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(I am a member of the Danish Committee for a Free Iraq. This piece was first printed by its website: www.fritirak.dk, on July 4, 2005, and revised in August 2006 for www.stateofnature.org. Slight update in December 2007.)
The Permanent War Age (PWA) is the post-September 11, 2001 government political and economic strategy both domestically and internationally. Upon declaring “War against Terrorism” (October 7, 2002), George Bush ordered his military chiefs to calculate the costs of a long-range war against as many as 40 countries. War Secretary Donald Rumsfield got $48 billion on top of what had been planned for military expenses, an increase of 11.6%. A constant increase in military expense is now a permanent aspect of the warlord's policies. Since 9/11 the military expenditure increase is 41%.
Within the context of the PWA, the CIA received TEN times the amount
of usual funds to bribe foreign public officers and other informers.
Official restrictions on the CIA against use of murderers and torturers
were lifted. (1)
United States capitalism has been partly dependent upon huge military
appropriations since long before World War 11, but Big Business has
been busy extracting even greater profits by expanding its warmongering
over the entire world since that war. The weapons industry is the basis
for maintaining the empire's foreign interests and for keeping the domestic
economy thriving.
In the half century since WW11, the US has sent its military forces
to 66 countries 159 times.
The Norwegian peace researcher at Gutenberg University, Jørgen
Johansen, has concluded that in just two centuries the US has passed
the Roman Empire, which existed nearly one thousand years, in the number
of military interventions.
“Of the 220 times, in round figures, the United States has used military might against other states the majority have been against international law, as well as the ruling conventions and laws concerning the use of military power.”(2)
Even before the 9/11 terror attack the US stood for 40% of the world's
military expenditures. Its sum was 20 times that of China (nr. 2 in
use of military funding), which has four times as many inhabitants.
Just three years after 9/11, the US was spending HALF the entire world
military expenditures. In 2004, the world sum was $1.03 trillion. Officially,
the US used $524 billion, including “extra” funding for
their wars against Afghanistan and Iraq.
In 2006, the entire national budget was $2.57 trillion with $424 billion
for military expenditures. But on top of that official funding, “extra”
appropriations for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq must be added: at
least $100 billion for 2006. Yet that combined sum ($524 billion) is
only official. Hidden within the overall budget is approximately $450
for former war costs: for war veterans' pensions and enormous medical
expenses for the wounded—which includes many poisoned by their
own military biochemical weapons of mass destruction—and for interests
on the wars' debt.
There are also other war-defense funds hidden in areas called social
programs. (3)
Peace researchers have estimated that the real military piece of national
budget in 2001 was 47%. At today's prices, that means each and every
American (280 billion) babies included are forced, without their consultation
or consent, to spend $4000 per year for current and previous wars.
The costs of current wars are mostly “borrowed”, again
without democratic consent, from pension funds and from social security.
It is difficult to know what the real expenditures for domestic social
programs, which actually benefit people, are when reading the budget.
Much of the funding under “domestic programs” includes funding
for police and secret service, for the Homeland Security and even for
war. I calculate that the real expenditures for people programs is around
$200 billion, or eight percent as opposed to about 47% for current and
past war-making.
The military must support Big Business' natural development, which is
to perennially concentrate private ownership and thus profits in fewer
and fewer hands and places. This leads to conflicting contradictions:
uneven economic and social development the world over, with greater
poverty both in numbers of poor and the extent of their poverty. The
richest 500 corporations possess one-third of the entire world's accumulative
gross nation product (GNP), and 90% of these firms have their headquarters
in the US, Japan and Europe. The richest 225 individuals possess half
the wealth of the all six billion people on the planet (4).
The gap between the richest and poorest nations has nearly tripled since
WW11. The least development countries get less in investment capital.
In 1994, 41% of capital investments went into these countries; in 2000,
that amount had been reduced to 19%.(5)
The free movement of capital—with support by most nation states—the
growing concentration of capital and investments, the monopoly's unlimited
power, the increasing oil prices, and the chain reaction in the wake
of the Enron energy company scandal has resulted in a turbulent world
economy and in political and military developments we are witness to
over the world today.
