Congressional Amendment Opens Floodgates for War Profiteers and a Major Ground War on Russia
by Medea
Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies Posted on November 14, 2022
If the powerful leaders of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, Senators Jack Reed (D) and Jim Inhofe (R), have their way, Congress
will soon invoke wartime emergency powers to
build up even greater stockpiles of Pentagon weapons. The amendment is
supposedly designed to facilitate replenishing the weapons the United States
has sent to Ukraine, but a look at the wish list contemplated in this amendment
reveals a different story.
Reed and Inhofe’s idea is to tuck their wartime
amendment into the FY2023 National Defense Appropriation Act (NDAA) that will
be passed during the lame-duck session before the end of the year. The amendment
sailed through the Armed Services Committee in mid-October and, if it becomes
law, the Department of Defense will be allowed to lock in multi-year contracts
and award non-competitive contracts to arms manufacturers for Ukraine-related
weapons.
If the Reed/Inhofe amendment is really aimed at
replenishing the Pentagon’s supplies, then why do the quantities in its wish
list vastly surpass those sent to Ukraine?
Let’s do the
comparison:
- The current star of U.S. military aid to Ukraine is Lockheed
Martin’s HIMARS rocket
system, the same weapon US Marines used to help reduce much of Mosul, Iraq’s second-largest
city, to rubble in 2017. The US has only sent 38 HIMARS systems to Ukraine,
but Senators Reed and Inhofe plan to "reorder" 700 of them, with
100,000 rockets, which could cost up to $4 billion.
- Another artillery weapon provided to Ukraine is the M777 155
mm howitzer. To "replace" the 142 M777s sent to Ukraine, the
senators plan to order 1,000 of them, at an estimated cost of $3.7
billion, from BAE Systems.
- HIMARS launchers can also fire Lockheed Martin’s long-range (up to
190 miles) MGM-140 ATACMS
missiles, which the US has not sent to Ukraine. In fact, the US has only
ever fired 560 of them, mostly in Iraq in 2003. The even longer-range
"Precision Strike Missile," formerly prohibited under the INF Treaty renounced by Trump, will start replacing the ATACMS in 2023,
yet the Reed-Inhofe Amendment would buy 6,000 ATACMS, 10 times more than
the US has ever used, at an estimated cost of $600 million.
- Reed and Inhofe plan to buy 20,000 Stinger anti-aircraft
missiles from Raytheon. But Congress already spent $340 million for 2,800
Stingers to replace the 1,400 sent to Ukraine. Reed and Inhofe’s amendment
will "re-replenish" the Pentagon’s stocks 14 times over, which
could cost $2.4 billion.
- The United States has supplied Ukraine with only two Harpoon
anti-ship missile systems – already a provocative escalation – but the
amendment includes 1,000 Boeing Harpoon missiles (at about $1.4 billion) and 800 newer
Kongsberg Naval Strike Missiles (about $1.8 billion), the Pentagon’s replacement for the
Harpoon.
- The Patriot air
defense system is another weapon the US has not sent to Ukraine because
each system can cost a billion dollars and the basic training course for
technicians to maintain and repair it takes more than a year to complete.
And yet the Inhofe-Reed wish list includes 10,000 Patriot missiles, plus
launchers, which could add up to $30 billion.
ATACMS, Harpoons, and Stingers are all weapons the
Pentagon was already phasing out, so why spend billions of dollars to buy
thousands of them now? What is this really all about? Is
this amendment a particularly egregious example of war profiteering by the
military-industrial-Congressional complex?
Or is the United States really preparing to fight a major ground war against
Russia?
Our best judgment is that both are true.
Looking at the weapons list, military analyst and
retired Marine Colonel Mark Cancian noted:
"This isn’t replacing what we’ve given [Ukraine]. It’s building stockpiles
for a major ground war [with Russia] in the future. This is not the list you
would use for China. For China, we’d have a very different list."
President Biden says he will not send US troops to
fight Russia because that would be World War III.
