying- and fear-mongering-for the desires of the military industrial complex.”

On July 4, 1956 the first U-2 spy mission was flown over the Soviet Union. Using the newly bestowed increase in executive power of the National Security Act of 1947, Dwight D. Eisenhower used the CIA to violate Soviet airspace and risk the chance for war in order to assess the true nature of the Soviet Union strategic bomber forces. Confirming his suspicions of the non-existent strategic bomber gap, Eisenhower wanted to conclusively prove the gap did not exist to avert wasteful military spending. Acting as a true fiscal conservative, comparing his actions to today’s republican leadership with their tax cut policy mindset and continued defense spending increases, shows how badly the quality of leaders in America has deteriorated. Although the flights of the U-2 in 1956 vindicated Eisenhower, by the time the flights were conducted, the number of U.S. Air Force B-47 Stratojets tripled from 329 in 1953 to 1,086 in 1955.

In his book Perils of Dominance, Gareth Porter provides extensive data of the massive arms buildup during the Eisenhower administration and the fact that the Soviet Union had far fewer aircraft than proponents of the bomber gap had claimed. The Soviets, not possessing any forward operating bases, “were unable to project power much further from their own territory”. Even the actual number of aircraft the Soviet’s possessed did not pose the threat as advocated by Symington and other politicians influenced by the military industrial complex.

While the bomber gap was troubling for Eisenhower, in 1957 the surprise launch of the Soviet Union’s Sputnik 1, the Eisenhower administration had yet another fight, this time in the form of being accused of allowing a missile gap to emerge with the Soviet Union. For Eisenhower, and now historians with the same information he had at the time, the missile gap was attributed to the very men who advocated for more B-47 Stratojets and the B-52 Stratofortress. Compounding problems further for Eisenhower, two months after the launch of Sputnik 1, Americans watched in horror as an American Vanguard TV3 rocket exploded on the launch pad.

In the book, Eisenhower and the Missile Gap, Peter Roman who traced the bomber gap myth back to Stuart Symington and Thomas Lanphier, also explains how these two men were again largely responsible for the missile gap charge. As Eugene Jarecki explains in his book, The American Way of War, after the Sputnik launch and the Vanguard explosion,
“Symington’s strident posture reflected a combination of factors; his personal bias towards air power, his closeness to Lanphier and thus to the Atlas missile program and- of growing importance in the 1957-59 timeframe-his presidential ambitions. As the missile gap charge became the rallying cry for Symington’s bid for the Democratic presidential nomination of 1960, his partisan political ambitions became increasingly interwoven with Lanphier and Convair’s private goals”.

Although Symington would later lose in his quest to win the 1960 Democratic nomination, Senator Robert Kennedy began to use the missile gap rhetoric as early as 1958 when he gave a speech on the Senate floor. Eisenhower, concerned that Kennedy would continue to use a mistruth for political gain, authorized CIA director Allen Dulles to share U-2 intelligence that clearly showed Soviet bomber and missile capabilities to the presidential candidate in August 1960. Eisenhower was angered that even after being shown the information, Kennedy as well as Nixon continued to make a political issue out of the false missile gap rhetoric. As Jarecki writes in The American Way of War,
“Eisenhower saw in Kennedy’s conduct a fulfillment of George Washington’s fears of an “over grown military establishment”. “God help this country”, the general turned president was over heard to say in the Oval Office, “when someone sits at this desk who doesn’t know as much about the military as I do”.

It is in this context that students of political science and American history can appreciate why Dwight D. Eisenhower warned the American people about the dangers associated with a military industrial complex.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

I like Ike


Most known for the campaign slogan “I like Ike”, many senior citizens today and a vast majority of Americans from both political parties have a very high regard for Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Well known for his role as the Supreme Allied Commander during World War II, many Americans would be surprised to learn that Dwight Eisenhower was raised by a pacifist mother who was also a Mennonite. Perhaps this is why Dwight D. Eisenhower, a man more known for his ability to wage war, while as President had sought a way to wage peace. A man who was well aware of the brutality and the senseless death that war brings, tried valiantly to fight the growing power of a tangled web of interlocking public and private interests, that he would ultimately call the military industrial complex.