The 1997 Asian financial crisis hit capitalism hard, not only in Japan
but from Russia to Argentina and other Latin America countries. Its
consequences, coupled with the over-accumulation of capital and goods
in the US, has led to an uncontrollable debt for all American families,
surpassing their ability to pay. The world's only superpower stimulates
preposterous financial speculation in quick buying and selling of stocks
and foreign exchange, which means that the economy is founded upon soap
bubbles.
The military shall, once again, rescue the situation. Production, sale
and use of weapons must be stimulated so that more can be produced and
sold, thus bringing many capitalist greater profits, which then can
be used for even greater investments. But how can the military arrange
for its weapons to be used, more so than just for training purposes?
After the fall of the Soviet and European Communist parties' state control,
the US had a difficult time rationalizing its huge military budget and
it began to fall. General Colin Powell, in charge of the first US invasion
against Iraq, told the “Toronto Star”: “I am running
dry of villains.” (6)
The US soon converted its terrorist friend, Osama bin Laden, into a
terrorist villain. From good guy to bad guy, much like it did with Manuel
Noriega, CIA-agent and Panama’s strong-man. Then it decided that
its former friend and dictator, Saddam Hussein, was a terrorist bad
guy, too. It wasn't the first President George Bush who took him on
as a terrorist enemy, but rather as an obstinate independent dictator,
one who wished to weaken the oil power of its Great Britain-created
neighbor, Kuwait. It wasn't until France convinced Hussein to go over
to the new Euro valuta, in exchange for the UN-approved “oil-for-food”
program, that the second President George Bush decided that Saddam Hussein
must be replaced.
Economist William Engdahl formulated it this way: “All indications
point in the direction that the Iraq war was taken as the easiest way
to send a deadly preventative warning to OPEC and others not to flirt
with rejecting the petrodollar system in exchange for a system based
upon the Euro.” (7)
Permanent War Age Goals
1. Most important for the US is to maintain and strengthen its dominance
over the entire world.
2. The US wishes to establish an extended military presence in Iraq
and will use this territory to expand throughout the Middle East and
beyond, especially where there is oil and other important resources,
and/or where people resist US hegemony.
3. Israel is a strategic ally in that endeavor. Its domination over
Palestinians, its periodic wars against Lebanon and Syria help the US’s
long-sighted plans.
4. It will control the transportation of oil reserves from the Caucasus
Mountains, once part of the Soviet Union, the world's richest oil location.
That is the main reason for warring on Afghanistan.
5. It will destabilize Central Asia and it hopes to destabilize China,
if it can.
6. The War on Terrorism shall last a very, very long time, in order
to make it profitable to transfer part of production for civilian use
to military production beneficial to the most powerful corporations—weapons,
oil and other mineral concerns, and for heavy industry. (In June 2005,
War Secretary Donald Rumsfield, told the world that he estimated the
US would continue occupying Iraq for 12 years.) The war-occupation is
hoped to decrease growing US unemployment. War shall also stop the fall
in the exchange rate as well as growing consumer lack of confidence,
all of which creates an overproduction of goods and sales deficits.
7. US capitalists do not, of course, want European capitalists to become
stronger in a united, sovereign EU, at least not in the long run. Such
unification would strengthen their ability to become a competing superpower
with its own army. But, in the short run, the Bush administration can
tolerate and support a united EU with a constitution, as long as the
US can control EU's foreign policy and as long as European capitalists
will back up its wars in the “Third World”. All Big Business
is obligated to follow US imperialism and dampen their own independence,
especially where the poorest peoples struggle for an increase in the
economic pie, which naturally threatens the profits of all Big Business.
