In an age when American presidents routinely
boast of having the world’s
finest military, where nearly trillion-dollar war
budgets are now a new version of routine, let me bring up one
vitally important but seldom mentioned fact: making major
cuts to military spending would increase U.S. national
security.
Why? Because real national security can neither be measured
nor safeguarded solely by military power (especially the might of a military
that hasn’t won a major war since 1945). Economic vitality matters so much
more, as does the availability and affordability of health care, education,
housing, and other crucial aspects of life unrelated to weaponry and war.
Add to that the importance of a Congress responsive
to the needs of the working poor, the hungry and the homeless among
us. And don’t forget that the moral fabric of our nation should be based
not on a military eternally ready to make war but on a determination to uphold
international law and defend human rights.
It’s high time for America to put aside its
conveniently generic “rules-based order” anchored in imperial imperatives and
face its real problems. A frank look in the mirror is what’s most needed here.
It should be simple really: national security is
best advanced not by endlessly preparing for war, but by fostering
peace. Yet, despite their all-too-loud disagreements,
Washington’s politicians share a remarkably bipartisan consensus when it comes
to genuflecting before and wildly overfunding the military-industrial
complex. In truth, ever-rising military spending and yet more wars are
a measure of how profoundly unhealthy our country actually is…
Peace Must Be Our Profession
What was true then remains true today. Real national defense
should not be synonymous with massive spending on wars and weaponry. Quite the
reverse: whenever possible, wars should be avoided; whenever possible, weapons
should be beaten into plowshares, and those plowshares used to improve the
health and well-being of people everywhere.
Oh, and that Biblical
reference of mine (swords into plowshares) is intentional. It’s
meant to highlight the ancient roots of the wisdom of avoiding war, of
converting weapons into useful tools to sustain and provide for the rest of us.
Yet America’s leaders on both sides of the aisle have long lost
the vision of George McGovern, of John F. Kennedy, of Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Today’s president and today’s Congress, Republicans and Democrats alike, boast
of spending vast sums on weapons, not only to strengthen America’s imperial
power but to defeat Russia and deter China, while bragging all the while of the “good”
jobs they’re allegedly
creatinghere in America in the process. (This country’s major
weapons makers would
agree with them, of course!)…
In today’s climate of perpetual war, the dream of peace
continues to wither. Still, despite worsening odds, it’s important that it must
not be allowed to die. The high ground must be wrested away from our
self-styled “warriors,” who aim to keep the factories of death churning, no
matter the cost to humanity and the planet.
My fellow Americans, we need to wake up from the nightmare of forever
war. This country’s wars aren’t simply being fought “over there” in
faraway and, at least to us, seemingly forgettable places like Syria and
Somalia. In some grim fashion, our wars are already very much being fought right
here in this deeply over-armed country of ours.
George McGovern, a bomber pilot from World War II, knew the
harsh face of war and fought in the Senate for a more peaceful future, one no
longer haunted by debilitating arms races and the prospect of a doomsday
version of overkill. Joining him in that fight was John F. Kennedy, who, in
1963, suggested that “this generation of Americans has already had enough, more
than enough, of war, and hate, and oppression.”
If only.
Today’s generation of “leaders” seems not yet to have had their
fill of war, hate, and oppression. That tragic fact — not China, not Russia,
not any foreign power — is now the greatest threat to this country’s “national
security.” And it’s a threat only aggravated by ever
more colossal Pentagon budgets still being rubberstamped by a
spinelessly complicit Congress.
to read the entire article from Counterpunch, click here: Pentagon Spending and National (In)Security
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