But the longer the war goes on and the more it escalates, the more it becomes
clear that US forces are directly involved in many aspects of the war: helping to plan Ukrainian
operations; providing satellite-based intelligence;
waging cyber warfare, and operating covertly inside
Ukraine as special operations forces and CIA paramilitaries. Now Russia has
accused British special operations forces of direct roles in
a maritime drone attack on Sevastopol and the destruction of the Nord Stream
gas pipelines.
As US involvement in the war has escalated despite
Biden’s broken promises,
the Pentagon must have drawn up contingency plans for a full-scale war between
the United States and Russia. If those plans are ever executed, and if they do
not immediately trigger a world-ending nuclear war,
they will require vast quantities of specific weapons, and that is the purpose
of the Reed-Inhofe stockpiles.
At the same time, the amendment seems to respond
to complaints by
the weapons manufacturers that the Pentagon was "moving too slowly"
in spending the vast sums appropriated for Ukraine. While over $20 billion has
been allocated for weapons, contracts to actually buy weapons for Ukraine and
replace the ones sent there so far totaled only $2.7 billion by early November.
So the expected arms sales bonanza had not yet
materialized, and the weapons makers were getting impatient. With the rest of the world increasingly
calling for diplomatic negotiations, if Congress didn’t get moving, the war
might be over before the arms makers’ much-anticipated jackpot ever arrived.
Mark Cancian explained to DefenseNews,
"We’ve been hearing from industry when we talk to them about this issue,
that they want to see a demand signal."
When the Reed-Inhofe Amendment sailed through
committee in mid-October, it was clearly the "demand signal" the
merchants of death were looking for. The stock prices of Lockheed Martin,
Northrop Grumman, and General Dynamics took off like antiaircraft missiles,
exploding to all-time highs by the end of the month.
Julia Gledhill, an analyst at the Project on
Government Oversight, decried the wartime emergency provisions in the
amendment, saying it "further deteriorates already weak guardrails in
place to prevent corporate price gouging of the military."
Opening the doors to multi-year, non-competitive,
multi-billion dollar military contracts shows how the American people are
trapped in a vicious spiral of war and military spending. Each new war becomes
a pretext for further increases in military spending, much of it unrelated to
the current war that provides cover for the increase. Military budget analyst
Carl Conetta demonstrated (see Executive Summary)
in 2010, after years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq, that "those
operations account(ed) for only 52% of the surge" in US military spending
during that period.
Andrew Lautz of the National Taxpayers’ Union now calculates
that the base Pentagon budget will exceed $1 trillion per year by
2027, five years earlier than projected by the Congressional Budget Office. But
if we factor in at least $230 billion per year in military-related costs in the
budgets of other departments, like Energy (for nuclear weapons), Veterans
Affairs, Homeland Security, Justice (FBI cybersecurity), and State, and national
insecurity spending has already hit the trillion dollars per year mark, gobbling
up two-thirds of
annual discretionary spending.
America’s exorbitant investment in each new generation
of weapons makes it nearly impossible for politicians of either party to
recognize, let alone admit to the public, that American weapons and wars have
been the cause of many of the world’s problems, not the solution, and that they
cannot solve the latest foreign policy crisis either.
Senators Reed and Inhofe will defend their amendment
as a prudent step to deter and prepare for a Russian escalation of the war, but
the spiral of escalation we are locked into is not one-sided. It is the result
of escalatory actions by both sides, and the huge arms buildup authorized by
this amendment is a dangerously provocative escalation by the US side that will
increase the danger of the World War that President Biden has promised to avoid
After the catastrophic wars and ballooning US military
budgets of the past 25 years, we should be wise by now to the escalatory nature
of the vicious spiral in which we are caught. And after flirting with
Armageddon for 45 years in the last Cold War, we should also be wise to the
existential danger of engaging in this kind of brinkmanship with nuclear-armed
Russia. So, if we are wise, we will oppose the Reed/Inhofe Amendment.
Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies are the
authors of War in Ukraine: Making Sense of a
Senseless Conflict, available from OR Books in
November 2022.
Medea Benjamin is the cofounder of CODEPINK for Peace,
and the author of several books, including Inside Iran: The Real History and Politics of
the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Nicolas J. S. Davies is an independent
journalist, a researcher with CODEPINK, and the author of Blood on Our Hands: The American Invasion and
Destruction of Iraq.
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