8. And so there are us in the “First World”, who will not
accept their endless and chaotic profit-greed, their constant efforts
to take from us what we have achieved in a social network, and those
of us who reject their bloody wars. There is life in a new and often
expanding anti-globalization movement, and a rebirth of the anti-war
movement. If we hold on and grow, we could damage Big Business hegemonic
interests. We must be stopped.
In that short time since a few angry people exploded capital's Wall
Street, its most important buildings, and its army's headquarters, Big
Business and its government have nurtured state terrorism all the more.
The Yankees have gained a lot. WAR HELPS!
Permanent War Age Results
1. Since the War on Terrorism crusade was initiated, the Pentagon has
increased both the usage and sale of weapons. The armament industry's
congressional lobbying ($35 millions worth) has paid off. Stock values
rise, and 2.2 million weapon-producing workers (2% of the working class)
receive an indecent high wage for selling their labor for war.
2. The US puppet regime in Kabul has granted the Texas-based oil corporation
Unocal's bid for a 850-kilometer long oil pipeline from Turkmenistan
to Pakistan and India. There are 200,000 billion tons of oil at stake,
enough to supply US energy use for 30 years. The Taleban rulers had
stood in Unocal's path.
3. The US has taken over Iraq though with tremendous costs and difficulties.
4. As the mass media and state leaders focus on the holy terror war,
US elite troops and paramilitary forces have more or less quietly intervened
against liberation forces or Muslim rebels in Yemen, Georgia, the Philippines
and Colombia.
5. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, the US has extended its military
presence in over half the world's nations. The US has one-half million
troops stationed in upwards to 400 military bases in over 100 countries.
In addition to Eastern Europe, the Yankees are in several Euro-Asian
countries, in territories previously under Russia and China control
or influence: Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan,
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, along with 14 military bases in Saudi Arabia.
The US occupied much of Saudi Arabia territory after its war against
Afghanistan's progressive government, supported by the Soviet Union.
US presence in S.A. is the key reason why bin Ladin became an of the
US.
6. The US prevented a true solution to the conflict in Kashmir and
thus a long-lasting peace between India and Pakistan, because that would
release greater potential for India, which could threaten US economic
interests. The US has been involved in Kashmir at least since the CIA,
along with Pakistan's military intelligence unit, ISI, created the Mujahidin
in Kashmir and Taleban in Afghanistan.
7. Atomic weapons once again are considered acceptable war weapons,
rather than weapons of war deterrent. The war-terror world climate gives
the green light to the right-wing part of The Establishment, to its
long time desire to use atomic weapons. They also got their wish to
set Russia and China on the list of possible targets for “tactical
atomic weapons.” Also on the list are: Iran, North Korea, Libya,
Syria, Cuba and possibly Venezuela and Bolivia. Other weapons of mass
destruction, most of them prohibited by the UN, are in use.
8. The US tried but failed twice in removing Venezuela's progressive
president Hugo Chavez. A third attempt is not ruled out. The CIA had,
once again, miscalculated the strong support Chavez has from the poor
majority. Besides the governmen’s social reforms for people, what
most irritates the US is Chavez' backing of liberation forces in Colombia
and his barter trade with Cuba: oil for health care and education. Venezuela
is the world's fourth or fifth largest oil delivering country, most
of which is still sold to the US.
9. The US has set Cuba's name on its “terrorist state”
list, the so-called “evil axis” powers. Without offering
any evidence, the US claims that Cuba is producing biological weapons—certainly
a big lie as was theirs about Iraq. One is not expected to even ask
the question about why the US produces and uses weapons it falsely accuses
Cuba of producing, though the US does not contend Cuba uses what it
is not even producing. The biggest irony of this lie is that the US
undersecretary of weapons control, John Bolton, patched the accusation
together from the real fact that Cuba is a leading nation, and the only
“third world” country, to have achieved expertise in creating
and producing its own biotechnology industry, including the production
of 12 of the 13 vaccines it uses for all of its children, and does so
without any economic cost to the families. It is a crime, according
to the natural laws of capitalism, to do such a human thing, an affront
to the “free market economy.”
