The Military-Industrial Complex
It's Much Later Than You Think
by Chalmers Johnson
www.tomdispatch.com/, July 27,
2008
Most Americans have a rough idea what
the term "military-industrial complex" means when they
come across it in a newspaper or hear a politician mention it.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower introduced the idea to the public
in his farewell address of January 17, 1961. "Our military
organization today bears little relation to that known by any
of my predecessors in peacetime," he said, "or indeed
by the fighting men of World War II and Korea... We have been
compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions...
We must not fail to comprehend its grave implications... We must
guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether
sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex."
Although Eisenhower's reference to the
military-industrial complex is, by now, well-known, his warning
against its "unwarranted influence" has, I believe,
largely been ignored. Since 1961, there has been too little serious
study of, or discussion of, the origins of the military-industrial
complex, how it has changed over time, how governmental secrecy
has hidden it from oversight by members of Congress or attentive
citizens, and how it degrades our Constitutional structure of
checks and balances.
From its origins in the early 1940s, when
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt was building up his "arsenal
of democracy," down to the present moment, public opinion
has usually assumed that it involved more or less equitable relations
- often termed a "partnership" - between the high command
and civilian overlords of the United States military and privately-owned,
for-profit manufacturing and service enterprises. Unfortunately,
the truth of the matter is that, from the time they first emerged,
these relations were never equitable.
In the formative years of the military-industrial
complex, the public still deeply distrusted privately owned industrial
firms because of the way they had contributed to the Great Depression.
Thus, the leading role in the newly emerging relationship was
played by the official governmental sector. A deeply popular,
charismatic president, FDR sponsored these public-private relationships.
They gained further legitimacy because their purpose was to rearm
the country, as well as allied nations around the world, against
the gathering forces of fascism. The private sector was eager
to go along with this largely as a way to regain public trust
and disguise its wartime profit-making.
In the late 1930s and early 1940s, Roosevelt's
use of public-private "partnerships" to build up the
munitions industry, and thereby finally overcome the Great Depression,
did not go entirely unchallenged. Although he was himself an implacable
enemy of fascism, a few people thought that the president nonetheless
was coming close to copying some of its key institutions. The
leading Italian philosopher of fascism, the neo-Hegelian Giovanni
Gentile, once argued that it should more appropriately be called
"corporatism" because it was a merger of state and corporate
power. (See Eugene Jarecki's The American Way of War, p. 69.)
Some critics were alarmed early on by
the growing symbiotic relationship between government and corporate
officials because each simultaneously sheltered and empowered
the other, while greatly confusing the separation of powers. Since
the activities of a corporation are less amenable to public or
congressional scrutiny than those of a public institution, public-private
collaborative relationships afford the private sector an added
measure of security from such scrutiny. These concerns were ultimately
swamped by enthusiasm for the war effort and the postwar era of
prosperity that the war produced.
Beneath the surface, however, was a less
well recognized movement by big business to replace democratic
institutions with those representing the interests of capital.
This movement is today ascendant. (See Thomas Frank's new book,
The Wrecking Crew: How Conservatives Rule, for a superb analysis
of Ronald Reagan's slogan "government is not a solution to
our problem, government is the problem.") Its objectives
have long been to discredit what it called "big government,"
while capturing for private interests the tremendous sums invested
by the public sector in national defense. It may be understood
as a slow-burning reaction to what American conservatives believed
to be the socialism of the New Deal.
Perhaps the country's leading theorist
of democracy, Sheldon S. Wolin, has written a new book, Democracy
Incorporated, on what he calls "inverted totalitarianism"
- the rise in the U.S. of totalitarian institutions of conformity
and regimentation shorn of the police repression of the earlier
German, Italian, and Soviet forms. He warns of "the expansion
of private (i.e., mainly corporate) power and the selective abdication
of governmental responsibility for the well-being of the citizenry."
He also decries the degree to which the so-called privatization
of governmental activities has insidiously undercut our democracy,
leaving us with the widespread belief that government is no longer
needed and that, in any case, it is not capable of performing
the functions we have entrusted to it.