While all political scientists and most of the policy makers in Washington D.C. are acquainted with Eisenhower’s 1961 Farewell Address to Congress, some neoconservative policy makers such as Richard Pearl have tried to say that the term used by Eisenhower was “the work of some speechwriter” and “the Eisenhower warning about the military-industrial-complex was silly at the time”. Although Eisenhower did have speechwriters, before he was president, Eisenhower was Douglas MacArthur’s speechwriter and was known during his career in the Army for the ability to write speeches and to “turn a phrase”. Fully discrediting the accusation of the neoconservative Richard Pearl, one of the main architects of the Iraq War in 2003, is a review of several major policy speeches written by Eisenhower himself during his eight years as President, starting as far back as 1953 during his first 100 days in office.

In a speech known as the “Chance for Peace” given to The American Society of Newspaper Editors on April 16, 1953, he asserted that the Soviet Union was spending vast amounts of on military weapons and it was causing the United States to follow suit. Eisenhower declared that for whatever the reasons behind the arms race, it was diverting national resources and other priorities disproportionately towards military weapons. In his speech Eisenhower declared,
“Every gun is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired, signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed. This world in arms is not spending money alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genesis of its scientists, the hopes of its children”.


In a similar manner and almost word for word of the speech he gave to the American people in 1961, in the “Chance for Peace” speech in 1953 Eisenhower warned about the trade-offs:

“The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this: a modern brink schoolhouse in more than 30 cities. It is two electric power plants, each serving a town of 60,000 population. It is two fine, fully equipped hospitals. It is some 50 miles of concrete highway. We pay for a single fighter with a half million bushels of wheat. We pay for a single destroyer with the homes that could have housed 8,000 people. This, I repeat, is the best way of life to be found on the road the world has been taking. This is not a way of life at all, in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.”


Considering that the speech was given at a time when the Red Scare of Communism was gripping the nation and the United States was involved in a military conflict on the Korean peninsula, the speech by Eisenhower showed the former military general to be a genuine leader of the country. Not only concerned or beholden to the interests of the former institution he spent most of his life in, the “Chance for Peace” speech by Eisenhower in 1953 proved that he was concerned about the interests of all Americans.

Providing the best example of Eisenhower’s humanism and his idolization of General George Washington, was when Eisenhower took the oath of office on January 20, 1953. It was during Eisenhower’s inauguration that he held his hand on two bibles- one used by George Washington at the nation’s first inauguration and the one given to Eisenhower by his mother upon his graduation from West Point.

George Washington, a fellow general turned president, was the model president for Eisenhower to idolize. Like the farewell speech given by Washington in which the first president warned of foreign entanglements and a large standing army, the farewell speech by Dwight D. Eisenhower indicates that the thirty-fourth president of the United States ended his presidency in the same noble manner in which he begun his presidency.

As the United States finds itself mired in perpetual war and a country flirting with insolvency and long term economic stagnation, the actions and deeds by the thirty-fourth president before, during and after his time in office definitively prove him to be one of the greatest patriots in American history.

The State Department's Country Reports on Terrorism 2009

Thanks to the McClatchy blog Nukes and Spooks, for posting the following information related to the 2010 annual State Department Country Reports on Terrorism.

According to the State Department website that posted the report, U.S. law requires the Secretary of State to provide Congress, by April 30 of each year, a full and complete report on terrorism with regard to those countries and groups meeting criteria set forth in the legislation.


Although the report is three months late, here are some of the highlights, as according to Spooks and Nukes, some of them a bit surprising:

* While Osama bin Laden's core al Qaida organization remains the most potent threat to U.S. interests at home and abroad, it wasn't even in the Top Three terrorist groups when it comes to deadly attacks in 2009. Those slots were occupied by the Taliban; the Somalia-based al Shabaab group; and the al Qaida in Iraq "franchise."

* There were just 25 U.S. noncombatant fatalities from terrorism worldwide. (The US government definition of terrorism excludes attacks on U.S. military personnel). While we don't have the figures at hand, undoubtedly more American citizens died overseas from traffic accidents or intestinal illnesses than from terrorism.

