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Bill Quigley

Bill Quigley

Posted: May 24, 2010 08:25 AM

US law officially proclaims Memorial Day "as a day of prayer for permanent peace."

However, the US is much closer to permanent war than permanent peace. Corporations are profiting from wars and lobbying politicians for more. The US, and the rest of the world, cannot afford the rising personal and financial costs of permanent war.

Number One in War

No doubt, the USA is number one in war. This coming year the US will spend 708 billion dollars on war and another $125 billion for Veterans Affairs -- over $830 billion. In a distant second place is China which spent about $84 billion on its military in 2008.

The US also leads the world in the sale of lethal weapons to others, selling about one of every three weapons worldwide. The USA's major clients? South Korea, Israel and United Arab Emirates.

Our country has 5 percent of the world's population but accounts for more than 40% of the military spending for the whole world.

Harm

Our nation does not respect our soldiers by engaging in permanent war. War is grinding up our children. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have cost over 5000 US lives and tens of thousands more lives of people in those countries. Over 20% of those in our military who served in these two wars, 320,000 people, have war-related traumatic brain injuries. Suicide rates are up by 26 percent among 18 to 29 year old male veterans in the latest Veterans Administration study. Mental health hospitalizations are now the leading cause of hospital admissions for the military, higher than injuries. On any given night, over 100,000 veterans are homeless and living on our nation's streets.

Rising Costs of War

Since 2001, the US has spent over $6 trillion (a trillion is a million millions) on war and preparations for war. That is about $20,000 for every woman, man and child in the US. Iraq and Afghanistan alone have cost the US taxpayer over a trillion dollars since 2001.

No End in Sight

Earlier this month, Marine General James Cartwright, the Vice-Chair of the military Joint Chiefs of Staff, told the Army Times that the US can expect continuing war "for as far as the eye can see."

In the name of this perpetual war against terrorism the US still jails hundreds without trial in Guantanamo, holds hundreds more in prisons on bases and in secret detention world-wide, tries to avoid constitutional trials for anyone accused of terrorism, admits it is trying to assassinate an American citizen Muslim cleric in Yemen, and launches deadly drone strikes in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Yemen killing civilians and suspects whenever we decide.

Who Benefits from Permanent War?

One support for permanent war is that there are corporations in the US which openly lobby for more and more money to be invested in war. Why? Because they profit enormously from government contracts.

President Dwight Eisenhower, who believed in a strong military, warned the US about just this in his farewell address to the nation in 1961.

"In the councils of government, 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. We must never let the weight of this combination endanger our liberties or democratic processes."

War is Big Business

War is very big business. People know that private companies are doing much more in war. In January 2010, the Congressional Research Service reported that there are at least 55,000 private armed security contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan, and maybe many more - as many as 70,000 in Afghanistan alone.

But much bigger money is available to defense contractors. In 2008 alone, the top ten defense contractors received nearly $150 billion in federal contracts. These corporations spent millions to lobby for billions more in federal funds and hired ex-military leaders and ex-officials to help them profit off war.

For example, look at the top three defense contractors, Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Northrop Grumman. They demonstrate why perpetual war is profitable and part of the reason it continues.

Lockheed Martin

Lockheed Martin is the largest military contractor in the world with 140,000 employees, taking in over $40 billion annually, over $35 billion of which comes from the US government. Lockheed Martin boasts that they have increased their dividend payments by more than 10 percent for the seventh consecutive year - perfectly in line with the increase in war spending by the US. Its chairman, Robert Stevens, received over $72 million in compensation over the past three years.

Lockheed's board of directors includes a former Under Secretary of Defense, a former US Air Force Commander of the U.S. Strategic Command, a former Deputy Director of Homeland Security, and a former Supreme Allied Commander of Europe. These board members receive over $200,000 a year in compensation. Its political action committee gave over a million dollars a year to federal candidates in 2009, and is consistently one of the top spending PACs in the US. They appeal to all members of Congress because they strategically have operations in all fifty states. And, since 1998, Lockheed has spent over $125 million to lobby Congress.