Wolin writes:
"The privatization of public services
and functions manifests the steady evolution of corporate power
into a political form, into an integral, even dominant partner
with the state. It marks the transformation of American politics
and its political culture, from a system in which democratic practices
and values were, if not defining, at least major contributory
elements, to one where the remaining democratic elements of the
state and its populist programs are being systematically dismantled."
(p. 284)
Mercenaries at Work
The military-industrial complex has changed
radically since World War II or even the height of the Cold War.
The private sector is now fully ascendant. The uniformed air,
land, and naval forces of the country as well as its intelligence
agencies, including the CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), the
NSA (National Security Agency), the DIA (Defense Intelligence
Agency), and even clandestine networks entrusted with the dangerous
work of penetrating and spying on terrorist organizations are
all dependent on hordes of "private contractors." In
the context of governmental national security functions, a better
term for these might be "mercenaries" working in private
for profit-making companies.
Tim Shorrock, an investigative journalist
and the leading authority on this subject, sums up this situation
devastatingly in his new book, Spies for Hire: The Secret World
of Intelligence Outsourcing. The following quotes are a précis
of some of his key findings:
"In 2006? the cost of America's spying
and surveillance activities outsourced to contractors reached
$42 billion, or about 70 percent of the estimated $60 billion
the government spends each year on foreign and domestic intelligence?
[The] number of contract employees now exceeds [the CIA's] full-time
workforce of 17,500? Contractors make up more than half the workforce
of the CIA's National Clandestine Service (formerly the Directorate
of Operations), which conducts covert operations and recruits
spies abroad?
"To feed the NSA's insatiable demand
for data and information technology, the industrial base of contractors
seeking to do business with the agency grew from 144 companies
in 2001 to more than 5,400 in 2006? At the National Reconnaissance
Office (NRO), the agency in charge of launching and maintaining
the nation's photoreconnaissance and eavesdropping satellites,
almost the entire workforce is composed of contract employees
working for [private] companies? With an estimated $8 billion
annual budget, the largest in the IC [intelligence community],
contractors control about $7 billion worth of business at the
NRO, giving the spy satellite industry the distinction of being
the most privatized part of the intelligence community?
"If there's one generalization to
be made about the NSA's outsourced IT [information technology]
programs, it is this: they haven't worked very well, and some
have been spectacular failures? In 2006, the NSA was unable to
analyze much of the information it was collecting? As a result,
more than 90 percent of the information it was gathering was being
discarded without being translated into a coherent and understandable
format; only about 5 percent was translated from its digital form
into text and then routed to the right division for analysis.
"The key phrase in the new counterterrorism
lexicon is 'public-private partnerships'? In reality, 'partnerships'
are a convenient cover for the perpetuation of corporate interests."
(pp. 6, 13-14, 16, 214-15, 365)
Several inferences can be drawn from Shorrock's
shocking expos?. One is that if a foreign espionage service wanted
to penetrate American military and governmental secrets, its easiest
path would not be to gain access to any official U.S. agencies,
but simply to get its agents jobs at any of the large intelligence-oriented
private companies on which the government has become remarkably
dependent. These include Science Applications International Corporation
(SAIC), with headquarters in San Diego, California, which typically
pays its 42,000 employees higher salaries than if they worked
at similar jobs in the government; Booz Allen Hamilton, one of
the nation's oldest intelligence and clandestine-operations contractors,
which, until January 2007, was the employer of Mike McConnell,
the current director of national intelligence and the first private
contractor to be named to lead the entire intelligence community;
and CACI International, which, under two contracts for "information
technology services," ended up supplying some two dozen interrogators
to the Army at Iraq's already infamous Abu Ghraib prison in 2003.
According to Major General Anthony Taguba, who investigated the
Abu Ghraib torture and abuse scandal, four of CACI's interrogators
were "either directly or indirectly responsible" for
torturing prisoners. (Shorrock, p. 281)
Remarkably enough, SAIC has virtually
replaced the National Security Agency as the primary collector
of signals intelligence for the government. It is the NSA's largest
contractor, and that agency is today the company's single largest
customer.