* For the first time in the last five years, the number of terrorist incidents in South Asia (including Afghanistan and Pakistan), exceeded the number in the Near East (which includes Iraq).

* Russ Travers, a top official of the National Counterterrorism Center, told a State Department briefing that media reports suggesting an increase in terrorist attacks in Iraq this year are not borne out by data for the first quarter of 2010.

* The number of attacks in Iraq decreased to 2,458 in 2009 from 3,256 in 2008. In terms of fatalities, the numbers were 3,654 in 2009 and 5,013 the year before.

* The number of attacks in Afghanistan nearly doubled, from 1,222 in 2008 to 2,126 in 2009. There was a smaller increase, of 30 percent, in neighboring Pakistan.

* The number of suicide bombings against noncombatants actually declined, by 25 percent, to 299. There were, however, more armed attacks in the style of the 2008 Mumbai, India attacks.

* Well over half of the world's terrorist victims in 2009 were Muslim.

* The idea that the United States was somehow immune from the radicalization that has taken hold in parts of some immigrant communities in Europe has proven over-optimistic.

The report says: "Not only have there been more cases of Americans becoming operatives for foreign terrorist organizations, we have also seen U.S. citizens rise in prominence as proponents of violent extremism. The most notable is al-Qa’ida in the Arabian Peninsula’s Anwar al-Aulaqi, who has become an influential voice of Islamist radicalism among English-speaking extremists."

* Finally, as it is every year, Iran was designated the "most active" state sponsor of terrorism. Which is why the United States invaded Iraq in 2003.


Monday, August 9, 2010

The National Security Act of 1947- How militarism was institutionalized in America

The National Security Act of 1947 and most recently the creation of the Homeland Security Department and the Patriot Act unquestionably prove why the founders of the Constitution were so fearful of a powerful executive within the federal government. For astute students of political science and anti-imperial scholars, the last 65 years has definitively shown why several founders of the U.S. Constitution were so fearful of a powerful executive branch in the federal government.

The National Security Act of 1947, which created the Central Intelligence Agency, the U.S. Air Force, the National Security Council and the executive level position of National Security Director, all tipped the balances of power in Washington DC from a State Department influenced foreign policy towards militarism.

Trapped within the infotainment media bubble of cable news outlets or mainstream press outlets, a large majority of Americans do not have any idea how the National Security Act of 1947 and the seeking of more power by the executive set events in motion that would ultimately lead to the horrific terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. Contrary to the partisan rancor and propaganda that has become the norm for the infotainment media outlets and most of the mainstream press, several anti-imperialist scholars such as Eugene Jarecki, Chalmers Johnson, and Lawrence Wilkerson all recognize that the National Security Act of 1947 has produced unintended negative consequences for the balance of powers among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches in American government.

In the book, The American Way of War, the author Eugene Jarecki devotes an entire chapter explaining the origins of the national security state with the creation of the National Security Act of 1947. In the chapter, Jarecki provides a detailed assessment of each one of the institutions created by the National Security Act of 1947 and how these executive level institutions have subverted or bypassed the structural mechanisms of checks and balances in the Constitution.

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the National Security Act of 1947 was the creation of the National Security Council and the position of the National Security Council Advisor. According to Jarecki, the position of the National Security Advisor “has provided the executive with a covert asset in the decision making process”. As he later points out in the chapter, this ability to provide a covert asset in the decision making process for the executive, has allowed Presidents to avoid responsibility and let the National Security Director take the blame. Some notable cases of this kind of behavior are the decision by Henry Kissinger to bomb Cambodia in 1970 and John Poindexter and his role in the Iran/Contra affair. As Jarecki writes in the chapter,
“While lower level actors like Oliver North were convicted, fined, and indicted in limited ways, the executive himself maintained the privilege to admit error, preserve his deniability, and live on to become one of America’s most revered presidents”.


