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IPS Writers in the Blogosphere » Dwight D. Eisenhower http://www.ips.org/blog/ips Turning the World Downside Up Tue, 26 May 2020 22:12:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.1 John Barrasso vs. Chuck Hagel http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/john-barrasso-vs-chuck-hagel/ http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/john-barrasso-vs-chuck-hagel/#comments Fri, 25 Jan 2013 18:43:45 +0000 Marsha B. Cohen http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/john-barrasso-vs-chuck-hagel/ via Lobe Log

The Military-Industrial Complex Strikes Back

Disarmament, with mutual honor and confidence, is a continuing imperative. Together we must learn how to compose differences, not with arms, but with intellect and decent purpose.

– Dwight D. Eisenhower, January 17, 1961

Barely a week after the 53rd anniversary of President Dwight [...]]]> via Lobe Log

The Military-Industrial Complex Strikes Back

Disarmament, with mutual honor and confidence, is a continuing imperative. Together we must learn how to compose differences, not with arms, but with intellect and decent purpose.

– Dwight D. Eisenhower, January 17, 1961

Barely a week after the 53rd anniversary of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s farewell address he prepared to leave office, warning the nation of the perils to peace emanating not just from America’s enemies, but from the increasingly rapacious appetite for power and profit of its defense industries. This week, Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) offered what should have been a sobering reminder of Eisenhower’s worst fears.

On the surface, Barrasso’s op-ed in the Wall Street Journal on January 23, headlined Chuck Hagel’s Unsettling History, seems to be just another regurgitation of (Bill) Kristol-lite complaints and (Jennifer) Rubinesque rants about Chuck Hagel — stale smears about “the Jewish lobby,” his voting record in the Senate, and a straw-man claim that Hagel believes that “Iran would act responsibly.” Indeed, Barrasso’s arguments appear to be part of the organized attempt to deride Hagel’s character and capabilities through the casually meretricious “let’s just throw stuff at him and see what sticks” mode employed against President Obama that has become the norm in neoconservative bluster.

But Barrasso’s career also deserves scrutiny and one of his paragraphs revealed — intentionally or unintentionally — the next line of attack against the Secretary of Defense nominee: Hagel’s stance on U.S. nuclear policy.

On the issue of nuclear weapons, the candidate for U.S. secretary of defense actually seems more focused on eliminating American nuclear arms than eliminating the threat of a nuclear-armed Iran. Mr. Hagel was the co-author of a 2012 report for the group Global Zero, “Modernizing U.S. Nuclear Strategy, Force Structure and Posture,” that included a recommendation to eliminate the “Minuteman land-based ICBM.” That could leave America dangerously vulnerable. Even Mr. Obama has promised to modernize our ICBMs, not scrap them.

Barrasso, a Wyoming Republican who had run as a moderate for the Senate in 1996 and lost, replaced the late Craig Thomas in the Senate in 2007 and won a special election in 2008 that gave him a hold on the seat for another two years. He spent $2.5 million on his campaign, ten times the amount of his Democratic opponent, and easily won re-election to his first six-year term in the Senate this past November, raising over $7 million dollars and spending $4.5 million.

The vehemence of Barrasso’s opposition to the Senate’s ratification of the START nuclear weapons reduction treaty with Russia in 2010 surprised even his Wyoming constituents. Only 11 Republican senators voted with Democrats in favor of START; Mike Enzi, Wyoming’s senior senator, wasn’t among them either. Wyoming was once one of the largest suppliers of uranium to the the nuclear weapons industry, but production has been on the decline since the 1980s. It hopes to revitalize the yellowcake industry, capitalizing on rising prices. Barrasso and Enzi both have been forthright about their state’s vested interest in perpetuating US reliance on nuclear weaponry and upgrading the US nuclear weapons arsenal.

Bill McCarthy of WyoFile points out that Wyoming’s Warren Air Force Base contributes $364 million to the Cheyenne area economy, including $221 million in payroll from the base, about $81 million in construction projects and the rest from jobs created in and around the base. The cutback or loss of any of these revenue sources and the commerce generated by them would also damage the rest of the state’s economy. But cutbacks at Warren appear inevitable. Former Vice-Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General James Cartwright and General Robert Kehler, the head of U.S. Strategic Command, stated in 2011 that they don’t believe funding will match past spending. Warren is at a disadvantage relative to other nuclear weapons delivery systems and facilities:

Along with the potential that silo-based missiles in Wyoming might be considered a Cold War relic compared to submarine- and aircraft-based weapons, for example, Warren is an Air Force base without a “flight line.” There are no facilities on base to land and maintain military aircraft.