There are literally thousands of other
profit-making enterprises that work to supply the government with
so-called intelligence needs, sometimes even bribing Congressmen
to fund projects that no one in the executive branch actually
wants. This was the case with Congressman Randy "Duke"
Cunningham, Republican of California's 50th District, who, in
2006, was sentenced to eight-and-a-half years in federal prison
for soliciting bribes from defense contractors. One of the bribers,
Brent Wilkes, snagged a $9.7 million contract for his company,
ADCS Inc. ("Automated Document Conversion Systems")
to computerize the century-old records of the Panama Canal dig!
A Country Drowning in Euphemisms
The United States has long had a sorry
record when it comes to protecting its intelligence from foreign
infiltration, but the situation today seems particularly perilous.
One is reminded of the case described in the 1979 book by Robert
Lindsey, The Falcon and the Snowman (made into a 1985 film of
the same name). It tells the true story of two young Southern
Californians, one with a high security clearance working for the
defense contractor TRW (dubbed "RTX" in the film), and
the other a drug addict and minor smuggler. The TRW employee is
motivated to act by his discovery of a misrouted CIA document
describing plans to overthrow the prime minister of Australia,
and the other by a need for money to pay for his addiction.
They decide to get even with the government
by selling secrets to the Soviet Union and are exposed by their
own bungling. Both are sentenced to prison for espionage. The
message of the book (and film) lies in the ease with which they
betrayed their country - and how long it took before they were
exposed and apprehended. Today, thanks to the staggering over-privatization
of the collection and analysis of foreign intelligence, the opportunities
for such breaches of security are widespread.
I applaud Shorrock for his extraordinary
research into an almost impenetrable subject using only openly
available sources. There is, however, one aspect of his analysis
with which I differ. This is his contention that the wholesale
takeover of official intelligence collection and analysis by private
companies is a form of "outsourcing." This term is usually
restricted to a business enterprise buying goods and services
that it does not want to manufacture or supply in-house. When
it is applied to a governmental agency that turns over many, if
not all, of its key functions to a risk-averse company trying
to make a return on its investment, "outsourcing" simply
becomes a euphemism for mercenary activities.
As David Bromwich, a political critic
and Yale professor of literature, observed in the New York Review
of Books:
"The separate bookkeeping and accountability
devised for Blackwater, DynCorp, Triple Canopy, and similar outfits
was part of a careful displacement of oversight from Congress
to the vice-president and the stewards of his policies in various
departments and agencies. To have much of the work parceled out
to private companies who are unaccountable to army rules or military
justice, meant, among its other advantages, that the cost of the
war could be concealed beyond all detection."
Euphemisms are words intended to deceive.
The United States is already close to drowning in them, particularly
new words and terms devised, or brought to bear, to justify the
American invasion of Iraq - coinages Bromwich highlights like
"regime change," "enhanced interrogation techniques,"
"the global war on terrorism," "the birth pangs
of a new Middle East," a "slight uptick in violence,"
"bringing torture within the law," "simulated drowning,"
and, of course, "collateral damage," meaning the slaughter
of unarmed civilians by American troops and aircraft followed
- rarely - by perfunctory apologies. It is important that the
intrusion of unelected corporate officials with hidden profit
motives into what are ostensibly public political activities not
be confused with private businesses buying Scotch tape, paper
clips, or hubcaps.
The wholesale transfer of military and
intelligence functions to private, often anonymous, operatives
took off under Ronald Reagan's presidency, and accelerated greatly
after 9/11 under George W. Bush and Dick Cheney. Often not well
understood, however, is this: The biggest private expansion into
intelligence and other areas of government occurred under the
presidency of Bill Clinton. He seems not to have had the same
anti-governmental and neoconservative motives as the privatizers
of both the Reagan and Bush II eras. His policies typically involved
an indifference to - perhaps even an ignorance of - what was actually
being done to democratic, accountable government in the name of
cost-cutting and allegedly greater efficiency. It is one of the
strengths of Shorrock's study that he goes into detail on Clinton's
contributions to the wholesale privatization of our government,
and of the intelligence agencies in particular.
