May 24, 2023
In the year 2000, the U.S.
government debt was $3.5 trillion, equal to 35% of the Gross Domestic Product
(GDP). By 2022, the debt was $24 trillion, equal to 95% of GDP. The U.S. debt
is soaring, hence America’s current debt crisis. Yet both Republicans and
Democrats are missing the solution: stopping America’s wars of choice and
slashing military outlays.
Suppose the government’s
debt had remained at a modest 35% of GDP, as in 2000. Today’s debt would be $9
trillion, as opposed to $24 trillion. Why did the U.S. government incur the
excess $15 trillion in debt?
The single biggest answer
is the U.S. government’s addiction to war and military spending. According to
the Watson Institute at Brown University, the cost of U.S. wars from fiscal
year 2001 to fiscal year 2022 amounted to a whopping $8 trillion, more than
half of the extra $15 trillion in debt. The other $7 trillion arose roughly
equally from budget deficits caused by the 2008 financial crisis and the
Covid-19 pandemic.
To surmount the debt
crisis, America needs to stop feeding the Military-Industrial Complex (MIC),
the most powerful lobby in Washington. As President Dwight D. Eisenhower
famously warned on January 17, 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.” Since 2000, the MIC led the
U.S. into disastrous wars of choice in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, and now
Ukraine.
The Military-Industrial
Complex long ago adopted a winning political strategy by ensuring that the
military budget reaches into every Congressional district. The Congressional
Research Service recently reminded Congress that, “Defense spending touches
every Member of Congress’s district through pay and benefits for military servicemembers
and retirees, economic and environmental impact of installations, and
procurement of weapons systems and parts from local industry, among other
activities.” Only a brave member of Congress would vote against the
military-industry lobby, yet bravery is certainly no hallmark of Congress.
America’s annual military
spending is now around $900 billion, roughly 40% of the world’s total, and
greater than the next 10 countries combined. U.S. military spending in 2022 was
triple that of China. According to Congressional Budget Office, the military
outlays for 2024-2033 will be a staggering $10.3 trillion on current baseline.
A quarter or more of that could be avoided by ending America’s wars of choice,
closing down many of America’s 800 or so military bases around the world, and
negotiating new arms control agreements with China and Russia.
Yet instead of peace
through diplomacy, and fiscal responsibility, the MIC regularly scares the
American people with a comic-book style depictions of villains whom the U.S.
must stop at all costs. The post-2000 list has included Afghanistan’s Taliban,
Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, Libya’s Moammar Qaddafi,
Russia’s Vladimir Putin, and recently, China’s Xi Jinping. War, we are
repeatedly told, is necessary for America’s survival.
A peace-oriented foreign
policy would be opposed strenuously by the military-industrial lobby but not by
the public. Significant public pluralities already want less, not more, U.S.
involvement in other countries’ affairs, and less, not more, US troop
deployments overseas. Regarding Ukraine, Americans overwhelmingly want a “minor
role” (52%) rather than a “major role” (26%) in the conflict between Russia and
Ukraine. This is why neither Biden nor any recent president has dared to ask
Congress for any tax increase to pay for America’s wars. The public’s response
would be a resounding “No!”
While America’s wars of
choice have been awful for America, they have been far greater disasters for
countries that America purports to be saving. As Henry Kissinger famously
quipped, “To be an enemy of the United States can be dangerous, but to be a
friend is fatal.” Afghanistan was America’s cause from 2001 to 2021, until the
U.S. left it broken, bankrupt, and hungry. Ukraine is now in America’s embrace,
with the same likely results: ongoing war, death, and destruction.
The military budget could
be cut prudently and deeply if the U.S. replaced its wars of choice and arms
races with real diplomacy and arms agreements. If presidents and members of congress
had only heeded the warnings of top American diplomats such as William Burns,
the U.S. Ambassador to Russia in 2008, and now CIA Director, the U.S. would
have protected Ukraine’s security through diplomacy, agreeing with Russia that
the U.S. would not expand NATO into Ukraine if Russia also kept its military
out of Ukraine. Yet relentless NATO expansion is a favorite cause of the MIC;
new NATO members are major customers of U.S. armaments.
The U.S. has also
unilaterally abandoned key arms control agreements. In 2002, the U.S.
unilaterally walked out of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. And rather than
promote nuclear disarmament—as the U.S. and other nuclear powers are required
to do under Article VI the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty—the
Military-Industrial Complex has sold Congress on plans to spend more than $600
billion by 2030 to “modernize” the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
Now the MIC is talking up
the prospect of war with China over Taiwan. The drumbeats of war with China are
stoking the military budget, yet war with China is easily avoidable if the U.S.
adheres to the One-China policy that properly underpins U.S.-China relations.
Such a war should be unthinkable. More than bankrupting the U.S., it could end
the world.
Military spending is not
the only budget challenge. Aging and rising healthcare costs add to the fiscal
woes. According to the Congressional Budget Office, debt will reach 185 percent
of GDP by 2052 if current policies remain unchanged. Healthcare costs should be
capped while taxes on the rich should be raised. Yet facing down the
military-industrial lobby is the vital first step to putting America’s fiscal
house in order, needed to save the U.S., and possibly the world, from America’s
perverse lobby-driven politics.
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