10. Bush's rhetorical attack upon Cuba is connected to its success
in getting José Bustani removed as OPCW's chief of weapons inspection.
The Brazilian-born public servant saw no difference between small and
poor nations and large and rich nations. Bustani demanded the same access
to control laboratories and chemical factories in the US as in every
other land. On April 21, 2002, when OPCW was forced, at economic gunpoint,
to fire him, Bustani said that he had sought to, “Promote Iraq's
signature to the Convention on Chemical Weapons...in accordance with
the UN Security Council guidelines.” That was not in the US's
interests.
11. The US assumes the “right” to board any skip anywhere
in the world regardless of the flag it flies. This is an open affront
to the sovereignty of every nation in the world.
12. Big Business wars give them the “right” to reduce its
taxes to society's infrastructure, to people programs. From paying 20%
of all taxes a handful of years ago, under Bush Big Business is now
only contributing 10%.
13. The PWA shall be sold. We shall be afraid. Thus we will be passive
supporters to their wars and terror laws, which reduce our civil liberties
and the accumulated power of the working class. These encroachments
into our political rights lay the basis for a future fascist governing
process.
14. Without opposition, the US government codified the “Patriot
Act”, which opens up for a police state: far-reaching surveillance
of anyone it wishes, and the indefinite jailing on “suspicion
of being a terrorist” without any rights to visitation, to an
attorney, to court orders or trials. The government has a capacity to
intern many millions of people under this law in 600 jails and concentrations
camps—in addition to the illegally occupied Cuban territory known
as Guantánamo base. Many of these jails are hidden, and are said
to be able to hold 20,000 people. But one camp in Fairbanks Alaska is
said to be able to hold two million people. These new interning capacities
are paid for, in part, by the new ministry of “Homeland Security”,
which currently receives $31 billion. Moreover, in addition to these
jails and concentration camps, the US uses an undetermined number of
isolation jails in several other countries, including Europe.
Since the enactment of the US “Patriot Law”, most European
nations have proclaimed similar laws, again without consultation or
approval by the people. The rulers’ definition of terror is so
broad that it fits most anything or anyone, except the ruling class’
governments and their military officials. Since terror is said to be
suspected anywhere at anytime, then we citizens must accept that our
democratic rights of speech, press and to organize unions or political
organizations and demonstrations be curtailed.
The definition of terror in the country where I live today, Denmark,
approximates the recommendation from the EU commission on terrorism,
whose members are kept secret and whose criteria for placing groups
on the terrorist list are withheld. To the rulers, terror is when two
or more persons act with intent to create fear or seriously change or
destroy the nation's political, economic or social structure. With such
a law, the government's police forces can attack our collectively won
rights, union rights, and act against social and political and economic
opponents. It can easily be interpreted to disallow anyone from even
advocating or acting for socialism, since that would be against the
existing economic structure.
In something one would expect to find in “Alice in Wonderland”, the Danish government used the law for the first time in June 2005. It brought the pacifist, non-violence organization Greenpeace to court for committing “terror”. The judge found for the government, and fined the organization about $6000 for the acts of three of its members. Greenpeace has appealed. The horrendous act of terror occurred in October 2003 when three young men crawled up the government's agricultural building with ropes, and hung a large white banner over several windows.
The banner read: NO TO GMO PIGS
In August 2004, a few hundred Danes started the group “Rebellion” (Oprør, in Danish) to protest the terror law. “Rebellion” collected about $20,000 for two groups—the Palestinian PFLP and the Colombian liberationist FARC—which, following the example of the US, the Danish government and EU Commission had recently placed on their terror lists. We divided the money evenly between them. We provided Denmark's police intelligence with evidence of our deed. We wanted to provoke not only debate but a juridic decision to outlaw the law. State authorities were afraid to take the case to court, because we would have the opportunity to defy their secret criteria for placing groups on the list. But when we defied them all the more by beginning to raise a greater sum of money and encouraging, through our website (www.opror.net), other groups in Denmark and the rest of Europe to do the same, we were cited for violating the law. One of our spokespersons, Patrick Mac Manus, was arrested and charged with violating the terror law. If it wins the case, the state can incarcerate Patrick to ten years in prison.
