July 9, 2010 2:08 AM

Seven Reasons Why We Can't Stop Making War

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  If one quality characterizes our wars today, it's their endurance.  They never seem to end. 

Though war itself may not be an American inevitability, these days many factors combine to make constant war an American near certainty.  Put metaphorically, our nation's pursuit of war taps so many wellsprings of our behavior that a concerted effort to cap it would dwarf BP's efforts in the Gulf of Mexico.

Our political leaders, the media, and the military interpret enduring war as a measure of our national fitness, our global power, our grit in the face of eternal danger, and our seriousness.  A desire to de-escalate and withdraw, on the other hand, is invariably seen as cut-and-run appeasement and discounted as weakness.  Withdrawal options are, in a pet phrase of Washington elites, invariably "off the table" when global policy is at stake, as was true during the Obama administration's full-scale reconsideration of the Afghan war in the fall of 2009.  Viewed in this light, the president's ultimate decision to surge in Afghanistan was not only predictable, but the only course considered suitable for an American war leader.  Rather than the tough choice, it was the path of least resistance.

Why do our elites so readily and regularly give war, not peace, a chance?  What exactly are the wellsprings of Washington's (and America's) behavior when it comes to war and preparations for more of the same?

Consider these seven:

1.  We wage war because we think we're good at it -- and because, at a gut level, we've come to believe that American wars can bring good to others (hence our feel-good names for them, like Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom). Most Americans are not only convinced we have the best troops, the best training, and the most advanced weapons, but also the purest motives.  Unlike the bad guys and the barbarians out there in the global marketplace of death, our warriors and warfighters are seen as gift-givers and freedom-bringers, not as death-dealers and resource-exploiters.  Our illusions about the military we "support" serve as catalyst for, and apology for, the persistent war-making we condone.

2.  We wage war because we've already devoted so many of our resources to it.  It's what we're most prepared to do.  More than half of discretionary federal spending goes to fund our military and its war making or war preparations.  The military-industrial complex is a well-oiled, extremely profitable machine and the armed forces, our favorite child, the one we've lavished the most resources and praise upon.  It's natural to give your favorite child free rein.

3.  We've managed to isolate war's physical and emotional costs, leaving them on the shoulders of a tiny minority of Americans.  By eliminating the draft and relying ever more on for-profit private military contractors, we've made war a distant abstraction for most Americans, who can choose to consume it as spectacle or simply tune it out as so much background noise.

4.  While war and its costs have, to date, been kept at arm's length, American society has been militarizing fast.  Our media outlets, intelligence agencies, politicians, foreign policy establishment, and "homeland security" bureaucracy are so intertwined with military priorities and agendas as to be inseparable from them.  In militarized America, griping about soft-hearted tactics or the outspokenness of a certain general may be tolerated, but forceful criticism of our military or our wars is still treated as deviant and "un-American."

5.  Our profligate, high-tech approach to war, including those Predator and Reaper drones armed with Hellfire missiles, has served to limit American casualties -- and so has limited the anger over, and harsh questioning of, our wars that might go with them.  While the U.S. has had more than 1,000 troops killed in Afghanistan, over a similar period in Vietnam we lost more than 58,000 troops.  Improved medical evacuation and trauma care, greater reliance on standoff precision weaponry and similar "force multipliers," stronger emphasis on "force protection" within American military units: all these and more have helped tamp down concern about the immeasurable and soaring costs of our wars.

6.  As we incessantly develop those force-multiplying weapons to give us our "edge" (though never an edge that leads to victory), it's hardly surprising that the U.S. has come to dominate, if not quite monopolize, the global arms trade.  In these years, as American jobs were outsourced or simply disappeared in the Great Recession, armaments have been one of our few growth industries.  Endless war has proven endlessly profitable -- not perhaps for all of us, but certainly for those in the business of war.

7.  And don't forget the seductive power of beyond-worse-case, doomsday scenarios, of the prophecies of pundits and so-called experts, who regularly tell us that, bad as our wars may be, doing anything to end them would be far worse.  A typical scenario goes like this: If we withdraw from Afghanistan, the government of Hamid Karzai will collapse, the Taliban will surge to victory, al-Qaeda will pour into Afghan safe havens, and Pakistan will be further destabilized, its atomic bombs falling into the hands of terrorists out to destroy Peoria and Orlando.