Similar to Andrew Bacevich, another anti-imperialistic scholar who was also a member of the military, retired Colonel Lawrence Wilkerson acknowledges the creation of the National Security Act of 1947 greatly contributed to militarism in America. In his interview with Eugene Jarecki, Wilkerson explains how diplomatic influence the State Department once had is now overwhelmed by the sheer power of the Department of Defense, the National Security Council, and the Central Intelligence Agency. Driving home this point is the fact that the Department of Defense has a yearly budget of over half a trillion dollars, while the State Department has a budget of only 30 billion dollars. As Jarecki writes, “Of all the monies spent today in the United States on foreign affairs, 93 percent passes through the Department of Defense and only 7 percent goes through the State Department. This simple statistic goes a long way in explaining why America finds herself so often turning to “the military instrument” to solve international problems. One of the most recent examples of turning to the military instrument for use in foreign relations was the story of the U.S. Army being used to provide relief for Pakistani flood victims.

While the creation of the National Security Act of 1947 was meant to correct some of the mistakes that lead up to the attack on Pearl Harbor, the same argument was recently used by the Bush administration to create the Department of Homeland Security.

In both cases, the over blown fears of war and insecurity were cover for a power grab by the executive and a subversion of the checks and balances protected in the U.S. Constitution.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Rolling Stones reporter banned from embed with troops after McChrystal fallout

Thanks to the Yahoo blog, The UpShot, for posting the story and video about a Rolling Stone reporter being banned from an embed.

"This is a symptom of, essentially, the war, and how the war is going," Hastings told "Today" host Meredith Vieira.

"June and July were the deadliest months that we've ever seen in the war in Afghanistan. The war has hit its all-time low in approval ratings," he observed. "So clearly, there's great concern in Washington about how the war is going and the response to this embed -- the response to me on this embed -- sort of indicates that."

You can watch the "Today" interview below.


Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Master Sgt. Todd Nelson






This is a report from The Detriot News.
Master Sgt. Todd Nelson lost his right eye and ear in a flash when a car bomb in Afghanistan exploded, sending fire up his arm and over his head.

Although it's taken years of painstaking work, the military has given him a bright blue eye and ear lightly freckled and pinked from summer sun. They're not flesh and blood, but the glass and silicon replicas are so realistic, so perfectly customized, that they've given Nelson something else: the ability to face the world without shocking it.

"Honestly, people really don't know it's artificial," said Nelson, whose injuries three years ago included third-degree burns, a skull fracture and broken jaw. "In casual social interactions, I see much smaller cases where people stare."

The wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have brought a new kind of patient to the facial prothestics lab at the Lackland Air Force Base: wounded warriors, who have recently suffered heavy burns and multiple traumas. The lab is one of two major facial prosthetic programs in the Defense Department, and it has seen an unprecedented new stream of wounded soldiers.

Before the wars, the 26-year-old lab's patients were almost exclusively cancer and civilian trauma survivors, but "all of that prepared us for wartime, and that's really why our department is here," said lab director Dr. Joe Villalobos.

The lab doesn't track how many soldiers wounded from the war it's treated. However, before the wars began in 2001 and 2003, the facility rarely saw combat-related injuries -- only an occasional Vietnam-era veteran looking for a new prostheses. Now, partly because the lab is across town from the Army's only burn center, wounded warriors make up about one-fifth of the roughly 425 patients they treat each year.

While the technology and capabilities at the lab are available in the civilian world, the Lackland lab has the expertise and resources to give soldiers the best possible care with little concern about the financial burdens that civilian trauma patients might face, he said.



When civil liberties are scarificed for security, it opens the door for government repression

WOW! The name Perfect Citizen just screams of Orwellian repression.

That was a comment made a Wall Street reader in response to a recent announcement that the National Security Agency (NSA) had recently awarded a $ 100 million dollar government contract to the defense conglomerate, Raytheon.

For the relatively few Americans who are paying attention, this story highlights the damage perpetual war imposes on a democracy when citizens give up their civil liberties for more safety and security. This often opens the door for more government repression and an abuse of power in the hands of fewer people. As the United States continues to pursue a policy of global domination through military expansion and aggression, democracy and the rule of law is continuing to be undermined on the domestic home front.

Recent news reports from various sources offer empirical evidence of the deterioration of American civil liberties all in the name of safety and security . Beginning with federal government agencies such as the National Security Agency (NSA), spying into the lives of American citizens all in the name of security, to local and state police forces elevating themselves from above the law, the pendulum shift of power is clearly swinging to the side of the state.

