News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Column: A Government By The People, For The Military-Industrial Complex |
Title: | US CA: Column: A Government By The People, For The Military-Industrial Complex |
Published On: | 2000-09-27 |
Source: | Los Angeles Times (CA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-03 07:29:17 |
A GOVERNMENT BY THE PEOPLE, FOR THE MILITARY-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX
WASHINGTON--What's behind Washington's huge, expensive military
intervention to combat drugs in Colombia?
Last week, the actions of the House Republican leadership suggested one
possible answer: procurement. The Republican Congress, it appears,
wants to help American defense firms sell helicopters for use in
Colombia--and to obtain the prices they want for these copters.
This is not all that unusual. In fact, it's a classic example of how
Congress sometimes works harder for private defense contractors than
for taxpayers.
Last summer, the Clinton administration and Congress approved the $1.3-
billion Plan Colombia, a package of aid (most of it military) designed
to bolster the Bogota government's efforts to eradicate drugs and to
combat traffickers.
On Sept. 21, the House International Relations subcommittee on the
Western Hemisphere summoned representatives of the State and Defense
departments to a hearing on the progress of Plan Colombia. The
executive branch officials came armed with facts and figures on the
details of the program.
But they had barely started before Rep. Doug Bereuter (R-Neb.) made
plain what the Republican leadership cared most about: concluding a
deal for the use of Sikorsky Aircraft Corp.'s Black Hawk helicopters in
Colombia.
Ordinarily, Bereuter wouldn't even have attended this hearing, because
he isn't a member of the subcommittee. But he announced that he had
come at the "personal request" of House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-
Ill.). Hastert, he said, was dismayed that it was taking too long for
Sikorsky to obtain a contract for its Black Hawks. The Republican
leadership wanted to know why there had been so many delays. Congress
had approved the purchase of 18 Black Hawk helicopters, but U.S.
officials had subsequently said they might buy a lower number. Sikorsky
was willing to sell 16 Black Hawks for $234 million, Bereuter said.
What was going on here? At first, it seemed as though the Republicans
might be concerned only about speeding up Plan Colombia. The record
shows that Hastert, to his credit, has taken a personal interest in the
issue of stopping drugs for years, even before he became the House
speaker.
Still, Bereuter persisted, growing more and more specific. "The
Sikorsky offer still stands, $234 million for 16 Black Hawks," he told
the executive branch officials. "Is that an understanding?"
Finally, Rand Beers, assistant secretary of State for narcotics
programs, pointed to the underlying issue: In the original Plan
Colombia, $234 million was supposed to purchase 18 Black Hawks, and now
Sikorsky seemed to be proposing to supply 16 helicopters for that same
$234 million.
"Sikorsky is giving you a number for a lower number of helicopters, and
that's not our objective," Beers said. In short, the dispute wasn't
just about timing but also about price. And the House Republican
leadership seemed to be weighing in on Sikorsky's side in its contract
negotiations with the Pentagon.
This week, Sikorsky suggested that, in Bereuter's effort to help,
perhaps he had gotten his numbers wrong.
"We have said consistently that we would be prepared to deliver 18
helicopters, appropriately configured, for $234 million, presuming
timely contract negotiations with the government," said Scott Seligman,
a spokesman for Sikorsky's parent company, United Technologies.
The point here is not that Republican lawmakers behave differently than
the Democrats. In Congress, being solicitous of defense contractors is
a bipartisan cause.
Sikorsky is located in Connecticut. Earlier this year, Connecticut's
two Democratic senators, Joseph I. Lieberman and Christopher J. Dodd,
pushed hard for Sikorsky to win congressional approval for the use of
Black Hawks in Colombia.
Rather, the point is that the pressures for contracts and sales in
America's defense industry are so strong that neither of the major
parties can resist them.
In the wake of the end of the Cold War, American companies have been
eager to find new sorts of missions for which they can supply planes
and helicopters. The drug war in Colombia is one such effort.
"The market for military equipment abroad is not great these days, and
obviously these [helicopter] companies have to sustain their production
base," says Gabriel Marcella, a specialist on Latin America at the U.S.
Army War College.
Sikorsky is merely one of many U.S. companies that hope to take part in
Plan Colombia. Last month, the Financial Times listed others, such as
Textron, which is upgrading Huey helicopters, and Lockheed Martin,
which makes early-warning systems. Other smaller, private companies
will hire former U.S. soldiers to help train the Colombian military.
Nearly four decades ago, in January 1961, President Eisenhower warned
in his farewell address about the influence of what he famously called
the "military-industrial complex."