So, although Barrasso opposed New START on strategic grounds, he had plenty of parochial reasons to try to stop the treaty or protect the weapons overseen from Cheyenne.

While hundreds of billions of dollars will be spent over the next decade on nuclear weapons, there will be fierce competition for fewer dollars.

Barrasso also requested an appropriation of $4.5 million in 2010 for the Wyoming Army National Guard Joint Training and Experimentation Center:

The project will focus on four areas to support war fighter experimentation: operational experiment instrumentation, expansion of ground robotics experimentation facilities including reconfigurable MOUT facilities, expansion of surrogate robotics pool, and conducting user defined robotics experiments focusing of the Joint Capability Areas (JCAs) of Joint Protection, Joint Homeland Defense, and Military Support of Civil Authorities user defined robotics experiments.

A Casper Star Tribune editorial at the time considered the speed and severity of Barrasso’s lurch to the hard right, and his uncompromising stances immediately after his election to the Senate, puzzling:

The fact that Barrasso has joined the extreme right-wing faction of his party and is leading opposition to the treaty confounds us. He is in one of the safest Senate seats in the country, and in no way needs to pander to ultraconservatives whose main goal is to see (President Barack) Obama lose.”

The op-ed noted that Wyoming’s senior senator Mike Enzi also opposed the New START, “but Barrasso has been out front in the right-wing Republican charge against what President Barack Obama has called his top foreign policy objective.”

Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) led the floor fight for the START treaty in 2010. About to become Secretary of State in what is expected to be a swift and relatively bloodless confirmation process, Kerry hailed the ratification of START 3 years ago as moving the world away from the risk of nuclear disaster. “The winners are not defined by party or ideology,” he said. “The winners are the American people, who are safer with fewer Russian missiles aimed at them.”

Nuclear policy should be a matter of serious concern in confirming the next Secretary of Defense, whoever s/he may be. The 2013 nuclear agenda is going to be full, as Kevin Baron of Foreign Policy’s E-Ring points out.

The Pentagon has yet to release its plan to implement the Nuclear Posture Review, and amid continuing resolutions funding the fiscal year and the sequester-delayed budget request for 2014, the new defense secretary must decide the pace of building new nuclear submarines and strategic bombers. Additionally, the Obama administration is poised to start pushing below the caps established by the New START treaty, which limits the United States and Russia to 1,550 warheads each. With that agenda already penciled in, Hagel’s nomination has both thrilled nuclear disarmament advocates and concerned nuclear hawks in Congress.

It’s incumbent upon the media to point out that it is not just national security concerns, or conservative ideology, but behind-the-scenes economic considerations that will be playing a role in the political grandstanding surrounding Chuck Hagel’s confirmation. “In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex,” Eisenhower warned. “The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists, and will persist.”

Case in point: John Barrasso.

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From Military-Industrial Complex to Permanent War State http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/from-military-industrial-complex-to-permanent-war-state/ http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/from-military-industrial-complex-to-permanent-war-state/#comments Mon, 17 Jan 2011 21:56:39 +0000 Guest http://www.lobelog.com/?p=7668 By Gareth Porter

Fifty years after Dwight D. Eisenhower’s January 17, 1961 speech on the “military-industrial complex”, that threat has morphed into a far more powerful and sinister force than Eisenhower could have imagined.  It has become a “Permanent War State”, with the power to keep the United States at war continuously for the indefinite [...]]]> By Gareth Porter

Fifty years after Dwight D. Eisenhower’s January 17, 1961 speech on the “military-industrial complex”, that threat has morphed into a far more powerful and sinister force than Eisenhower could have imagined.  It has become a “Permanent War State”, with the power to keep the United States at war continuously for the indefinite future.

But despite their seeming invulnerability, the vested interests behind U.S. militarism have been seriously shaken twice in the past four decades by some combination of public revulsion against a major war, opposition to high military spending, serious concern about the budget deficit and a change in perception of the external threat.  Today, the Permanent War State faces the first three of those dangers to its power simultaneously — and in a larger context of the worst economic crisis since the great depression.

When Eisenhower warned in this farewell address of the “potential” for the “disastrous rise of misplaced power,” he was referring to the danger that militarist interests would gain control over the country’s national security policy. The only reason it didn’t happen on Ike’s watch is that he stood up to the military and its allies.

The Air Force and the Army were so unhappy with his “New Look” military policy that they each waged political campaigns against it. The Army demanded that Ike reverse his budget cuts and beef up conventional forces. The Air Force twice fabricated intelligence to support its claim that the Soviet Union was rapidly overtaking the United States in strategic striking power — first in bombers, later in ballistic missiles.