One recent example of the secret spying on American citizens is from a 9 July news article from Reuters that reported on a new program started by the NSA in conjunction with a defense company to “monitor” Internet activity related to power grids and critical infrastructure. First reported on by the Wall Street Journal to most likely inform its readers to buy stock in Raytheon due to the latest government contract, the report is another chilling example of the ever-growing collusion between defense corporations and the government. For the naive Americans foolish enough to fall for the campaign slogan of change, according to the Wall Street Journal report,
The classified program is now being expanded with funding from the multibillion-dollar Comprehensive National Cybersecurity Initiative, which started at the end of the Bush administration and has been continued by the Obama administration, officials said. With that infusion of money, the NSA is now seeking to map out intrusions into critical infrastructure across the country.


Taking a page right out of the classic novel by George Orwell, the latest government surveillance tool is called “Perfect Citizen”. By giving such a friendly name to a government program, the government and its corporate partners fool people into thinking that the agencies and the people using these spy programs will be acting as the prefect citizen. In reality however, a program like Perfect Citizen is probably only the latest surveillance program to monitor any person who is not considered a part of the mainstream.

Hiding behind the guise of national security, the $ 100 million dollar price tag of the “initial” contract awarded to the defense corporation Raytheon is the latest example of wasteful government spending and a government hand out to a politically connected defense corporation. It is shocking that more Americans are not protesting against the amount of money spent on secretive and highly costly surveillance programs, while the infrastructure of America crumbles and deteriorates around them.

In researching this article, there is no mention on Raytheon's website announcing its latest government contract. This is surprising since Raytheon declares in its 2009 Corporate Responsibility Report that
"Raytheon is committed to fostering an ethical business culture and delivering innovative programs that keep ethics front-of-mind".


Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of the $ 100 million dollar cost of the “initial” phase of the Raytheon surveillance program is that there will be no lasting tangible asset for the American taxpayer. If on the other hand, a $ 100 million dollars was spent on funding budget short falls for municipal mass transit systems, like the MTA in New York City which recently cut service on its subway system due to budget constraints, America would be more secure in the long term by not having to import as much foreign oil.

Supporting the claim that the balance of power has shifted from the people to the government, is the story of a motorcyclist being pulled by a Maryland State Trooper for speeding at gunpoint, and then later charged for illegally taping the police officer. The motorcyclist, a Maryland Army National Guard soldier, is now facing a felony charge of five years in prison for illegally taping the officer.

When reviewing the video, it would be interesting to learn what readers over on MikeB302000 would have to say about a plain clothed individual pulling a gun on someone and declaring that they were a cop. As the motorcyclist said in an interview with a local news station reporting on the story, he was more afraid that the plain clothes cop could have been trying to car jack his motorcycle.

Both of these stories are disturbing and are warning signs down the road of America’s ever escalating decline.

Monday, August 2, 2010

Another great essay from one of the best anti-imperial scholars

Andrew Bacevich, a retired Lt. Colonel and a professor of international relations at Boston University, recently published another scathing indictment against the status quo in Washington DC. In his latest forceful yet eloquent essay, Dr. Bacevich informs his audience of the misguided approach U.S. policy makers are making by using military power to pursue peace. Fast becoming one of the premier scholars in the Anti-Imperialist discipline of political science, Bacevich holds nothing back in his latest critical analysis of American foreign policy.

Some of the more memorable highlights of the essay posted on TomDispatch.

Among nations classified as liberal democracies, only two resisted this trend. One was the United States, the sole major belligerent to emerge from the Second World War stronger, richer, and more confident. The second was Israel, created as a direct consequence of the horrors unleashed by that cataclysm. By the 1950s, both countries subscribed to this common conviction: national security (and, arguably, national survival) demanded unambiguous military superiority. In the lexicon of American and Israeli politics, “peace” was a codeword. The essential prerequisite for peace was for any and all adversaries, real or potential, to accept a condition of permanent inferiority. In this regard, the two nations -- not yet intimate allies -- stood apart from the rest of the Western world.