Northrop Grumman

Northrop Grumman is a $33 billion company with 120,000 employees. In 2008, it received nearly $25 billion in federal contracts. Its chairman, Ronald Sugar, received over $54 million in compensation over the past three years.

Northrop's Board includes a former Admiral of the Navy, a former 20 year member of Congress, a former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a former commissioner of the Security and Exchange Commission and a former U.S. Naval officer. The members of its board of directors received over $200,000 each in 2009. Its Pac is listed as making over $700,000 in federal campaign donations in 2009. Since 1998, it has spent over $147 million lobbying Congress.

Boeing

Boeing has 150,000 employees and took in over $23 billion in federal contracts in 2008. With revenues of $68 billion in 2009, its chair, James McNerney, was paid over $51 million over the past three years. Its board members are paid well over $200,000 a year. Boeing's directors include a former U.S. Secretary of Commerce, a former White House chief of staff, a former vice chair of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, and a former U.S. Ambassador and U.S. Trade Representative. It hosts the 10th largest political action committee, giving away more than one million dollars to federal candidates in 2009. Since 1998, it has spent $125 million lobbying Congress.

Time to Terminate the Permanent War

These corporations take billions from the government and profit from our perpetual state of war. They recycle some of that money back into lobbying the same people who gave it to them, and hire ex-military and government officials to help smooth the process. Their leaders make tens of millions off this work.

The trillions of dollars that it costs to wage permanent war are taxing the US economy. Yet where are the voices in Congress, Democrat or Republican, that talk seriously of dramatically reducing our military spending? President Obama and the Democrats are effectively continuing the permanent war policies of the Bush years. It is past time for change.

Remember this Memorial Day that, while thousands have been laid in their graves and hundreds of thousands wounded, private military contractors are prospering and profiting as the business of war booms.

The US should not only remember its dead but work to reverse the profitable permanent war that promises to add more names to the dead and disabled in this country and around the world.


Bill Quigley is Legal Director at the Center for Constitutional Rights and a law professor at Loyola University New Orleans. Quigley77@gmail.com

 
 
 
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12:20 PM on 05/27/2010
BARF CITY
War is business. Business is war. With us or against us. So much for American exceptionalism as we funnel down the toilet of cultural devolution common to all other civilizations that have blessed this planet. Ours is leaving a big black stain in its wake, and a trail of depleted uranium as love nuggets to the rest of the world. And now there is Boeing's new Memorial Day commercial with plenty of twinky piano play to pull our heartstrings asking us to remember.
Remember all those who died to blah, blah, blah. Twink, twink.

Well, maybe we should also remember Boeing for its direct role in the war effort as well.
Google "Boeing and Rendition."
Get personal. Send letters.
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
05:54 PM on 05/25/2010
This guy is brilliant....just fricking brilliant................duh.
08:17 AM on 05/25/2010
Well done. End the wars now.
The US soldiers are either killed or maimed, or having their lives and relationships ruined by the repeated deployments. The Repubs balk at budgeting adequately for veterans ongoing health care. This is disrespectful to people who have given more to the US than we had any right to ask of them.
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stillbarbi
Keep Reading
11:28 PM on 05/24/2010
Great article. Thank you.

This should be the lead story on every news show 24/7. The phony patriotism associated with war needs to be exposed for what it is. The boom in the sale of American flags after the start of the Iraq War was merely advertising support for the war that had no just cause. The if you're not for us you're against us attitude of Bush was another way of demonizing and ostracizing anyone who dared to disagree with their war for oil and corporate welfare. And that's exactly what it is, because we the taxpayers provide the funding that fuels the ongoing occupations and wars.
06:11 AM on 05/25/2010
phony patriotism, corporations running the government, invention of "boogeymen" to fear, ongoing war for no particular reason, sacrifice of individual liberties for "the good of national security"...
sounds like FASCISM to me.
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offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
11:24 PM on 05/24/2010
“ntire text of War Is a Racket speech:

http://www.lexrex.com/enlightened/articles/warisaracket.htm
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offred
A biocitizen is 3/5 of a corporate citizen
11:21 PM on 05/24/2010
Hear, hear, Mr. Quigley.