But Ike defied both services, reducing Army manpower by 44 percent from its 1953 level and refusing to order a crash program for bombers or for missiles.  He also rejected military recommendations for war in Indochina, bombing attacks on China and an ultimatum to the Soviet Union.

After Eisenhower, it became clear that the alliance of militarist interests included not only the military services and their industrial clients but civilian officials in the Pentagon, the CIA’s Directorate of Operations, top officials at the State Department and the White House national security adviser.  During the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, that militarist alliance succeeded in pushing the White House into a war in Vietnam, despite the reluctance of both presidents, as documented in my book Perils of Dominance.

But just when the power of the militarist alliance seemed unstoppable in the late 1960s, the public turned decisively against the VietnamWar, and a long period of public pressure to reduce military spending began.  As a result, military manpower was reduced to below even the Eisenhower era levels.

For more than a decade the alliance of militarist interests was effectively constrained from advocating a more aggressive military posture.

Even during the Reagan era, after a temporary surge in military spending, popular fear of Soviet Union melted away in response to the rise of Gorbachev, just as the burgeoning federal budget deficit was becoming yet another threat to militarist bloc.  As it became clear that the Cold War was drawing to a close, the militarist interests faced the likely loss of much of their power and resources.

But in mid-1990 they got an unexpected break when Saddam Hussein occupied Kuwait. George H. W. Bush – a key figure in the militarist complex as former CIA Director — seized the opportunity to launch a war that would end the “Vietnam syndrome”.  The Bush administration turned a popular clear-cut military victory in the 1991 Gulf War into a rationale for further use of military force in the Middle East.   Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney’s 1992 military strategy for the next decade said, “We must be prepared to act decisively in the Middle East/Persian Gulf region as we did in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm if our vital interests are threatened anew.”

The Bush administration pressured the Saudis and other Arab regimes in the Gulf to allow longer-term bases for the U.S. Air Force, and over the next eight years, U.S. planes flew an annual average of 8,000 sorties in the “no fly zones” the United States had declared over most of Iraq, drawing frequent anti-aircraft fire.

The United States was already in a de facto state of war with Iraq well before George W. Bush’s presidency.

The 9/11 attacks were the biggest single boon to the militarist alliance.  The Bush administration exploited the climate of fear to railroad the country into a war of aggression against Iraq.  The underlying strategy, approved by the military leadership after 9/11, was to use Iraq as a base from which to wage a campaign of regime change in a long list of countries.

That fateful decision only spurred recruitment and greater activism by al Qaeda and other jihadist groups, which expanded into Iraq and other countries.

Instead of reversing the ill-considered use of military force, however, the same coalition of officials pushed for an even more militarized approach to jihadism.  Over the next few years, it gained unprecedented power over resources and policy at home and further extended its reach abroad:

  • The Special Operations Forces, which operate in almost complete secrecy, obtained extraordinary authority to track down and kill or capture al Qaeda suspects not only in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in many more countries.
  • The CIA sought and obtained virtually unlimited freedom to carry out drone strikes in secrecy and without any meaningful oversight by Congress.
  • The Pentagon embraced the idea of the “long war” – a twenty-year strategy envisioning deployment of U.S. troops in dozens of countries, and the Army adopted the idea of “the era of persistent warfare” as its rationale for more budgetary resources.
  • The military budget doubled from 1998 to 2008 in the biggest explosion of military spending since the early 1950s – and now accounts for 56 percent of discretionary federal spending.
  • The military leadership used its political clout to ensure that U.S. forces would continue to fight in Afghanistan indefinitely, even after the premises of its strategy were shown to have been false.

Those moves have completed the process of creating a “Permanent War State” — a set of institutions with the authority to wage largely secret wars across a vast expanse of the globe for the indefinite future.

But the power of this new state formation is still subject to the same political dynamics that have threatened militarist interests twice before: popular antipathy to a major war, broad demands for reduced military spending and the necessity to reduce the Federal budget deficit and debt.

The percentage of Americans who believe the war in Afghanistan is not worth fighting has now reached 60 percent for the first time.  And as the crisis over the federal debt reaches it climax, the swollen defense budget should bear the brunt of deep budget cuts.

As early as 2005, a Pew Research Center survey found that, when respondents were given the opportunity to express a preference for budget cuts by major accounts, they opted to reduce  military spending by 31 percent.  In another survey by the Pew Center a year ago, 76 percent of respondents, frustrated by the continued failure of the U.S. economy, wanted the United States to put top priority on its domestic problems.