Following "Rebellion's" initiative, a group of seven "Fighters
and Lovers" produced and sold t-shirts with FARC and PFLP emblems.
Part of the proceeds were to go to media projects in those areas where
the two liberation forces operate. These activists are now (end of 2007)
being tried for aiding terrorism. Maximum punishment is ten years in
prison.
“We must go all the way back to when the Nazis had power in Germany
to find anything similar to judge this law by,” said constitutional
attorney Hans Kjellund. (8)
The Mass Media's Contribution
The mass media encourages the War on Terrorism by spreading fear and so-called patriotic morality, and by censoring any significant opposition opinion.
“Give war a chance,” read the September 13, 01 headline in the “Philadelphia Inquirer.”
“It is time to choose atomic weapons,” read the “Washington Times” headline, the day after.
The US government has gagged the media since 9/11, and the media appeases by self-censuring. Television news has, for example, forbidden any commentary from Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. The “Washington Post” responsible editor revealed that the government told the newspaper “a handful of times” in the first months following 9/11 that it will control the news. The reason given was that otherwise it would “bring national security in danger.”
Thus, the media brokers for the government what the people will be told.
“The people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the peacemakers for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country:” Nazi leader Hermann Goring.
Censorship and self-censorship are not enough for the world's self-proclaimed democratic nation number one. Just one month after 9/11, the Pentagon established “The Office of Strategic Influence”, in order to legitimize lying, which the Pentagon admitted it would do. The “Office” sends anonymous e-mails and “news” free of charge to news bureaus world-wide. The objective is to cast resister to US domination in a bad light. Media receivers of the “news” are not able to know if the information is true or not.
“This information will stretch from the blackest of black (ed. read “lying”) to the whitest of white,” said a spokesman for the Pentagon. (9)
But after the OSI became publicly known, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfield decided to “abolish” it. In a November 18, 2002 press briefing, he told civil liberty critics: “You can have the name, but I’m gonna keep doing every single thing that needs to be done and I have; that was intended to be done by that office, NOT by that office [but] in other ways.”
Thus the Information Operations Task Force IOTF) came into being. The Center for Media and Democracy described is as “deeper” within the Pentagon. Among the IOTF’s official duties is to “coerce” foreign journalists and plant false information overseas. Secret briefing papers also said the office should find ways to “punish” those who convey the “wrong message”. One senior office told CNN that the office would, “formalize government deception, dishonesty and misinformation”—something the CIA is know to have done routinely for many years.
Iraq
The US thought, or said that it thought, it would be easy to take over Iraq. The ruling class is so arrogant and racist that it believed the Iraqi people would not continue fighting with any meaningful resistance forces. But since the beginning of occupation there has been an upswing of resistance. The occupation forces' reaction has been brutal. Thousands of civilians were murdered in Falluja in revenge for the liquidation there of four US mercenaries. The destruction of Falluja parallels the destruction of Lidice and Oradour in WW11. But there was so much unified and massive resistance in Falluja that the occupation forces were beaten back at first and called for a ceasefire. Later, they crushed the city, bringing it to ruins, using internationally forbidden weapons: napalm and depleted uranium (DU), which produces many diseases, including cancers, and genetic deformities in babies.
By June of 2005, observers estimated that about 100,000 Iraqis had been murdered, overwhelmingly by US troops, and tens of thousands had been tortured and imprisoned without any civil liberties or judicial rights. The US claimed “only” 25,000 Iraqis had been killed and the US’s “few” soldiers and mercenaries responsible for the torture had been “brought to justice”.
One year later, Lancelot medical journal estimated that the number
of Iraqi war dead had risen to 650,000, and the aggressors are faced
with massive resistance in Iraq, and growing resistance in Afghanistan.
