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de Rugy writes: "Today we are living Ike's nightmare. Defense spending is not just one of the most sacrosanct parts of the budget but also one of the largest and most inscrutable. Adjusting for inflation, military spending has grown for an unprecedented 13 consecutive years and is now higher than at any time since World War II."

U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower makes his farewell address, Jan. 17, 1961. (photo: AP)
U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower makes his farewell address, Jan. 17, 1961. (photo: AP)



The Invincible Military-Industrial Complex

By Veronique de Rugy, Reason

18 February 12

 

uring his 1961 farewell address, President Dwight D. Eisenhower famously warned the American people that one of the greatest threats to freedom came not from enemies abroad but from "the conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry," which over time would lose sight of defending the United States and become devoted only to its own perpetuation. "In the councils of government," said the man who had commanded the Allied forces in Europe during World War II, "we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist."

Today we are living Ike's nightmare. Defense spending is not just one of the most sacrosanct parts of the budget but also one of the largest and most inscrutable. Adjusting for inflation, military spending has grown for an unprecedented 13 consecutive years and is now higher than at any time since World War II. Even excluding war costs, the military baseline budget has grown by about 50 percent during the last decade.

Yet the faintest suggestion of a plan to reduce the rate of the defense budget's growth inevitably triggers dire warnings that Americans will soon be speaking Russian, Chinese, Arabic, or the mother tongue of whoever is deemed the most powerful adversary of the moment. Consider the Pentagon's reaction to the recent threat of defense spending reductions following the failure of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction (popularly known as the "supercommittee") to find deficit savings of $1.2 trillion over 10 years. The lack of a deal triggered an alternative path to those savings: a sequestration that would cut projected overall spending by $1.2 trillion between 2013 and 2021. Half of those savings are to come from the defense budget - an annual hit of about $54 billion compared to current administration plans.

But don't confuse that $54 billion with reductions from current spending levels. In August 2011, the Congressional Budget Office projected that discretionary national defense spending (96 percent of all military spending), excluding the wars, would cost $5.3 trillion between 2013 and 2021. After sequestration, that spending will instead total $4.8 trillion, or $500 billion less. That's 10 percent less than otherwise projected (see the chart) but still 10 percent higher than current defense spending.

How did apologists for the military-industrial complex react to the possibility of an increase of just 10 percent rather than 18 percent? Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, in a November letter to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), warned that if "maximum sequestration" goes into effect in 2013, "these cuts would be devastating for the Department." One of Panetta's deputies colorfully described the cuts as a form of "self-castration." Former Defense Secretary William Cohen characterized the possible cuts as "draconian" and "calamitous," Air Force Chief of Staff Norton Schwartz fretted that his branch "may not be able to overcome dire consequences," and Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) declared that trimming the rate of military spending growth would do nothing less than "destroy the Department of Defense."

There is no basis in reality for such hyperbole. Adjusting for inflation, sequester cuts would freeze the military's budget at its level in 2007 - a year in which America was ably defended, and plenty of cash flowed to the armed forces.

All these numbers underestimate the growth of defense spending. The data for 2013­­–21 exclude war spending, which will add roughly $400 billion during that period, even if the withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan proceed as planned. It also excludes mandatory spending, which adds another $6 billion a year on things like military retirement benefits.

When U.S. defense spending is placed in a global context, flipping out over "cuts" becomes even stranger. A country's defense budget should be a function of its security needs - the cost to guard against the threats it faces. Secretary Panetta has noted that "threats to national security would not be reduced" in the face of budget cuts. But it's far from clear that current spending is commensurate with the dangers the U.S. faces.

Data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute's military expenditure database show that the United States spent $728 billion on its military in 2010, or about 45 percent of the world's $1.6 trillion total, more than the next 14 largest military spenders combined and nearly six times more than the next biggest spender, China. Most of the other countries at the top of the list are American allies. With or without the automatic cuts to defense from the Budget Control Act of 2011, the United States will remain the biggest global military power for at least a generation.

Defense hawks may have some legitimate gripes about sequestration: Since 42 percent of the cuts in the budget deal come from military spending, defense, which accounts for about 20 percent of annual spending, is being targeted disproportionately. Furthermore, Cato Institute research fellow Benjamin Friedman argues that sequestration is an inefficient method for resizing government. When it comes to military spending, the process doesn't allow for prioritization - cutting less important missions and programs to fully fund more critical ones. As written, the law applies equally to all military accounts. The president can choose to exclude only personnel spending.