The only thing missing from this picture is a grassroots political movement organized specifically to demand an end to the Permanent War State.  Such a movement could establish firm legal restraints on the institutions that threaten American Democratic institutions through a massive educational and lobbying effort. This is the right historical moment to harness the latent anti-militarist sentiment in the country to a conscious strategy for political change.

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Amid Ongoing Revelations, U.S. Chamber Sets Up Israel "Business Council" http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/amid-ongoing-revelations-u-s-chamber-sets-up-israel-business-group/ http://www.ips.org/blog/ips/amid-ongoing-revelations-u-s-chamber-sets-up-israel-business-group/#comments Thu, 28 Oct 2010 19:27:45 +0000 Marsha B. Cohen http://www.lobelog.com/?p=5099 Recent revelations by Think Progress concerning the  contributions of foreign corporate donors to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce (USCC), which are helping to fund American political advertisements, are not deterring the Chamber from expanding  and reinforcing its efforts to shape U.S. politics and policies in the interests of foreign corporate entities.

The newest addition to the U.S. Chamber’s clandestine web of potential election donors :  a new joint U.S.-Israel “business council.”

According to a USCC press release, a “global summit” on Oct. 19 celebrated the the 25th anniversary of the U.S.-Israel Free Trade  Agreement (FTA) by  launching the “U.S. Israel Business Initiative.” A plethora of guest speakers were invited “to address top innovators and entrepreneurs from both countries about potential global investment opportunities, and provide guidance regarding the industries that will shape the future of the U.S.-Israel commercial alliance.”

There  are already twelve organizations calling themselves the American-Israel Chamber of Commerce (or some state or regional variant), who are members of the Association of America-Israel Chambers of Commerce and Industry (AAICCI). Each targets a particular geographic region of the U.S. and promotes trade and cultural exchange. None of  these are to  be confused with the Israel-America  Chamber of Commerce, of which Chemi Peres (son of Israel’s president, Shimon Peres) is Chairman of the Board.

So why the need for the new business initiative?  What will the new council  be able to do that these existing Chambers haven’t, don’t or can’t?


Yitzhak ben Horin on the Y-Net website (the English language version of the popular Israeli news daily Yediot Aharanot) provides a clue:

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the biggest enterprise in the world, launched the first American-Israeli business council last week, just like six previous business councils established with China and some of the largest markets around the world.

Does this mean the new “business council” –”just like six previous  business councils”– will enable Israeli corporations to secretly influence U.S. elections without having to reveal their involvement?

According to a study by the Wesleyan Media Project, in a recent five week period the  USCC expended $9 million on campaign ads, which have largely favored (9-1 by one estimate) the election of Republican and “Tea Party” candidates rather than Democrats.  Will the new council enable Israeli corporate interests to go beyond merely lobbying elected officials, by helping to elect the senators and House members that they’ll be lobbying?

Farfetched? Congressman Henry Waxman doesn’t seem to think so. Waxman used  the keynote address he delivered to the newly formed “business council” to confront the U.S. Chamber about its partisan involvement in the upcoming U.S. midterm elections, and its funneling of clandestine contributions from foreign corporations into American political contests. As reported by  Politico‘s Darren Samuelsohn:

Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman (D-Calif.) blasted the nation’s largest business group in the closing moments of a speech on U.S.-Israel business relations.

Echoing remarks recently from President Barack Obama, Waxman criticized the chamber for spending tens of millions of dollars on campaign ads without being more forthright about where the money is coming from.

“An event like this conference today is an appropriate use of contributions from chamber members overseas,” Waxman added. “Spending such money on an election in any country would be inappropriate. In this country, it would also be illegal…”

Waxman urged the Chamber to provide full disclosure about the political contributions it  has been making during this election cycle. Only with proper transparency and disclosure, he said, could the Chamber be “a role model for corporate citizenship in America and around the world.”

Y-Net’s Ben Horin claims that the U.S. Chamber decided to establish the joint council  under the assumption that “Israeli start-ups and technology appeal to the American business world.” Greater interest in the Israeli hi-tech sector has been generated, he suggests, by the publicity surrounding the recent publication of “Start-up Nation: The Story of Israel’s Economic Miracle” by Dan Senor, who was also among forum’s guest speakers.

But the agenda for the Israeli business council — and the USCC itself — is apparently about more than promoting American investment and cooperation in feisty little Israel’s innovative hi-tech startups. The U.S. Chamber’s devious but successful scheme to enlist the members of its “business councils”–particularly in China, India and the Persian Gulf — in promoting the outsourcing of American jobs, weakening of  environmental legislation, maintaining U.S.  reliance on fossil fuels, promoting regressive labor policies and de-emphasizing human rights in commercial policy was also very much in evidence.