So even as they professed their devotion to peace, civilian and military elites in the United States and Israel prepared obsessively for war. They saw no contradiction between rhetoric and reality.
By 2007, the American officer corps itself gave up on victory, although without giving up on war. First in Iraq, then in Afghanistan, priorities shifted. High-ranking generals shelved their expectations of winning -- at least as a Rabin or Schwarzkopf would have understood that term. They sought instead to not lose. In Washington as in U.S. military command posts, the avoidance of outright defeat emerged as the new gold standard of success.

As a consequence, U.S. troops today sally forth from their base camps not to defeat the enemy, but to “protect the people,” consistent with the latest doctrinal fashion. Meanwhile, tea-sipping U.S. commanders cut deals with warlords and tribal chieftains in hopes of persuading guerrillas to lay down their arms.

A new conventional wisdom has taken hold, endorsed by everyone from new Afghan War commander General David Petraeus, the most celebrated soldier of this American age, to Barack Obama, commander-in-chief and Nobel Peace Prize laureate. For the conflicts in which the United States finds itself enmeshed, “military solutions” do not exist. As Petraeus himself has emphasized, “we can’t kill our way out of" the fix we’re in. In this way, he also pronounced a eulogy on the Western conception of warfare of the last two centuries.

Nearly 20 years ago, a querulous Madeleine Albright demanded to know: “What's the point of having this superb military you're always talking about if we can't use it?” Today, an altogether different question deserves our attention: What’s the point of constantly using our superb military if doing so doesn’t actually work?

Washington’s refusal to pose that question provides a measure of the corruption and dishonesty permeating our politics.

Sunday, August 1, 2010

How war has helped create an Imperial Presidency

Not many people would think that the character of Franklin D. Roosevelt and George W. Bush or the conflicts these two men presided over during their time as President have very much in common. The moral leadership of these two men could not be more different, with FDR seen as a national hero, guiding the country to a military, moral, and leadership triumph, while Bush is seen in the reverse on all counts. However a close examination of these two presidencies reveal how the political and economic pressures of war have undermined the republican framework of checks and balances affirmed in the U.S. Constitution by concentrating more power in the executive branch of American government and contributing to the rise of an Imperial Presidency.

The framers of the Constitution were well aware of history and were determined not to repeat the tragedy of Rome, a republic that had fallen through military expansion and an army of professional soldiers following the political ambitions of their leader Julius Cesar. The framers of the Constitution were so wary of war and a powerful executive, that they designed the Constitution to give the power to declare war and raise an Army, to the more representative and populous legislative branch. The framers of the Constitution and in particular, James Madison, wrote that the history of all governments demonstrate that the Executive is the branch of power most interested in war and most prone to it.

It is in this historical context where the similarities of FDR and George W. Bush become more evident. Although FDR and George W. Bush presided over vastly different wars in the terms of their scale, purpose, and intent, a critical assessment of these two conflicts reveal how similar tactics may have been used by the executive branch to get America involved in a conflict. Balanced between the two extremes of conspiracy theorists and empirical evidence, a recently declassified document known as the McCollum Memo, written a year before the attack on Pearl Harbor, sheds some light into the secretive decision making process of the national security state apparatus and the danger that comes with concentrating too much power in the executive branch of the government.

Written by Arthur McCollum, a Japanese-American naval attaché officer who was born in Nagasaki Japan to Baptist missionary parents, this document offered an eight point plan to military leaders and members of Roosevelt’s foreign policy inner circle on how America could provoke Japanese aggression in order to gain public opinion to join the war.

Although President Roosevelt was anxious to get America involved in the war, a majority of Americans opposed the United States entering the war. One of the most influential and powerful political groups of the late 1930s was the America First Committee, a pressure group that embodied the spirit of isolationalism into a national movement. Symbolizing the majority opinion of remaining out of the war in Europe, a Gallop Poll in 1939 taken within days of Hitler’s invasion of Poland found that 90 percent of American’s did not want to get involved in the war. In 1940, this figure would only drop to 88 percent.

It is in this historical context that makes the McCollum memo so important. It is what many conspiracy theorists claim to be the smoking gun of evidence behind the attacks on the World Trade Center in 2001 and how neoconservative members in America were able to implement recommendations they made in the 1990s of projecting American power to enforce a worldwide “Pax Americana”. Many conspiracy theorists believe the McCollum Memo written in 1940 and only declassified in 1994 was known to people within the inner state of government with access to classified documents like the McCollum Memo.