Overreliance on across-the-board defense cuts was meant to maximize the pain of sequestration. The idea was to encourage each side of the supercommittee to sacrifice in order to reach a deal, meaning tax increases for Republicans and domestic spending cuts for Democrats. The committee's failure doesn't end those negotiations; it broadens and extends them.

Defense hawks, however, should be careful what they wish for. Unless Congress changes current law, New Year's Day 2013 will bring both sequestration cuts and the expiration of the Bush tax cuts, two outcomes Republicans wish to avoid. By exaggerating the impact of defense "cuts," conservatives are giving President Obama important leverage to win revenue increases in exchange for overturning sequestration.

It doesn't have to be this way, Friedman notes. Rather than bellyaching about a somewhat smaller spending increase, Panetta could offer an alternative that allows the Pentagon to choose more wisely among its priorities while bringing spending levels down to a level compatible with adequate national defense. That option would relieve pressure for tax increases while allowing the American people to enjoy the dividends from winding down two expensive wars. But if Eisenhower was right about the military-industrial complex's insatiable need to keep increasing its budget, size, and influence, it is foolish to expect any defense secretary to propose wiser spending, let alone agree to spend less.

Contributing Editor This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

 

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+17 # giraffee2012 2012-02-18 09:35
And the money spent includes hiring "contractors" - like Haliburton, Brown etc without going out to "bid"--- and don't forget the Congress also has privilege of "insider trading" although u/I would be in jail for same.

Do NOT vote GOP/TP but vote in 2012
 
 
+23 # douglassmyth 2012-02-18 09:36
If cuts were targeted, which they should be, we could probably cut the Defense budget in half and still do most of the stupid stuff "Defense" is doing now.

However, cutting the Defense budget should really require us to re-think what we're paying for.

Must we really be the world's policeman, especially since American corporations aren't really American anymore, so our patrol of the world for their benefit is not really for ours? In fact, the pax Americana works against the interest of the American people, since it enables the export of jobs, and the devaluation of work at home (the race to the bottom).

Further, our real economic problem is our balance of payments deficits, and our military's expansion all over the world is a major contributor.

I say, cut back the "Defense" budget so that what we pay for is real defense, not an imperial presence all over the world.
 
 
+13 # reiverpacific 2012-02-18 10:05
It really rubs it all in when I'm trying to make the shattered remnants of a once-successful small business survive, which has tried to benefit the community, whilst the death-machine has a seemingly bottomless budget, including the CIA's "Black Budget", not accountable even to the president.
My American Indian friends have always referred to the invader's mentality as being the product of a "Death culture" and this is indeed what it more and more identifies itself as, destroying anything which even appears to stand in it's way, including the assassination of a president who was turning to peace.
It is indeed the buttress of the corporate state, like the Nazi storm-troopers and "Blitzkreig" of aggressive arrogance and overwhelming firepower.
Anybody who thinks that the US Military is a benefit to the world is delusional, including those who have family in the death-machine that is allegedly keeping the "bad guys du-jour" away from our shores whilst interfering in the affairs of other countries thereby inviting blowback and retaliation.
It is both the most environmentally destructive entity, fuel-sucking and wasteful at taxpayer expense and has been the biggest threat to all hopes of world peace since WW11.
Maybe I should bite the bullet and learn to "kill as directed", as a second job, and funnel the obviously generously available proceeds into my pathetic little business.
 
 
+11 # angelfish 2012-02-18 10:29
The Military Industrial Complex doesn't give a Big Rat's Patoot about defending America, what it DOES care about is it's BUDGET! MORE, MORE, MORE! HOW much MORE do they need to destroy this Planet a thousand times over? We, the People, have given them the MONEY to build their Million Dollar tanks for Desert Storm that WOULDN'T roll in SAND! We've given them Million Dollar Jets that are incapable of fulfilling their promise! WHY are they allowed such Financial Leeway when our Infra-structure is DISINTEGRATING before our eyes! ARISE, Americans! Learn who the War Mongers are in your State and remember to Vote them OUT in November! The People, UNITED, will NEVER be defeated! God continue to save and bless our, formerly, Great Country!
 
 
-2 # lnason@umassd.edu 2012-02-18 10:51
Perfection.

Lee Nason
New Bedford, Massachusetts
 
 
+6 # mhog jones 2012-02-18 11:04
Murderous power attracts the psychotic personality...
 