Such fevered nightmares, impossible to disprove, may be conjured at any moment to scare critics into silence.  They are a convenient bogeyman, leaving us cowering as we send our superman military out to save us (and the world as well), while preserving our right to visit the mall and travel to Disney World without being nuked.

The truth is that no one really knows what would happen if the U.S. disengaged from Afghanistan.  But we do know what's happening now, with us fully engaged: we're pursuing a war that's costing us nearly $7 billion a month that we're not winning (and that's arguably unwinnable), a war that may be increasing the chances of another 9/11, rather than decreasing them.

Capping the Wellsprings of War

Each one of these seven wellsprings feeding our enduring wars must be capped.  So here are seven suggestions for the sort of "caps" -- hopefully more effective than BP's flailing improvisations -- we need to install:

1.  Let's reject the idea that war is either admirable or good -- and in the process, remind ourselves that others often see us as "the foreign fighters" and profligate war consumers who kill innocents (despite our efforts to apply deadly force in surgically precise ways reflecting "courageous restraint").

2.  Let's cut defense spending now, and reduce the global "mission" that goes with it.  Set a reasonable goal -- a 6-8% reduction annually for the next 10 years, until levels of defense spending are at least back to where they were before 9/11 -- and then stick to it.

3.  Let's stop privatizing war.  Creating ever more profitable incentives for war was always a ludicrous idea.  It's time to make war a non-profit, last-resort activity.  And let's revive national service (including elective military service) for all young adults.  What we need is a revived civilian conservation corps, not a new civilian "expeditionary" force.

4. Let's reverse the militarization of so many dimensions of our society.  To cite one example, it's time to empower truly independent (non-embedded) journalists to cover our wars, and stop relying on retired generals and admirals who led our previous wars to be our media guides.  Men who are beholden to their former service branch or the current defense contractor who employs them can hardly be trusted to be critical and unbiased guides to future conflicts.

5.  Let's recognize that expensive high-tech weapons systems are not war-winners.  They've kept us in the game without yielding decisive results -- unless you measure "results" in terms of cost overruns and burgeoning federal budget deficits.

6.  Let's retool our economy and reinvest our money, moving it out of the military-industrial complex and into strengthening our anemic system of mass transit, our crumbling infrastructure, and alternative energy technology.  We need high-speed rail, safer roads and bridges, and more wind turbines, not more overpriced jet fighters.

7.  Finally, let's banish nightmare scenarios from our minds.  The world is scary enough without forever imagining smoking guns morphing into mushroom clouds.
There you have it: my seven "caps" to contain our gushing support for permanent war.  No one said it would be easy.  Just ask BP how easy it is to cap one out-of-control gusher.

Nonetheless, if we as a society aren't willing to work hard for actual change -- indeed, to demand it -- we'll be on that military escalatory curve until we implode.  And that way madness lies.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

By William J. Astore
Reprinted with permission from TomDispatch.

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 73 Comments
by addict42 July 13, 2010 1:13 PM EDT
This article is so true. I was a DoD contractor and the wars were the best thing to happen to my career. My salary skyrocketed and it was an abstaction something that wasn't hurting me just making me a lot of money. I thought "what recession?" Then a trip to Walter Reed hopsital changed all that and I resigned and now make a fraction of what I did working for a non-profit association.
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by jayrh July 12, 2010 9:09 PM EDT
by maintain_integrity

Islam still means PEACE in Arabic
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Tell that to the 74 people in Uganda who died from terrorist attacks by the radical Islamic group al-Shabab over the weekend!!!
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by dennismaneri July 12, 2010 1:04 PM EDT
One of THE MOST IMPORTANT articles I've read in years! This deserves wide circulation. I particularly like "Capping" step # 3. With kids facing the worst job market in generations, why not make National Service a priority; anyone who reaches 18 and/or finishes High School is evaluated, and given a number. The people with the competency to do so are given higher tech jobs to help us become energy independent and assist new "Green Technology" companies. And there are plenty of jobs to help re-build our infrastructure and the power grid. Let's have ALL our youth have a number, and the next time a President wants to take us to war -- and his son(s) and daughter(s) are eligible just like every senator, congressman and U.S. parent -- maybe we'll think twice before rushing off to "save the day". As the U.S. was creating its plan for war in Afghanistan, there was only one politician who was opposed to troop build-up; that was the only politician with a child in the military: Vice President Joe Biden. It's amazing how your perspective on war changes when it's your child's life that lies in the balance -- especially a war whose "Noble Cause" hasn't been so clearly defined.
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by hamsterattack July 11, 2010 3:54 PM EDT
We need war to help the planet. humans are cockroaches overpopulating and destoying the environment. war and death is the planet's only hope.
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by jayrh July 11, 2010 11:35 AM EDT
by maintain_integrity