Advance publicity of the event by the U.S.-Israel Science and Technology Foundation noted:

The day will feature panels that delve into subjects such as “From the Battlefield to the Boardroom”; a discussion moderated by Lt. Gen. Dan Christman, Former Superintendent at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. Lt. Gen. Christman will promote a discussion between Gideon Argov, CEO of Entegris, and Guy Filippelli, CEO of Berico Technologies. This panel will give an inside look at successful soldiers-cum-entrepreneurs and what we as businesspeople can learn from them.  “Energy to Power the Future” will feature talks from Karen Harbert, President and CEO of the Institute for 21st Century Energy, Mark Little, Senior Vice President and Director of GE – Global Research, John Woolard,CEO of BrightSource Energy, and Bookey Oren, Chairman of WATEC.

The announcement characterizes the panel as “successful soldiers-cum-entrepreneurs.” While it’s difficult to complain about, for example, Guy Filipelli coming up with a technology to make it easier to detect roadside bombs, some participants and panel speakers represented what most worried U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower when he warned in 1961 about the dangers of the development of a “military industrial complex.”

Another ominous aspect of the USCC’s agenda was made evident by the panel participation of Karen Harbert, the Bush administration’s Assistant Secretary for Policy and International Affairs at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) between 2004-2008.  Harbert “was the primary policy adviser to the Secretary and to the department on domestic and international energy issues, including climate change, fossil, nuclear, and renewable energy and energy efficiency,” according to her self-authored Politico Arena bio. Harbert is also, as Politico‘s Erika Lovley has noted, “a leading critic of Democratic climate change proposals.” Now President and CEO of the USCC’s own Institute for 21st Century Energy, she travels the country reviling green tape (i.e. bureaucratic obstacles posed by environmental concerns).

According to Y-Net‘s Ben Horin, “The new council will also be working towards simplifying proceedings and removing legislative barriers and regulations between the two countries.” Apparently the new “business council” will engage in legislative lobbying  to make terms of trade between the U.S. and Israel even more favorable than they already are.

Industry, Trade and Labor Minister Ben-Eliezer told the conclave that business between the two countries had been burgeoning, noting that  U.S.-Israeli trade had increased by 500%, from $4.7 billion to $28.3 billion between 1985 to 2009, and currently averages about $78 million worth of business per day.

Ben Eliezer did not mention that the U.S. consistently runs a deficit in its balance of  trade of goods with Israel. In 2009 U.S. exports to Israel were nearly $9.5 billion, while its imports from Israel totaled over $18.7 billion. As of August 2010, U.S. imports from Israel were over $14 billion, with exports just over $7 billion.

It’s interesting, however, that the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is one of nine business groups that have gone on record as opposing sanctions against Iran. As reported by Laura Rozen at Politico, back on Jan. 26, these groups sent a letter to then-National Security Adviser James Jones objecting to the Iran sanctions bills that were under consideration by the House and Senate, arguing that they would harm U.S. alliances and constrain international trade by imposing U.S. penalties on foreign firms that violated the sanctions:

“While we agree that preventing Iran from developing the capability to produce nuclear weapons is an urgent U.S. national security objective, the unilateral, extraterritorial, and overly broad approach of these bills would undercut rather than advance this critical objective,” the letter from nine U.S. business groups says. “The history of similar efforts demonstrates that such a unilateral approach would provoke a negative response from our allies and would divert attention from an effective, coordinated response to Iran’s nuclear ambitions.”

It’s unlikely that the USCC will sway fervent Israel’s support for “crippling” Iran sanctions (which most Israeli politicians and defense officials don’t think will work).  Will the new business council persuade the Chamber to favor such sanctions? China and India, two of the Chamber’s key international players, have thus far managed to successfully play both sides of the U.S.-Iran fence.

Myron Brilliant, the U.S. Chamber’s Vice President for East Asia, who is credited by the USCC with creating the “grassroots issue advocacy program” that successfully built up support for “normalization” of U.S.-Chinese commercial relations, asserts in the U.S. Chamber’s post-forum press release, “The U.S.-Israel Business Initiative will infuse energy into the bilateral trade relationship that will change our alliance for generations to come.”

Uh-oh.

Perhaps it’s time to update the medium of delivery for the punchline of the old joke about the contents of a “Jewish telegram” and make it a Tweet: “Start worrying. Details to follow.”

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