Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

No Economic Recovery Without Downsizing the Military
Glen Ford, BAR executive editor
31 Dec 2008
🖨️ Print Article

No Economic Recovery Without Downsizing the Militaryno war

A Black Agenda Radio commentary by Glen Ford

"Obama must break his
promise to the military industrial complex."

Barack Obama is being coy, as usual, artfully cultivating
media speculation over the scope of his economic "recovery" plan. To put it
more bluntly, Obama is a tease, a media flirt who knows that the shallow
corporate press become hopelessly fixated on that which is withheld from them.
How big will Obama's stimulus be? 850 billion? A trillion? As long as media
attention revolves around the elusive figure, few journalists will pose the
more fundamental question: How can the nation muster the resources to save
itself from economic ruin, while continuing to feed the dogs of war?

The disappearance of trillions in notional and actual
dollars has so dazzled the public, some seem to have forgotten about the
Trillion Dollar War on Terror. That's the figure Time magazine
places on George Bush's military adventures since 9/11. Others put the figure
much higher. Former Clinton economic advisor Joseph Stiglitz and co-author
Linda Bilmes' best-selling book calls Iraq a "Three Trillion Dollar War," when
all costs are factored in.

Of course, there are costs that economists are no good at
tallying, such as the cost of making the whole planet hate you, and wish you
ill. There's a very big, long term price tag at the end of that militaristic
road - a price that is paid when nobody in their right mind wants to have
business or any other relations with your country. But the simple budgetary
cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars was already an unbearable weight, before
the whole economic house of cards came tumbling down, just a few months ago. Better
days are way beyond the horizon, even in the best of scenarios, but economic
recovery is inconceivable if the U.S. continues to spend such a huge proportion
of its treasure on war.

"The simple budgetary cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars was already an unbearable weight, before the whole economic house of cards
came tumbling down."

That's one reason not to be excited about whatever economic
stimulus figure Obama's corrupt banker advisors pull out of their hats. The
U.S. cannot pay for recovery and fund its wars, too. Had the financial system
not collapsed so precipitously, the constantly escalating drain of U.S.
resources to the military would have inevitably led to an economic and
political crisis. Back in March, authors Stiglitz and Bilmes noted that war
spending had already "crowded out spending on virtually all other discretionary
federal programs." If the banker's had not done the economy in, the generals
and war contractors would have eventually crippled the government.

If Barack Obama is to have the remotest chance to avoid
full-scale economic depression, he must break his promise to the military
industrial complex - an Obama promise that was always more firm and detailed
than any he ever made to the public regarding health care or jobs or affordable
housing. Obama must reverse his support for 100,000 additional soldiers and
Marines - and cancel plans for new or expanded wars in which those troops were
to be deployed. And get out of Iraq and Afghanistan. And that's just for
starters.

The arithmetic of the current, overlapping crises leaves
Obama no options. He can continue to finance a war machine that costs more than
all the rest of the world's armies, navies and air forces, combined, or he can
try to save what's left of the U.S. economy. He can't do both.

For Black Agenda Radio, I'm Glen Ford.

BAR executive editor Glen Ford can be contacted
at Glen.Ford@BlackAgendaReport.com.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Trump
    Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Trump Derangement and the Phony Rule of Law
    05 Jun 2024
    Donald Trump is often portrayed as the worst president of all time and now his criminal conviction has made him the butt of many jokes. But his legal troubles may not prevent him from winning again.…
  • Price Mars
    Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    PREFACE: So Spoke the Uncle/Ainsi parle l’oncle, Jean Price-Mars, 1928
    05 Jun 2024
    Revisiting a powerful account of the psychology of colonialism and neocolonialism by Haiti’s Jean Price-Mars.
  • Menendez
    Ann Garrison, BAR Contributing Editor
    Hardliner on the Hill: Senator Bob Menendez and US-Cuba Policy
    05 Jun 2024
    A Belly of the Beast documentary follows Afro-Cuban journalist Liz Oliva Fernández as she explores the Cuban American community and its relation to the long-running embargo on her country.
  • Donald Trump in court
    Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
    Hey, Mr. Tangerine Man …
    05 Jun 2024
    "Hey, Mr. Tangerine Man…" is the latest from BAR's Poet-in-Residence.
  • Shaka Shakur
    Revolutionary Notes from the Western Front
    05 Jun 2024
    The international liberation struggles of colonized people in nations like Haiti, Palestine, as well as Indigenous nations on land stolen by the U.S., are inextricably linked to the struggle for the…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us