What we're witnessing now is something new. It's the emergence of a
narco-industrial complex: a proliferation of U.S. companies lining up,
with congressional support, to obtain public money for anti-drug
campaigns overseas.
Beware.
WASHINGTON--What's behind Washington's huge, expensive military
intervention to combat drugs in Colombia?
Last week, the actions of the House Republican leadership suggested one
possible answer: procurement. The Republican Congress, it appears,
wants to help American defense firms sell helicopters for use in
Colombia--and to obtain the prices they want for these copters.
This is not all that unusual. In fact, it's a classic example of how
Congress sometimes works harder for private defense contractors than
for taxpayers.
Last summer, the Clinton administration and Congress approved the $1.3-
billion Plan Colombia, a package of aid (most of it military) designed
to bolster the Bogota government's efforts to eradicate drugs and to
combat traffickers.
On Sept. 21, the House International Relations subcommittee on the
Western Hemisphere summoned representatives of the State and Defense
departments to a hearing on the progress of Plan Colombia. The
executive branch officials came armed with facts and figures on the
details of the program.
But they had barely started before Rep. Doug Bereuter (R-Neb.) made
plain what the Republican leadership cared most about: concluding a
deal for the use of Sikorsky Aircraft Corp.'s Black Hawk helicopters in
Colombia.
Ordinarily, Bereuter wouldn't even have attended this hearing, because
he isn't a member of the subcommittee. But he announced that he had
come at the "personal request" of House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-
Ill.). Hastert, he said, was dismayed that it was taking too long for
Sikorsky to obtain a contract for its Black Hawks. The Republican
leadership wanted to know why there had been so many delays. Congress
had approved the purchase of 18 Black Hawk helicopters, but U.S.
officials had subsequently said they might buy a lower number. Sikorsky
was willing to sell 16 Black Hawks for $234 million, Bereuter said.
What was going on here? At first, it seemed as though the Republicans
might be concerned only about speeding up Plan Colombia. The record
shows that Hastert, to his credit, has taken a personal interest in the
issue of stopping drugs for years, even before he became the House
speaker.
Still, Bereuter persisted, growing more and more specific. "The
Sikorsky offer still stands, $234 million for 16 Black Hawks," he told
the executive branch officials. "Is that an understanding?"
Finally, Rand Beers, assistant secretary of State for narcotics
programs, pointed to the underlying issue: In the original Plan
Colombia, $234 million was supposed to purchase 18 Black Hawks, and now
Sikorsky seemed to be proposing to supply 16 helicopters for that same
$234 million.
"Sikorsky is giving you a number for a lower number of helicopters, and
that's not our objective," Beers said. In short, the dispute wasn't
just about timing but also about price. And the House Republican
leadership seemed to be weighing in on Sikorsky's side in its contract
negotiations with the Pentagon.
This week, Sikorsky suggested that, in Bereuter's effort to help,
perhaps he had gotten his numbers wrong.
"We have said consistently that we would be prepared to deliver 18
helicopters, appropriately configured, for $234 million, presuming
timely contract negotiations with the government," said Scott Seligman,
a spokesman for Sikorsky's parent company, United Technologies.
The point here is not that Republican lawmakers behave differently than
the Democrats. In Congress, being solicitous of defense contractors is
a bipartisan cause.
Sikorsky is located in Connecticut. Earlier this year, Connecticut's
two Democratic senators, Joseph I. Lieberman and Christopher J. Dodd,
pushed hard for Sikorsky to win congressional approval for the use of
Black Hawks in Colombia.
Rather, the point is that the pressures for contracts and sales in
America's defense industry are so strong that neither of the major
parties can resist them.
In the wake of the end of the Cold War, American companies have been
eager to find new sorts of missions for which they can supply planes
and helicopters. The drug war in Colombia is one such effort.
"The market for military equipment abroad is not great these days, and
obviously these [helicopter] companies have to sustain their production
base," says Gabriel Marcella, a specialist on Latin America at the U.S.
Army War College.
Sikorsky is merely one of many U.S. companies that hope to take part in
Plan Colombia. Last month, the Financial Times listed others, such as
Textron, which is upgrading Huey helicopters, and Lockheed Martin,
which makes early-warning systems. Other smaller, private companies
will hire former U.S. soldiers to help train the Colombian military.
Nearly four decades ago, in January 1961, President Eisenhower warned
in his farewell address about the influence of what he famously called
the "military-industrial complex."
What we're witnessing now is something new. It's the emergence of a
narco-industrial complex: a proliferation of U.S. companies lining up,
with congressional support, to obtain public money for anti-drug
campaigns overseas.
Beware.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...