Actually, I do, and don't just swallow the fox/rush propaganda like you, since mormons like glenn beck will always tell you how bad Muslims are.
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You're just wrong maintain_integrety... Your going back to the 1800's to try and prove some point... I'm telling you that radical Islam is in the news today AND every single day! It was only after seeing this that I started to study radical Islam... This is the only religion that I know of that actually commits violence in the name of their God in the present day... You can actually here their religous leaders calling for violence... You're seeing homegrown terrorist from this country even. Mostly these are radicals, prisoners and other malcontents who have been converted... There have been dozens of acts of violence just in the U.S. this year... If you look in radical Islamic countries, there are too many acts to count...

You are just wrong... All you do with your rantings is help the very people who would murder innocent women and children! How many have suicide bombers killed today???
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by jayrh July 11, 2010 9:05 PM EDT
All you have to do is watch the news to see examples of radical Islamic violence every day... Perhaps you're just not aware but this goes all the way back to the crusades which were mostly to stop Muslim aggression... Both World Wars saw Palestinians and Islamics fighting with the Ottoman Empire and then Hitler... The Grand Mufti of Jeruselem even wanted to bring Hitler's Jewish solution to Palestine... It keeps happening even today... How can you not see the headlines?
by jayrh July 10, 2010 9:10 PM EDT
by maintain_integrity
So please, tell me what difference there is between Christians believing in God, his messenger Christ, and the Bible, versus Muslims believing in God, his messenger Muhammad and the Qur'an?
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That's pretty simple, Islamics are killing in the name of Allah every single day! Perhaps you don't read the news? Seems unlikely, since you're on a news site. CBS's coverage isn't that great but you see Islamic violence, even here, with a high degree of regularity...

I don't see Christian preachers or religious leaders of other faiths encouraging followers to kill in the name of thier God... However, it isn't hard to find video, audio and transcripts of Imams urging their followers to do this... It is also easy to find some form of Islamic atrocity in the news every day if you look... It ranges from suicide bombers to stoning their own people...
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by Mortar_29 July 10, 2010 9:34 PM EDT
The difference? Both cant be right.
by Skruffy1 July 10, 2010 2:02 PM EDT
Here are seven reasons why we can't stop making war: (1) the Legislative branch, (2) the Executive branch, (3)General Dynamics, (4) General Electric, (5) Lockheed-Martin, (6) Boeing, (7) Honeywell... and on and on and on...
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by nabi18 July 10, 2010 1:24 PM EDT
for the islamic perspective on all of this check out http://www.islamicsolutions.com/
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by difiyah July 10, 2010 10:34 AM EDT
The author writes, "The military-industrial complex is a well-oiled, extremely profitable machine"
Ah, there's the biggest motivater of all, the profits, the profits!
Thank you for no. 7, it runs a close second, control through fear. Plus it helps with the old divide and conquer strategy, which the state controlled media loves to beat us to death with daily. Oh wait, I forgot I was on CBS...
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by jayrh July 10, 2010 10:18 AM EDT
Going back to WW1 and WW2, every war that I can think of, that the United States has fought, we were either attacked, we stopped a ruthless dictator or aggression by someone else... If you look at a lot of our military actions, we were blocking efforts by Russia or China to expand their empires...

Now, radical Islam has declared war on us... This happened sometime before 1993 and the first attack on the World Trade Center... Given this fact and Russia and Chi na's support of radical Islamic countries, such as Iran, the author thinks that we should spend less money on defense??? Well, that makes about as much sense as a president who insults our allies and is friendly to our enemies... A president who thinks he can reach out to the Muslim world and change things while we have troops in Muslim lands... A president that would use NASA and space technology (read as missile technology in Islamic speak) as a means of reaching out to these Muslims...

There is such a thing as the military industrial complex. Companies do benefit from war... People that try to say this is the reason we go to war never seem to prove their case though... The same way with oil, if we go to war for it, where is it?
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