Their lies are no longer to be hidden, entirely. Warring governments
are also met with increasing resistance on the home fronts, especially
in Great Britain. Thanks to a whistle-blower like Daniel Ellsberg, one
of Denmark's own military officer intelligence experts, Frank Grevil,
leaked documents that show some of the lies that the Danish government
used to rationalize its war declaration against Iraq. Denmark currently
has 500 troops in the southern part of Iraq. For his “crime”
of informing the people so that democracy would not be lost entirely,
he has been convicted to six months in prison.
(In late 2007, Denmark withdrew most of their troops from Iraq and placed
more in Afghanistan. By December, there were about 600.)
US-UK-Denmark governments are not able to hide their lies very long,
despite the many millions spent on secret propaganda operations such
as the Information Office Task Force. On November 30, 2005, for example,
the Los Angeles Times reported that, “The US military is secretly
paying Iraqi newspapers to publish stories written” by American
“information operations” troops. Lt. Gen. John R. Vines
is the commander in Baghdad of the IOTF. Even a Colorado newspaper,
the Denver Post, wrote about Pentagon lying. Its December 2, 2005 headline
read: “All the news that’s fit to plant”.
Conclusion
The US needs the claim that it “removed” a brutal dictator from power in Iraq because he opposed the people's will. That gave the US the “right” to teach the Iraqis what “democracy” is all about. The US also needs Osama bin Laden free in flight. He is its symbol of hate and fear, and thus the “need” for the Permanent War Age.
“You're either with us or against us!” Such has it actually been since 1823 with the Monroe Doctrine, when the US declared that the entire continents of the Americas was its back yard: Hands Off!. But since the end of WW11, the goal has extended to the entire universe. US State Department chief for national security planning, George Kennan, put it like it is in the formerly secret Policy Planning Study of 1948:
“...We have about 50% of the world's wealth, but only 6.3% of its population...In this situation, we cannot fail to be the object of envy and resentment. Our real task...is to devise a pattern of relationships which will permit us to maintain this position of disparity. To do so, we will have to dispense with all sentimentality and day-dreaming. Our attention will have to be concentrated everywhere on our immediate national objectives... we should cease talking about vague and...unreal objectives such as human rights, the raising of the living standards and democratization...We have to deal in straight power concepts. The less we are then hampered by idealistic slogans the better.”
Kennan was considered by the mass media to be a “liberal dove”, just as John Kennedy, Bill Clinton and even Colin Powell are.
If permanent war cannot solve capital's economic crises, cannot provide it with “sufficient” profit, then it has its trump card: fascism. There is wind in fascism's sails both in the US and Europe. Once again they use racism as its foundation, which attracts a lot of whites, many of whom are self-proclaimed Christians.
But there are many positive signs and trends. Consciousness about what the US and EU are really about is growing. More insiders are becoming whistle-blowers, and thus more people understand the Orwellian concept of “double speak”. Peace means war; Freedom means slavery; Ignorance is strength! Now it is time to escalate our resistance at home and the world over. The next step should be to create national and international anti-capitalist broad movements. These could, perhaps, evolve/explode into strong movements for equality, for sharing our collective resources and production, and for collective decision-making, that is, for true democracy.
Notes:
1. Newsweek, 12/17/01
2. From the Norwegian Magazine, “Non-Violence”, as printed
in the Danish daily, “The Worker”, October 1, 2002 (my translation).
3. Total outlays were $1,394 billion. Military outlays were placed officially
$325 billion, and unofficial past military war costs (vet benefits and
national debt interest) was $334 billion. www. coloradicals.org.
4. United Nations Development Programs (UNDP) statistics.
5. United Nations Investment Report, 2000.
6. April 9, 1991. My translation from the Danish.
7. Translated from the Danish translation of Engdahl's article, “The
New American Century?”
8. “The Worker”, Denmark, March 23, 2002.
9. “New York Times” as translated from the Danish “The
Worker”, February 23, 01.
________________________________________
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