An Exceptional Military for the Exceptional Nation
by William J. Astore and Tom
Engelhardt Posted
on August 11, 2023
Originally posted
at TomDispatch.
I can still remember my
parents singing a somewhat cleaned-up version of the World War I-era song “You’re in the Army Now.” (“You’re in the Army now, You’re not behind a plow;
You’ll never get rich, you son of a bitch, You’re in the Army now.”) As it
happens, though, that song no longer applies, not if you’re in the upper ranks
of the U.S. military, where you can “retire” directly onto the boards of top military contractors in
the industrial part of the military-industrial-congressional complex that are
making eternal fortunes off the Pentagon budget. If you don’t believe me, check out Lloyd Austin’s career. He retired as a four-star
Army general and joined the board of
Raytheon before Joe
Biden appointed him secretary of defense (as Donald Trump had appointed a
retired Marine four-star general, serving on the board of General Dynamics, to
the same post). It should be shocking. It should be a crisis. It should be
investigated. But no such luck.
Still, as retired Air
Force lieutenant colonel, historian, and TomDispatch regular William Astore suggests today, as far as anyone
in power is concerned, who cares if the U.S. military couldn’t win a war when
it’s a veritable budgetary goldmine? And don’t even dream of doing anything but
adding to that if you hope to succeed in Congress. Democratic Senator Bernie
Sanders has proven the rarest of exceptions for opposing and even calling for cuts to what he’s termed a “bloated” Pentagon budget
(which is expected to hit a trillion dollars annually in the next few years).
But no such luck. Far too many congressional representatives are
literally in thrall to
defense contractors. In
fact, did you even know that Sanders had done so?
With that uniformed
nightmare first-class in mind, settle in for a ride to hell with Astore,
whose Bracing Views newsletter is (to my mind) a must-read. ~ Tom Engelhardt
“The Greatest
Fighting Force in Human History”
The Perpetual Wars
You Aren’t Supposed to Notice
By William J.
Astore
In his message to the
troops prior to the July 4th weekend, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin offered
high praise indeed. “We have the greatest fighting force in human history,” he
tweeted, connecting that claim to the U.S. having patriots of all colors,
creeds, and backgrounds “who bravely volunteer to defend our country and our
values.”
As a retired Air Force
lieutenant colonel from a working-class background who volunteered to serve
more than four decades ago, who am I to argue with Austin? Shouldn’t I just
bask in the glow of his praise for today’s troops, reflecting on my own
honorable service near the end of what now must be thought of as the First Cold
War?
Yet I confess to having
doubts. I’ve heard it all before. The hype. The hyperbole. I still remember
how, soon after the 9/11 attacks, President George W. Bush boasted that this country had “the greatest
force for human
liberation the world has ever known.” I also remember how, in a pep talk given
to U.S. troops in Afghanistan in 2010, President Barack Obama declared them “the finest fighting force that the world
has ever known.” And yet, 15 years ago at TomDispatch, I was already wondering when Americans had first become so proud of, and
insistent upon, declaring our military the world’s absolute best, a force
beyond compare, and what that meant for a republic that once had viewed large
standing armies and constant warfare as anathemas to
freedom.
In retrospect, the
answer is all too straightforward: we need something to boast
about, don’t we? In the once-upon-a-time “exceptional
nation,” what else is
there to praise to the skies or consider our pride and joy these days
except our heroes? After all, this country can no longer boast of
having anything like the world’s best educational outcomes, or healthcare
system, or the most advanced and safest infrastructure, or the best democratic
politics, so we better damn well be able to boast about having “the greatest
fighting force” ever.
Leaving that boast
aside, Americans could certainly brag about one thing this country has beyond
compare: the most expensive military around and possibly ever. No country
even comes close to our commitment of funds to wars, weapons (including nuclear
ones at the Department of Energy), and global dominance. Indeed, the Pentagon’s
budget for “defense” in 2023 exceeds that of the next 10
countries (mostly
allies!) combined.
And from all of this,
it seems to me, two questions arise: Are we truly getting what we pay so dearly
for — the bestest, finest, most exceptional military ever? And even if we are,
should a self-proclaimed democracy really want such a thing?
The answer to both
those questions is, of course, no. After all, America hasn’t won a war in a
convincing fashion since 1945. If this country keeps losing wars routinely and
often enough catastrophically, as it has in places like Vietnam, Afghanistan,
and Iraq, how can we honestly say that we possess the world’s greatest fighting
force? And if we nevertheless persist in such a boast, doesn’t that echo the
rhetoric of militaristic empires of the past? (Remember when we used to think
that only unhinged dictators like Adolf Hitler boasted of having peerless
warriors in a megalomaniacal pursuit of global domination?)
Actually, I do believe
the United States has the most exceptional military, just not in the way its
boosters and cheerleaders like Austin, Bush, and Obama claimed. How is the U.S.
military truly “exceptional”? Let me count the ways.