The greatest source of consensus among conspiracy theorists is the connection between the McCollum Memo, the subsequent attack on Pearl Harbor, and the insertion of using the example of “another Pearl Harbor” in a document called Rebuilding America’s Defenses. This provocative policy proposal was written by two leading neoconservatives, William Kristol and Robert Kagan, a year before the September 2001 terrorist attack on the United States.

Further fueling conspiracy theories of a government or inner state involvement in the September 11th terrorist attacks, is the fact that statements from the Rebuilding America’s Defenses article, were later included almost word for word into the 2002 National Security Strategy of the United States of America, more commonly known as the Bush Doctrine.

While some Americans outside of Washington DC may be aware of the link between the 2000 publication Rebuilding America’s Defenses and the subsequent 2002 Bush Doctrine, few Americans recognize how a small amount of unelected people who belong to influential think tanks can wield so much power within the executive branch of American government.
While few Americans know of the link between the terrorist attacks of 2001 and “another Pearl Harbor” neoconservative architects of the Iraq War they were looking for to get political support for the militaristic agenda, even fewer Americans are familiar with executive branch decision by Harry Truman to drop the two atomic bombs on civilian population centers in Japan.

Beginning with historian Robert Stinnett, who started the controversy of suggesting the Roosevelt administration may have sacrificed 3,000 American lives at Pearl Harbor in order for America to enter the war, some historians are now questioning the true motives behind Truman’s decision to use atomic weapons on Japan. New research is indicating that the use of the atomic bombs used on Japan was done more as a preemptive show of force against Russia, rather than the popular belief that the bombs were used to save over one million American lives and to speed up the end of the war.

Citing a June 15, 1945 memo by the Joint War Plans Committee, which assumed a worse-case scenario of 20,000 to 46,000American deaths in an invasion of the Japanese islands, various military leaders and even some scientists who created the bomb such as Albert Einstein, thought the decision to use the atomic weapons was deplorable and was used more as a preemptive show of force against Russia. Having access to the same classified June 15, 1945 memo, many military leaders at the time, such as Dwight D. Eisenhower, had “grave misgivings” about the decision to drop the atomic bombs on Japan, and that “that Japan was already defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary”. Several other military leaders such as Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz, General Douglas MacArthur, and U.S. Fleet Commander Admiral Ernest King all voiced concern with Truman’s decision to use the atomic weapons on a defeated military.

Though many historians agree the decision to drop the nuclear bombs on Japan was to demonstrate America’s new power to potential adversaries like the Soviet Union, there is also growing evidence that the decision to drop the bombs on Japan was also attributed to an inexperienced leader with limited foreign relations experience and the even more darker suspicion of justifying the two billion dollar cost of the Manhattan Project.

Supporting this viewpoint is the revelation by historian Baron Bernstein that Harvard University President and Truman advisor James Conant engineered the drafting and release of the February 1947 Harpers Magazine article, “The decision to use the atomic bomb” by former Secretary of War Henry Lewis Stimson. This article helped shape the public’s understanding of why the nuclear weapons were used on civilian targets and established the widely accepted notion that the bombs saved one million American lives. This close relationship between Harry Truman and James Conant indicates an executive concerned about his legacy and an individual using the press to influence and distort public opinion.

To be fair to Truman and to demonstrate the danger of a too powerful executive branch, when Truman took office in April 1944, he had no idea of the existence of the Manhattan Project. During the Manhattan Project, it was considered that the Vice President did not need to know about the existence of the research being conducted to develop an atomic weapon. Due to the fact that history will never know what FDR’s decision would have been in regards to using the weapon, the secret development of the bomb forever changed the dynamic between America and the world, as well as the relationship between the executive and the other branches of American government.

It is in this perspective that history will not look too harshly on George W. Bush. Most future historians will see his unilateralist use of force in 2003 as a result of the actions first set in motion by FDR in the mid 1930s, which set the precedent for executive overreach and militaristic aggression in the decades that followed the end of World War II.