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Robert Scheer
Robert Scheer
16 Feb 2012
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No Candidate Will Battle the Military Budget

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Curb your enthusiasm. Even if your favored candidate did well on Super Tuesday, ask yourself if he or she will seriously challenge the bloated military budget that President Bush has proposed for 2009.

If not, military spending will rise to a level exceeding any other year since the end of World War II, and there will be precious little left over to improve education and medical research, fight poverty, protect the environment or anything else a decent person might care about. You cannot spend more than $700 billion on "national security," running what the White House predicts will be more than $400 billion in annual deficits for the next two years, and yet find the money to improve life on the home front.

The conventional wisdom espoused by the mass media is that Bush's budget is a lame duck DOA contrivance, but that assumption is wrong. The 9-11 terrorist attacks have been shamefully exploited by the military-industrial complex with bipartisan support to ramp up military expenditures beyond Cold War levels, even though that war has been over for almost two decades.

This irrational spending spree, which accounts for more than half of all federal discretionary spending, is not likely to end with Bush's departure. Which one of the likely winners from either of the major parties will lead the battle to cut the military budget, and where will they find support in Congress? Both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, the Democratic presidential candidates, have treated the military budget as sacrosanct with their Senate votes and their campaign rhetoric. Clinton is particularly clear on the record as favoring spending more on the military.

Republican presidential candidate John McCain, who previously distinguished himself as a deficit hawk and was almost in a class by himself in taking on the rapacious defense contractors, has thrown in the towel with his inane support for staying in Iraq till "victory," even if it should take a century. It is simply illogical to call for fiscal restraint while committing to an open-ended war in Iraq that has already cost upward of $700 billion.

Bush's request for $515.4 billion for the Defense Department doesn't even include the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, which accounted for nearly $200 billion over the last budget year and which will cost at least $140 billion in 2009.

Add to those numbers $17.1 billion for the Department of Energy's weapons program, more than $40 billion for the Department of Homeland Security and other national security initiatives spread throughout the federal government, and you'll see that my $700 billion figure underestimates the hemorrhaging.

McCain knows, and has frequently stated as a Senate watchdog, that much of the military spending is wastefully superfluous for fighting terrorists who lack any but the most rudimentary weapons. Bush totally betrayed his campaign 2000 promise to reshape the post-Cold War U.S. military when he seized upon the 9-11 attack as an opportunity to reverse the "peace dividend" that his father had begun to return to taxpayers. Instead, Bush II ushered in the most profligate underwriting of weapons systems that are grotesquely irrelevant for combating terrorism.

The United States already spends more than the rest of the world combined on its military without a sophisticated enemy in sight. The Bush budget cuts not a single weapons system, including the most expensive ones designed to combat a Soviet military that no longer exists. Those sophisticated weapons have nothing to do with battling terrorism and everything to do with jobs and the profits that motivate both Democrats and Republicans in Congress.

It is not known whether Osama bin Laden even possesses a rowboat in his naval arsenal, but that won't stop Sen. Joe Lieberman, as is his habit, from pushing for an increase in the defense budget to double the funding for the $3.4 billion submarines built in his home state of Connecticut. Nor does the collapse of the old Soviet Union — and with it the need for enormously expensive stealth fighters to evade radar systems the Soviets never built — dissuade congressional supporters of those planes from pushing for more, not less, than Bush is requesting. Nor does wasting another $8.9 billion on ICBM missile defense have anything to do with stopping terrorists from smuggling a suitcase nuke into this country.

The centerpiece of the Bush legacy is a "war on terror" based on a vast disconnect between military expenditures and actual national security requirements that the likely presidential candidates all fully understand. The question is whether the voters and media will force them to face that contradiction or whether we're in for more of the same — no matter how much the candidates go on about change.

E-mail Robert Scheer at rscheer@truthdig.com. To find out more about Robert Scheer, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.


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