Eric Margolis in a recent article points
to the many areas that the US feels it is necessary to be involved
militarily including Somalia, Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and in the
Ukraine among many other places. As Margolis points out, trying to
defend everything may be a losing proposition:
To quote Frederick the Great, “he who defends everything, defends nothing.” To which we may add, he who spends on wars everywhere, ends up broke. And he who ignores domestic needs for the sake of imperial glory abroad is cruising for a bruising.
Margolis notes that Obama is being pressured by the media and
hawkish Republican politicians to attack in Syria and confront the
Russians in Eastern Ukraine. Margolis applauds Obama's decision not to
act in haste without having a clear understanding of the results.
Margolis refers to the old saw that fools rush in where angels fear to
tread. He claims that Washington has messed up in the past with its
interventionist policy. The best plan in many situations might be to do
nothing at all or at least leave it to other parties to take action.
The US lost a long war in Vietnam. The results of a decades long war
in Afghanistan and a long occupation of Iraq or even the regime change
in Libya are hardly indications that US intervention has been a huge
success. Some US hawks seem to think that the solution is to stay
longer, spend more money, and lose more US lives.
Margolis claims
that Iraq bombing even at present costs about $7.5 million daily or
over a half billion since June. Almost 8,000 US troops were killed in
action in the Afghan and Iraq wars.
The cost of medical care and
pensions for troops is enormous. The costs climb long after conflict a
particular war may be over as a recent study showed:
".. the cost of caring for Vietnam and first Gulf War veterans is still climbing. But the bill for Iraq and Afghanistan is likely going to be steeper still due to higher rates of survival, more generous benefits and more expensive medical treatments. Of the 1.56 million troops that have been discharged, over half applied to receive lifetime disability payments.. "
An article in the Washington Post suggests
that Washington needs to beef up its expense budget at the same time as
it cuts out some spending such as too generous benefits for veterans.
Given the scandals about veteran's medical treatment, as the article
mentions, it will be a hard political sell to cut spending in these
areas because of the "powerful lobbies" involved:
Every dollar spent on health benefits for retirees is a dollar we can’t spend training and equipping men and women to deal with the Islamic State, Putin and other threats.The moral appears to be that money should be spent liberally to prepare members of the armed forces to fight and risk their lives but after they have served, been wounded or retired, the government should pinch pennies to spend on a new batch.
The article
notes that military pensions represented a $51 billion expenditure in
2014 and was expected to grow to $62 billion in 2024. Even if the size
of the US armed forces actually shrinks in the future these costs will
still rise for some time.
The health care costs in the military budget are expected to rise from
$49 billion in 2014 to $70 billion in inflation-adjusted dollars in
2028. Obviously this is another area the article suggests that is ripe
for reform. While the article stresses that a dollar spent on health
care or pensions is a dollar that is not spent on training and equipping
service members to fight in the myriad locations the US sees action is
required, those dollars also are lost to alternative uses such as
increasing expenditure on education. Finland is able to provide free
post-secondary education for all of its citizens. The US with all its
wealth saddles many of its students with enormous debts.
According to CIA figures the
US spent 640 billion on defense or 4.35 percent of its GDP, the most in
the world, while Finland spent 1.47 percent even though it is right
next door to Russia. The total global expenditure in 2012 was $1747
trillion so one out of every three dollars spent on defense is by the
US.
US infrastructure is in dire need of repair.
The United States spent roughly $100 billion less (in real terms, that is, discounting for inflation) on infrastructure in 2012 than it did in 2002. States
only spend 5 percent of their budgets on transportation. Spending on mass transit has gone up, but we are still spending about $25 billion less than we need to. The American Water Works Association estimates that about $1 trillion will be needed for urgent pipe repairs over the next twenty-five years. The Highway Trust Fund is on track to run up a $77 billion deficit by 2019. These are just a few examples of the many infrastructure programs that are woefully underfunded.
Every
dollar spent on defense is a dollar that cannot be spent on health
care, education, and infrastructure, or helping cities such as Detroit
to come out of bankruptcy. Terrorists will not need to attack the US
homeland. The expense of trying to prevent an attack will ensure that
America's infrastructure simply falls apart. Bridges are already
collapsing. Apparently events such as these are not a threat to US
security.
No comments:
Post a Comment