Reagan launched his campaign to shrink
the size of government and offer a large share of public expenditures
to the private sector with the creation in 1982 of the "Private
Sector Survey on Cost Control." In charge of the survey,
which became known as the "Grace Commission," he named
the conservative businessman, J. Peter Grace, Jr., chairman of
the W.R. Grace Corporation, one of the world's largest chemical
companies - notorious for its production of asbestos and its involvement
in numerous anti-pollution suits. The Grace Company also had a
long history of investment in Latin America, and Peter Grace was
deeply committed to undercutting what he saw as leftist unions,
particularly because they often favored state-led economic development.
The Grace Commission's actual achievements
were modest. Its biggest was undoubtedly the 1987 privatization
of Conrail, the freight railroad for the northeastern states.
Nothing much else happened on this front during the first Bush's
administration, but Bill Clinton returned to privatization with
a vengeance.
According to Shorrock:
"Bill Clinton? picked up the cudgel
where the conservative Ronald Reagan left off and? took it deep
into services once considered inherently governmental, including
high-risk military operations and intelligence functions once
reserved only for government agencies. By the end of [Clinton's
first] term, more than 100,000 Pentagon jobs had been transferred
to companies in the private sector - among them thousands of jobs
in intelligence? By the end of [his second] term in 2001, the
administration had cut 360,000 jobs from the federal payroll and
the government was spending 44 percent more on contractors than
it had in 1993." (pp. 73, 86)
These activities were greatly abetted
by the fact that the Republicans had gained control of the House
of Representatives in 1994 for the first time in 43 years. One
liberal journalist described "outsourcing as a virtual joint
venture between [House Majority Leader Newt] Gingrich and Clinton."
The right-wing Heritage Foundation aptly labeled Clinton's 1996
budget as the "boldest privatization agenda put forth by
any president to date." (p. 87)
After 2001, Bush and Cheney added an ideological
rationale to the process Clinton had already launched so efficiently.
They were enthusiastic supporters of "a neoconservative drive
to siphon U.S. spending on defense, national security, and social
programs to large corporations friendly to the Bush administration."
(pp. 72-3)
The Privatization - and Loss - of Institutional
Memory
The end result is what we see today: a
government hollowed out in terms of military and intelligence
functions. The KBR Corporation, for example, supplies food, laundry,
and other personal services to our troops in Iraq based on extremely
lucrative no-bid contracts, while Blackwater Worldwide supplies
security and analytical services to the CIA and the State Department
in Baghdad. (Among other things, its armed mercenaries opened
fire on, and killed, 17 unarmed civilians in Nisour Square, Baghdad,
on September 16, 2007, without any provocation, according to U.S.
military reports.) The costs - both financial and personal - of
privatization in the armed services and the intelligence community
far exceed any alleged savings, and some of the consequences for
democratic governance may prove irreparable.
These consequences include: the sacrifice
of professionalism within our intelligence services; the readiness
of private contractors to engage in illegal activities without
compunction and with impunity; the inability of Congress or citizens
to carry out effective oversight of privately-managed intelligence
activities because of the wall of secrecy that surrounds them;
and, perhaps most serious of all, the loss of the most valuable
asset any intelligence organization possesses - its institutional
memory.
Most of these consequences are obvious,
even if almost never commented on by our politicians or paid much
attention in the mainstream media. After all, the standards of
a career CIA officer are very different from those of a corporate
executive who must keep his eye on the contract he is fulfilling
and future contracts that will determine the viability of his
firm. The essence of professionalism for a career intelligence
analyst is his integrity in laying out what the U.S. government
should know about a foreign policy issue, regardless of the political
interests of, or the costs to, the major players.
The loss of such professionalism within
the CIA was starkly revealed in the 2002 National Intelligence
Estimate on Iraq's possession of weapons of mass destruction.
It still seems astonishing that no senior official, beginning
with Secretary of State Colin Powell, saw fit to resign when the
true dimensions of our intelligence failure became clear, least
of all Director of Central Intelligence George Tenet.
A willingness to engage in activities
ranging from the dubious to the outright felonious seems even
more prevalent among our intelligence contractors than among the
agencies themselves, and much harder for an outsider to detect.
