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News (Media Awareness Project) - US FL: Column: Perpetual Wars, Poor Returns For America
Title:US FL: Column: Perpetual Wars, Poor Returns For America
Published On:2005-05-17
Source:Daytona Beach News-Journal (FL)
Fetched On:2008-08-20 09:19:53
PERPETUAL WARS, POOR RETURNS FOR AMERICA

In 1962 the Pentagon contracted with a four-company combine known as
RMK-BRJ to build every sea port, every airport, several military bases and
the American embassy in South Vietnam. It was one of those no-bid,
no-audit, no-problem contracts that makes the Pentagon every lucky
contractor's magic kingdom.

In 1966, a 34-year-old Republican representative from Illinois stood on the
House floor and, citing the RMK-BRJ consortium, justly condemned President
Johnson's administration for handing out illegal contracts to friends and
campaign supporters. "Under one contract, between the U.S. Government and
this combine, it is officially estimated that obligations will reach at
least $900 million by November 1967," the representative said. The sum
would be equivalent to $5 billion today. "Why this huge contract has not
been and is not now being adequately audited is beyond me. The potential
for waste and profiteering under such a contract is substantial." Why the
RMK-BRJ contract wasn't being audited shouldn't have been such a mystery to
the representative, one of the sharpest on Capitol Hill. Democrats
dominated Congress with a 295-140 majority in the House and a 68-32
majority in the Senate, their most crushing numbers since Franklin
Roosevelt's first term. Deafness to critics is the privilege of
supermajorities.

The indignant representative was Donald Rumsfeld, now the secretary of
defense. That makes him responsible for the latest magic kingdom contracts
- -- the ones that have yielded $11 billion so far in revenue from the Iraq
and Afghan wars to Kellogg, Brown & Root, the Halliburton subsidiary that's
been doing work similar to RMK-BRJ's, plus feeding, housing and
transporting troops around Iraq and the Middle East. Incidentally, Brown &
Root (but not yet Kellogg) was part of the Vietnam combine.

The minority representative playing Rumsfeld's role these days is Henry
Waxman, the California Democrat. All Waxman has been hearing is the sound
of Republicans making raspberries. Deafness is their privilege now.

Halliburton-type profiteering only seems like a Republican specialty. But
the immutable law of war is that while unlucky people die, lucky ones make
a killing.

That's been true whether Gengis Khan was pillaging his way across Asia,
whether Abraham Lincoln was saving the Union, or George W. Bush was saving
the world.

Party registration has never had anything to do with it other than to give
the minority party, when it exists, a chance to seem relevant.

Assuming that John Kerry had won the election last November, it's almost
impossible to imagine that the list of 150 American contractors doing $49
billion worth of work in Iraq and Afghanistan would have changed
substantially. (The Center for Public Integrity, www.publicintegrity.org,
lists every contract by name and amount.)

Besides, Halliburton may be a juicy target, but it's as good as a foil. It
keeps attention away from the heart of the issue.

After World War II, which boosted America's GDP by 75 percent, Harry Truman
needed to keep wartime booms going in peacetime.

So he invented the national security state, or what Gore Vidal has aptly
called "perpetual war for perpetual peace." One of America's most
impressive achievements since then has been to make a killing on wars
either by imagining them or outsourcing them. The cold war, the war on
drugs and the war on terror have all been by and large psychological
constructs at home. (The carnage in Vietnam was as real as it's been in
Iraq, but both wars' justifications depended on deception.

Bumper-sticker sympathies aside, neither made a dent in Americans'
lifestyle.) Each war had bits of truth to go on. The Soviets had to be
contained.

Drug addiction can be a problem.

Terrorists can pull off a spectacularly heinous coup once in a while.

But does national purpose have to be mortgaged to these manias?

The Soviets reliably self-destructed, but we're still spending somewhere
between $30 billion and $50 billion a year on the war on drugs, an equal
amount on the war on terror at home, and double those amounts on various
wars abroad.

It's helped GDP growth hum along.

But the nation isn't any less addicted to drugs.

It isn't any less paranoid at home. It has fueled violence and
America-hatred abroad.

And it's beginning to look like Iraq and Afghanistan are experiments in
national dismemberment. For a people and a president so enamored of returns
on investments, it's amazing how forgiving we've been of such colossally
negative returns.

Yet we persevere without a hint of learning from failure or attempting
different strategies.

All this is a little simplistic, I know, but not nearly as simplistic as
the bread and butter of every profiteer's dividends -- that patriotic daze
and those armchair fears that, at this rate, are damaging the country more
than any drugs or terrorists ever will.
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