When I was a college student in the
early 1980s, and in Air Force ROTC, I wrote critically of the Reagan
defense buildup. Caspar Weinberger, he of the “Cap the knife”
handle for cost-cutting, became “Cap the ladle” as
Reagan’s Secretary of Defense, ladling money in huge amounts to
the Pentagon. History is repeating itself again as the Biden
administration prepares to ladle $813 billion (and more) to the
Pentagon.
How do we stop this? Of course, we
must recognize (as I’m sure we all do) what we’re up
against. Both political parties are pro-military and, in the main,
pro-war. Our economy is based on a militarized Keynesianism and our
culture is increasingly militarized. Mainstream Democrats, seemingly
forever afraid of being labeled “weak” on defense, are at
pains to be more pro-military than the Republicans. Biden, in
Poland, echoed the words of Obama and other past presidents,
declaring the U.S. military to be “the finest fighting force”
in history. Think about that boast. Think about how Biden added
that the nation owes the troops big. This is a sign of a sick
culture.
Ike
gave his MIC speech in 1961, and for 61 years the MIC has been
winning. Even after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early
‘90s, the MIC held its own; after 9/11, it went into warp speed
and is accelerating. To cite Scotty from Star
Trek:
“And at Warp 10, we’re going nowhere mighty fast.”
We need a reformation of our
institutions; we need a restoration of our democracy; we need a
reaffirmation of the U.S. Constitution; we need to remember who we
are, or perhaps who we want to be, as a people.
Do we really want to be the world’s
largest dealer of arms? Do we really want to spend a trillion or
more dollars, each and every year, on wars and weapons, more than the
next dozen or so countries combined, most of which are allies of
ours? (“Yes” is seemingly the answer here, for both
Democrats and Republicans.) Is that really the best way to serve the
American people? Humanity itself?
Consider
plans to “invest” in “modernizing” America’s
nuclear triad. (Notice the words used here by the MIC.) What does
this really mean? To me, it means we plan on spending nearly $2
trillion over the next 30 years to replace an older suicide vest with
a newer one, except this suicide vest will take out humanity itself,
as well as most other life forms on our planet. To channel Greta
Thunberg’s righteous anger, “How dare you!”
Or, as Ike said in 1953, “This
is not a way of life at all … it
is humanity hanging from a
cross of iron.”
We will need the broadest possible
coalition to tackle this outrage against civilization and humanity.
That’s why I applaud these efforts to tackle the MIC, even as I
encourage all of us to enlist and recruit more people to join our
ranks.
My father enlisted in the Civilian
Conservation Corps in 1935 to do his bit for his family and his
nation. He fought forest fires in Oregon and later became a
firefighter after serving in the Army during World War II. That was
the last formally declared war that America fought. It was arguably
the last morally justifiable war this country has fought, waged by
citizens who donned a uniform, not “warriors” who are
told that the nation owes them big.
In “It’s A Wonderful
Life,” Jimmy Stewart, a true war hero, played a man who never
fought in World War II, who stayed at home and helped ordinary people
even as his younger brother Harry went off to war and earned the
Medal of Honor. Yet the movie doesn’t celebrate Harry’s
war heroism; it celebrates the nobility, decency, and humility of
George Bailey.
How do we get back to that America?
The America from before the MIC, that celebrated decency and kindness
and humanitarianism?
Yes, I know. It’s just a
Frank Capra movie, and America has never been a perfect shining city.
All I’m saying is we need more of that spirit, and more of the
righteous anger of Greta Thunberg, if we are to prevail.
BC
guest Commentator WJ
Astore is the Creator
of Bracing Views. Contributor to TomDispatch, Truthout, HNN,
Alternet, Huffington Post, Antiwar, and other sites. Retired AF
lieutenant colonel and professor of history. Senior fellow,
Eisenhower Media Network