For example, following 9/11, Rear Admiral John Poindexter, then
working for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
of the Department of Defense, got the bright idea that DARPA should
start compiling dossiers on as many American citizens as possible
in order to see whether "data-mining" procedures might
reveal patterns of behavior associated with terrorist activities.
On November 14, 2002, the New York Times
published a column by William Safire entitled "You Are a
Suspect" in which he revealed that DARPA had been given a
$200 million budget to compile dossiers on 300 million Americans.
He wrote, "Every purchase you make with a credit card, every
magazine subscription you buy and medical prescription you fill,
every web site you visit and every e-mail you send or receive,
every bank deposit you make, every trip you book, and every event
you attend - all these transactions and communications will go
into what the Defense Department describes as a ?virtual centralized
grand database.'" This struck many members of Congress as
too close to the practices of the Gestapo and the Stasi under
German totalitarianism, and so, the following year, they voted
to defund the project.
However, Congress's action did not end
the "total information awareness" program. The National
Security Agency secretly decided to continue it through its private
contractors. The NSA easily persuaded SAIC and Booz Allen Hamilton
to carry on with what Congress had declared to be a violation
of the privacy rights of the American public - for a price. As
far as we know, Admiral Poindexter's "Total Information Awareness
Program" is still going strong today.
The most serious immediate consequence
of the privatization of official governmental activities is the
loss of institutional memory by our government's most sensitive
organizations and agencies. Shorrock concludes, "So many
former intelligence officers joined the private sector [during
the 1990s] that, by the turn of the century, the institutional
memory of the United States intelligence community now resides
in the private sector. That's pretty much where things stood on
September 11, 2001." (p. 112)
This means that the CIA, the DIA, the
NSA, and the other 13 agencies in the U.S. intelligence community
cannot easily be reformed because their staffs have largely forgotten
what they are supposed to do, or how to go about it. They have
not been drilled and disciplined in the techniques, unexpected
outcomes, and know-how of previous projects, successful and failed.
As numerous studies have, by now, made
clear, the abject failure of the American occupation of Iraq came
about in significant measure because the Department of Defense
sent a remarkably privatized military filled with incompetent
amateurs to Baghdad to administer the running of a defeated country.
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates (a former director of the CIA)
has repeatedly warned that the United States is turning over far
too many functions to the military because of its hollowing out
of the Department of State and the Agency for International Development
since the end of the Cold War. Gates believes that we are witnessing
a "creeping militarization" of foreign policy - and,
though this generally goes unsaid, both the military and the intelligence
services have turned over far too many of their tasks to private
companies and mercenaries.
When even Robert Gates begins to sound
like President Eisenhower, it is time for ordinary citizens to
pay attention. In my 2006 book Nemesis: The Last Days of the American
Republic, with an eye to bringing the imperial presidency under
some modest control, I advocated that we Americans abolish the
CIA altogether, along with other dangerous and redundant agencies
in our alphabet soup of sixteen secret intelligence agencies,
and replace them with the State Department's professional staff
devoted to collecting and analyzing foreign intelligence. I still
hold that position.
Nonetheless, the current situation represents
the worst of all possible worlds. Successive administrations and
Congresses have made no effort to alter the CIA's role as the
president's private army, even as we have increased its incompetence
by turning over many of its functions to the private sector. We
have thereby heightened the risks of war by accident, or by presidential
whim, as well as of surprise attack because our government is
no longer capable of accurately assessing what is going on in
the world and because its intelligence agencies are so open to
pressure, penetration, and manipulation of every kind.
[Note to Readers: This essay focuses on
the new book by Tim Shorrock, Spies for Hire: The Secret World
of Intelligence Outsourcing, New York: Simon & Schuster, 2008.
Other books noted: Eugene Jarecki's The
American Way of War: Guided Missiles, Misguided Men, and a Republic
in Peril, New York: Free Press, 2008; Thomas Frank, The Wrecking
Crew: How Conservatives Rule, New York: Metropolitan Books, 2008;
Sheldon Wolin, Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the
Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism, Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 2008.]
Chalmers Johnson is the author of three
linked books on the crises of American imperialism and militarism.
They are Blowback (2000), The Sorrows of Empire (2004), and Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic (2006).
Chalmers
Johnson page
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