And a bravo and a standing ovation!
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davidmjoyce
09:36 PM on 05/24/2010
Let me see. Recently canceled programs: F-22, FCS, crusader, airborne laser, TSAT, NPOESS, CG-X, DD-1000, command ship-- tens of billions there. The fact is that the majority of the defense budget goes toward salaries, services and logistics. As it was during the Vietnam era, weapons programs like tanks, fighter aircraft and ships are reduced to pay for combat operations. As the bulk of our weapons were built during the Reagan era, there is a danger of other nations leap-frogging over us as we did the British in the 1920s. There's a wonderful book written in England right after WW-I called the "American Threat" on that very topic. Frankly, a world with the PRC as the primary superpower does not bode well for liberal values. American policy seems to swing radically from too right to too left...
06:37 PM on 05/24/2010
Gen. Smedley D. Butler said it best : "War is a racket".
jhNY
Mercy.
05:53 PM on 05/24/2010
The War on Terror, of course, has been the permanent war of late. Until it showed up, the war profiteers were casting about for income a bit more than they preferred, and yearned for Cold War certainties. Our latest permanent war though is a profiteer's dream, dwarfing in ease anything they might have imagined for themselves while the Russian bear had real teeth: the privatized wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are not really wars at all-- only a few are killed each week, as opposed to a few thousand, as was the case in WWII-- and the public outcry is largely muted, or only so loud as the families of the killed and those who are opposed on principle can raise. But the costs are almost the same as in a hot war-- and the profits are probably better.

Outfits like the Heritage Foundation are paid for by the profiteer crowd, and its mission of producing position papers that enshrine profiteeering as policy are transformed in the hands of compliant pols into serious strategies. Wish we could stop it-- but the Congress is their creature, as is the MSM commentariat. And the people? Badly served by all.
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05:47 PM on 05/24/2010
Eisenhower warned of the military-industrial complex, and I think parts
of it killed JFK. I can believe in a strong defense, but not one
that trys to run the US and spend us into bankruptcy.

Iraq will cost YOU ...
$ 10,000 ! and an average family..
$ 40,000 !!$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
Vote for a Republican after that and other blunders,
No Way !
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Terry Mcintyre
04:47 PM on 05/24/2010
We need to stop identifying "freedom" and "liberty" with the military-industrial complex. Our sons and daughters are _not_ risking their lives to defend our freedoms, but to ensure the continuation of a vast corporate-welfare pyramid, which is supported by numerous politicians on both sides of the aisle.

It's time to hold the Commander of War Toys responsible for his pledge to withdraw from Iraq, which is already long overdue, and to ask why we still have troops in about a thousand bases in over a hundred countries. We won World War II over 60 years ago; it's time to demobilize and bring our troops home.
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Canary503
An opinionated Iowan
03:46 PM on 05/24/2010
People have commented upon the theocracy factor of the C-Street house but Jeff Sharlet's book, "The Family" actually locates the drivers of the military-industrial complex in that very establishment, as well. It's war and power and arms sales to 3rd world despots---which they just happen to call "Jesus".
02:44 PM on 05/24/2010
You left out Flour, Haliburton and Dresser Wayne not including Carlisle Group etc... and thousands of satelite related industries.

Haliburton alone has secured BILLIONS of dollars in contracts from the US and other foreign governments for working in support roles for war.

The real fear is yet to come. When republicans announce a new law to hire private security firms replace a volunteer fighting force.

As war continues to escalate worldwide Americans will stop enlisting, the manpower issue will become epidemic failure. The US will replace these with nonbenefit fighting men working for a private Merc firms. Then corporate America can conduct war and oppression unbridled by the cries of American soldiers mothers.
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amleth
big fan of humanity - very often disappointed
04:10 PM on 05/24/2010
And in any serious societal breakdown, at whose service, and against whom else, will the mercs fight?

Not a hard question.
02:41 PM on 05/24/2010
Always money for war, but never for the citizens....

Outlaw all political contributions.
02:16 PM on 05/24/2010
don't be afraid to call it what it is...FASCISM! i'm not sure if you purposely danced around the word but as i read your article, and enjoyed it immensely, with each paragraph i kept expecting it to show up. this is not a word i use lightly.
FASCISM...there i said it again.