The Pentagon as a
Budgetary Black Hole
In so many ways, the
U.S. military is indeed exceptional. Let’s begin with its budget. At this very
moment, Congress is debating a colossal “defense” budget of $886 billion for
FY2024 (and all the debate is about issues that have little to do with the military). That
defense spending bill, you may recall, was “only” $740 billion when President
Joe Biden took office three years ago. In 2021, Biden withdrew U.S. forces from
the disastrous war in Afghanistan, theoretically saving the taxpayer nearly $50
billion a year. Yet, in place of any sort of peace dividend, American taxpayers
simply got an even higher bill as the Pentagon budget continued to soar.
Recall that, in his
four years in office, Donald Trump increased military spending by 20%. Biden is
now poised to achieve a similar 20% increase in just three
years in office.
And that increase largely doesn’t even include the cost of supporting Ukraine
in its war with Russia — so far, somewhere between $120 billion and $200 billion and still rising.
Colossal budgets for
weapons and war enjoy broad bipartisan support in Washington. It’s almost as if
there were a military-industrial-congressional
complex at work
here! Where, in fact, did I ever hear a president warning us about that? Oh,
perhaps I’m thinking of a certain farewell address by Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1961.
In all seriousness,
there’s now a huge pentagonal-shaped black hole on the Potomac that’s devouring
more than half of the federal discretionary budget annually. Even when Congress
and the Pentagon allegedly try to enforce fiscal discipline, if not austerity
elsewhere, the crushing gravitational pull of that hole just continues to suck in more money. Bet on that continuing as the
Pentagon issues ever more warnings about a new cold war with China and Russia.
Given its money-sucking
nature, perhaps you won’t be surprised to learn that the Pentagon is remarkably
exceptional when it comes to failing fiscal audits — five of them in a row (the
fifth failure being a “teachable
moment,” according to
its chief financial officer) — as its budget only continued to soar. Whether
you’re talking about lost wars or failed audits, the Pentagon is eternally
rewarded for its failures. Try running a “Mom and Pop” store on that basis and
see how long you last.
Speaking of all those
failed wars, perhaps you won’t be surprised to learn that they haven’t come
cheaply. According to the Costs of War Project at Brown University, roughly 937,000 people have died since 9/11/2001 thanks to direct
violence in this country’s “Global War on Terror” in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
and elsewhere. (And the deaths of another 3.6 to 3.7
million people may
be indirectly attributable to those same post-9/11 conflicts.) The financial
cost to the American taxpayer has been roughly $8 trillion and rising even as the U.S. military continues
its counterterror preparations and activities in 85 countries.
No other nation in the
world sees its military as (to borrow from a short-lived Navy slogan) “a global force for good.” No other nation divides
the whole world into military commands like AFRICOM for Africa and CENTCOM for the Middle East and
parts of Central and South Asia, headed up by four-star generals and admirals.
No other nation has a network of 750 foreign
bases scattered
across the globe. No other nation strives for full-spectrum dominance through “all-domain
operations,”
meaning not only the control of traditional “domains” of combat — the land,
sea, and air — but also of space and cyberspace. While other countries are
focused mainly on national defense (or regional aggressions of one sort or
another), the U.S. military strives for total global and spatial dominance.
Truly exceptional!
Strangely, in this
never-ending, unbounded pursuit of dominance, results simply don’t matter. The
Afghan War? Bungled, botched, and lost. The Iraq War? Built on lies and lost.
Libya? We came, we
saw, Libya’s leader (and
so many innocents) died. Yet no one at the Pentagon was punished for any of
those failures. In fact, to this day, it remains an accountability-free zone,
exempt from meaningful oversight. If you’re a “modern major
general,” why not pursue
wars when you know you’ll never be punished for losing them?
Indeed, the few
“exceptions” within the military-industrial-congressional complex who stood up
for accountability, people of principle like Daniel Hale, Chelsea Manning, and
Edward Snowden, were imprisoned or exiled. In fact, the U.S. government has
even conspired to imprison a foreign publisher and transparency activist,
Julian Assange, who published the truth about the American war on terror, by
using a World War I-era espionage clause that only applies to American
citizens.
And the record is even
grimmer than that. In our post-9/11 years at war, as President Barack
Obama admitted, “We tortured some folks” — and the only person
punished for that was another whistleblower, John Kiriakou, who did his best to bring those war crimes to our attention.
And speaking of war
crimes, isn’t it “exceptional” that the U.S. military plans to spend upwards of
$2 trillion in the coming decades on a new generation of genocidal nuclear weapons? Those include new stealth bombers and new
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) for the Air Force, as well as new
nuclear-missile-firing submarines for the Navy. Worse yet, the U.S. continues
to reserve the
right to use
nuclear weapons first, presumably in the name of protecting life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness. And of course, despite the countries — nine! — that now possess nukes, the U.S. remains the only
one to have used them in wartime, in the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki.
