Threats of Our Own Making
by Ivan Eland
www.antiwar.com, February 18,
2008
The Pentagon has long had a conflict of
interest. The Department of Defense builds the weapons of war
(albeit in a grossly inefficient manner using a captive defense
industry that is a ward of the state). Yet the department also
supervises and funds 85 percent of the intelligence effort to
identify threats that those weapons, at least theoretically, are
designed to counter. Thus, political pressure for more business
from states and congressional districts containing defense industries
leads the U.S. government to inflate external threats to justify
ever greater defense spending. The Pentagon helps generate such
political pressure by distributing defense contracts and subcontracts,
not on the basis of the best or most efficient defense companies,
but to companies in as many states and congressional districts
as possible. Such is the way the military-industrial complex -
identified by president and former general Dwight Eisenhower -
works.
Of course, it is much easier to find new
threats to highlight if you help create them yourself. A classic
case of threat-generation occurred with NATO expansion. NATO,
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, was originally created
after World War II as a defensive alliance against possible Soviet
expansionism in Europe. After the Cold War, despite the eclipse
of its reason for being, NATO started expanding its territory
and mission. The alliance admitted former Soviet allies in Eastern
Europe and republics of the defunct USSR, which implanted a hostile
alliance on a weakened Russia's doorstep. NATO became even more
threatening to Russia because, at the same time, the alliance
shifted its mission from defending the soil of member countries
to offensive missions outside the treaty area - for example, bombing
Bosnia, Kosovo, and Serbia.
All of this expansion of territory and
mission was done under the guise of transitioning new European
members from communist to capitalist societies and stabilizing
other areas in Europe and the world. Of course, admitting Eastern
European countries to the economically oriented European Union
would have sufficed to obtain the former objective; admitting
the new democracies to NATO merely caused these resource-deficient
countries to spend more on defense. As for the latter goal, it
is questionable whether NATO has stabilized countries through
attacking or occupying them. The real reason for NATO expansion
was to expand U.S. influence in Europe while Russia was weakened.
During the debates on NATO expansion during
the mid-nineties, many people, including me, warned that kicking
the Russian bear when he was down might come back to bite the
United States. The United States continues to deepen its ties
in the former Soviet sphere of influence by proposing that a missile-defense
system be installed in Poland and the Czech Republic to ostensibly
defend against Iranian long-range missiles, which that nation
will not have for some time. Yet the bear is no longer hibernating.
Today's Russia - buoyed by revenues from higher oil and natural
gas prices, economic growth, and a more assertive leader - is
no longer the weak Russia of the 1990s.
Yet Russia's new assertiveness, threats
of a military buildup, and strident opposition to the installation
of U.S. missile defense in Europe are being portrayed as arising
out of the deepening autocracy of the Putin regime. They are also
being used to justify the need for maintaining a vigorous NATO
alliance. For example, Michael Gerson, a former Bush administration
speechwriter-turned-Washington Post columnist, recently wrote
that "it seems wise to maintain a military alliance of democracies
in Europe, with Russia increasingly convinced that one Cold War
was not enough." This shocking rewrite of history ignores
a record of post-Cold War U.S. meddling in the former Soviet sphere
of influence in order to reduce Russia's influence and expand
that of the United States. In contrast, Russia has not meddled
in the U.S. sphere of influence in Latin America. Unlike the first
Cold War, the origins of which were cloudy, the blame for any
new Cold War with Russia should be laid firmly on the U.S.' doorstep.
U.S. wars on relatively primitive terrorists and guerrillas are
insufficient to justify the building of new generations of sophisticated
weapons - where the big money is for defense contractors - so
a threat from a nation-state peer competitor has to be invented.
Columnists like Gerson are happy to help.
The trend toward autocracy in Russia is
horrible for the Russian people, but it is little threat to the
United States. Even autocracies have legitimate security concerns,
and Russia has been invaded several times through Eastern Europe,
which is why the Russians are worried about a hostile alliance
on its borders. Empirical evidence shows that authoritarian regimes
aren't necessarily externally aggressive - for example, the dictators
in Burma - and that democracies are no less belligerent than autocracies
in their foreign policies. In fact, data show that the most aggressive
nation on the planet after World War II has been the United States
- not the Soviet Union - with more than 100 military or covert
interventions in other countries.
Gerson also laments that America's NATO
allies don't pull their weight in defense spending or in Afghanistan,
the latest NATO nation-building project. He writes, "During
the past fifteen years, Europe has taken a peace dividend so massive
that the slightest military exertion leaves it bent and gasping
for air." Gerson is actually understating the problem. Those
allies have been free-riding for all of the 60-plus years after
World War II. But can you blame them? If the United States is
foolish enough to subsidize the defense of these wealthy nations
through the NATO alliance, they would be foolish not to spend
the money elsewhere.
As for Afghanistan, NATO allies may be
unenthusiastic about the effort because helping with the U.S.
occupation of Muslim lands can lead to blowback terrorism on their
soil - for example, the attacks on Spain and Britain for helping
the United States occupy Iraq. Here again, the U.S. military-industrial
complex is busy generating new threats for the U.S. military and
its allies to counter.
Most businesses would love to be able
to generate demand for their products. Unfortunately, the Pentagon
and the military-industrial complex have this luxury and regularly
waste oodles of taxpayer dollars making U.S. citizens less safe.
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