 
+8 # walt 2012-02-18 11:06
It is spiraling out of control and needs to be stopped. Ending the military empire around the globe would be a good start. The USA can remain safe and powerful with far less spending.

However, we cannot use our military as we have in Iraq and Afghanistan for nation building while taxing the people for "defense."
 
 
+7 # Archie1954 2012-02-18 11:22
For all the "defense" expenditures the US doesn't seem to be able to win a war unless the so called enemy is a small third world country like Grenada. Anything larger and it always ends up being a stalemate. Don't you think if the US really just funded defense and left violent attacks and occupations to others, the US and the world would be a much better place?
 
 
+2 # Mohanraj 2012-02-18 11:24
The writer, as much as Ike, seems to have put the cart before the horse. What is it that necessitates the growth of the Military Industrial Complex? the MIC does not grow without a basis just for the heck of it. It is the direct result of the country's foreign policy, which is dominated by jingoism. If only the people of the country listens to Ron Paul America will be able to redeedm its national debt and balance its budget in due course.
Mohanraj.
 
 
+8 # CL38 2012-02-18 12:03
Kennedy wanted to make significant changes to the military and the CIA to limit and control their power -- and he was murdered for it.

That tells us the lengths the military will go to to preserve it's power and perpetually ratchet up it's budget. All the more reason to name this and stop it.
 
 
+4 # Pwarren 2012-02-18 12:12
Top Secret America by Dana Priest and William Arkin is a great read and right on target with this article. 17 Intellegent organizations? And they can not "talk" to each other because each it Top Seceret. They all have the same source and are falling all over each other with redundency. But their budget is incalcuable. Anyone else think this behavior smacks if pure insanity?
But all this is supposed to keep "the American People" secure. LOL
 
 
0 # Pwarren 2012-02-18 12:16
RSS
I have lost count of the times I have commented and have yet to see one posted. So I shall Quit you!
PWarren

*** RSN MODERATOR'S NOTE ***

Pwarren, our comments are approved by real people, not a software program, so it does take some time for comments to be reviewed and live on the page.
 
 
+1 # Glen 2012-02-18 13:20
There is a time lag with posts hitting the thread. Don't give up Pwarren. You probably have a lot to contibute.
 
 
+4 # futhark 2012-02-18 13:04
Many people, probably many RSN readers included, thought they were voting in 2008 for candidates (and one in particular) who would liberate the United States and all of planet Earth from the oppression of the MIC. How sadly mistaken they were (no, I did not vote for the 2009 Nobel Peace laureate, suspecting at the time of the election that his real agenda did not include shifting the United States away from addiction to war and violence). I was disappointed, of course, but not surprised.

Instead of "Never vote Republican", I propose the slogan of "Never vote war-mongering plutocrat". They are not necessarily one and the same. Winding down the overgrown American military and its incursions into other nations has to be the top priority. After that, there are so many other issued that deserve prompt attention: alternative energy, affordable medical care, accessible and affordable education, infrastructure updates, environmental protection, but none of these can be dealt with effectively as long as we are bearing the ethical and financial burden of unbridled militarism.

History buffs take note: read the views of Americans on pre-World War I Germany and compare them with what you see happening in America today.
 
 
+3 # ozken 2012-02-18 15:05
The Military Industrial Complex - come on you people let's concentrate on what's important for Amerika like God's plan for no contraception. You guys need as many children as possible - they are going to be needed as cannon fodder for Amerika's future wars and as factory slaves for the likes of foreign companies for example Caterpillar & IKEA who hate unionised work forces in their own countries and will open sweatshops in the U.S.A.

Please wake up my American cousins - before it's too late.
 
 
+10 # paulrevere 2012-02-18 18:15
Let us not forget that Rumsfeld on September 10, 2001 gave a speech stating that the DOD in the previous decade had lost, could not account for, had no idea where ONE TRILLION TWO HUNDRED BILLION dollars had gone to. The present administration has found a similar missing chunk of our treasury dissapated into oblivion without record...
That drum has got to be taiko drummed until it becomes part of the public dialogue!
 
 
+8 # CandH 2012-02-18 21:02
Bingo! Fascinating that we can't even discuss in public the MIC cutting its budget minor paltry sums in ten years, whilst we quietly shun the very real and actual discussion of the MIC actually "losing" $1,200,000,000,00 0 in ten years!!! The MIC could shave off 50% of its budget, and STILL, "lose" HALF of it anyway. Disgusting death cult(ure) and mafiosa leadership is spot on!
 

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