Finally, it turns out
that the military is even immune from Supreme Court decisions! When SCOTUS
recently overturned affirmative action for college admission, it carved
out an exception for the military academies. Schools like West
Point and Annapolis can still consider the race of their applicants, presumably
to promote unit
cohesion through
proportional representation of minorities within the officer ranks, but our
society at large apparently does not require racial equity for its cohesion.
A Most Exceptional
Military Makes Its Wars and Their Ugliness Disappear
Here’s one of my favorite
lines from the movie The Usual Suspects: “The
greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he did not
exist.” The greatest trick the U.S. military ever pulled was essentially
convincing us that its wars never existed. As Norman Solomon notes in his
revealing book, War Made
Invisible, the
military-industrial-congressional complex has excelled at camouflaging
the atrocious
realities of war,
rendering them almost entirely invisible to the American people. Call it
the new American isolationism, only this time we’re isolated from the harrowing and
horrific costs of war itself.
America is a nation
perpetually at war, yet most of us live our lives with little or no perception
of this. There is no longer a military draft. There are no war bond drives. You
aren’t asked to make direct and personal sacrifices. You aren’t even asked to
pay attention, let alone pay (except for those nearly trillion-dollar-a-year
budgets and interest payments on a ballooning national debt, of course). You
certainly aren’t asked for your permission for this country to fight its wars,
as the Constitution
demands. As President
George W. Bush suggested after the 9/11 attacks, go visit
Disneyworld!
Enjoy life! Let America’s “best and brightest” handle the brutality, the
degradation, and the ugliness of war, bright minds like former Vice President
Dick (“So?”) Cheney and former Secretary of Defense Donald (“I don’t do
quagmires”) Rumsfeld.
Did you hear something
about the U.S. military being in Syria? In Somalia? Did you hear about the U.S. military supporting the
Saudis in a brutal war of repression in Yemen? Did you notice how this country’s military
interventions around the world kill, wound, and displace so many people of
color, so much so that observers speak of the systemic
racism of America’s
wars? Is it truly progress that a more diverse military in terms of “color,
creed, and background,” to use Secretary of Defense Austin’s words, has killed
and is killing so many non-white peoples around the globe?
Praising the all-female-crewed flyover at the last Super Bowl or painting rainbow flags of inclusivity (or even blue and yellow
flags for Ukraine) on cluster munitions won’t soften the blows or quiet the screams. As
one reader of my blog Bracing Views so aptly put it: “The diversity the war parties
[Democrats and Republicans] will not tolerate is diversity of thought.”
Of course, the U.S.
military isn’t solely to blame here. Senior officers will claim their duty is
not to make policy at all but to salute smartly as the president and Congress
order them about. The reality, however, is different. The military is, in fact,
at the core of America’s shadow
government with
enormous influence over policymaking. It’s not merely an instrument of power;
it is power — and exceptionally powerful at that. And that form of power simply
isn’t conducive to liberty and freedom, whether inside America’s borders or
beyond them.
Wait! What am I saying?
Stop thinking about all that! America is, after all, the exceptional nation and
its military, a band of freedom fighters. In Iraq, where war and sanctions
killed untold numbers of Iraqi children in the 1990s, the sacrifice was “worth it,” as former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright
once reassured Americans on 60 Minutes.
Even when government
actions kill children, lots of children, it’s for the greater good. If this
troubles you, go to Disney and take your kids with you. You don’t like Disney?
Then, hark back to that old marching
song of World War
I and “pack up your troubles in your old kit-bag, and smile, smile, smile.”
Remember, America’s troops are freedom-delivering heroes and your job is to
smile and support them without question.
Have I made my point? I
hope so. And yes, the U.S. military is indeed exceptional and being so, being
#1 (or claiming you are anyway) means never having to say you’re sorry, no
matter how many innocents you kill or maim, how many lives you disrupt and
destroy, how many lies you tell.
I must admit, though,
that, despite the endless celebration of our military’s exceptionalism and
“greatness,” a fragment of scripture from my Catholic upbringing haunts me
still: Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a
fall.
Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Books, John Feffer’s
new dystopian novel, Songlands (the final one in his Splinterlands
series), Beverly Gologorsky’s novel Every Body Has
a Story, and
Tom Engelhardt’s A Nation
Unmade by War, as
well as Alfred McCoy’s In the Shadows
of the American Century: The Rise and Decline of U.S. Global Power, John Dower’s The Violent
American Century: War and Terror Since World War II, and Ann Jones’s They Were
Soldiers: How the Wounded Return from America’s Wars: The Untold Story.
William J. Astore, a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF) and professor of
history, is a TomDispatch regular and a senior fellow at the Eisenhower Media Network
(EMN), an organization of critical veteran military and national security
professionals. His personal substack is Bracing Views.
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