Fifty years after Dwight D. Eisenhower’s January 17, 1961 speech on the “military-industrial complex”, that threat has morphed into a far more powerful and sinister force than Eisenhower could have imagined. It has become a “Permanent War State”, with the power to keep the United States at war continuously for the indefinite future.
But despite their seeming invulnerability, the vested interests behind U.S. militarism have been seriously shaken twice in the past four decades by some combination of public revulsion against a major war, opposition to high military spending, serious concern about the budget deficit and a change in perception of the external threat. Today, the Permanent War State faces the first three of those dangers to its power simultaneously — and in a larger context of the worst economic crisis since the great depression.
When Eisenhower warned in this farewell address of the “potential” for the “disastrous rise of misplaced power”, he was referring to the danger that militarist interests would gain control over the country’s national security policy. The only reason it didn’t happen on Ike’s watch is that he stood up to the military and its allies.
The Air Force and the Army were so unhappy with his “New Look” military policy that they each waged political campaigns against it. The Army demanded that Ike reverse his budget cuts and beef up conventional forces. The Air Force twice fabricated intelligence to support its claim that the Soviet Union was rapidly overtaking the United States in strategic striking power — first in bombers, later in ballistic missiles.
But Ike defied both services, reducing Army manpower by 44 percent from its 1953 level and refusing to order a crash program for bombers or for missiles. He also rejected military recommendations for war in Indochina, bombing attacks on China and an ultimatum to the Soviet Union.
After Eisenhower, it became clear that the alliance of militarist interests included not only the military services and their industrial clients but civilian officials in the Pentagon, the CIA’s Directorate of Operations, top officials at the State Department and the White House national security adviser. During the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, that militarist alliance succeeded in pushing the White House into a war in Vietnam, despite the reluctance of both presidents, as documented in my book Perils of Dominance.
But just when the power of the militarist alliance seemed unstoppable in the late 1960s, the public turned decisively against the VietnamWar, and a long period of public pressure to reduce military spending began. As a result, military manpower was reduced to below even the Eisenhower era levels.
For more than a decade the alliance of militarist interests was effectively constrained from advocating a more aggressive military posture.
Even during the Reagan era, after a temporary surge in military spending, popular fear of Soviet Union melted away in response to the rise of Gorbachev, just as the burgeoning federal budget deficit was becoming yet another threat to militarist bloc. As it became clear that the Cold War was drawing to a close, the militarist interests faced the likely loss of much of their power and resources.
But in mid-1990 they got an unexpected break when Saddam Hussein occupied Kuwait. George H. W. Bush – a key figure in the militarist complex as former CIA Director — seized the opportunity to launch a war that would end the “Vietnam syndrome”. The Bush administration turned a popular clear-cut military victory in the 1991 Gulf War into a rationale for further use of military force in the Middle East. Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney’s 1992 military strategy for the next decade said, “We must be prepared to act decisively in the Middle East/Persian Gulf region as we did in Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm if our vital interests are threatened anew.”
The Bush administration pressured the Saudis and other Arab regimes in the Gulf to allow longer-term bases for the U.S. Air Force, and over the next eight years, U.S. planes flew an annual average of 8,000 sorties in the “no fly zones” the United States had declared over most of Iraq, drawing frequent anti-aircraft fire.
The United States was already in a de facto state of war with Iraq well before George W. Bush’s presidency.
The 9/11 attacks were the biggest single boon to the militarist alliance. The Bush administration exploited the climate of fear to railroad the country into a war of aggression against Iraq. The underlying strategy, approved by the military leadership after 9/11, was to use Iraq as a base from which to wage a campaign of regime change in a long list of countries.
That fateful decision only spurred recruitment and greater activism by al Qaeda and other jihadist groups, which expanded into Iraq and other countries.
Instead of reversing the ill-considered use of military force, however, the same coalition of officials pushed for an even more militarized approach to jihadism. Over the next few years, it to gained unprecedented power over resources and policy at home and further extended its reach abroad:
The Special Operations Forces, which operate in almost complete secrecy, obtained extraordinary authority to track down and kill or capture al Qaeda suspects not only in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in many more countries.
The CIA sought and obtained virtually unlimited freedom to carry out drone strikes in secrecy and without any meaningful oversight by Congress.
The Pentagon embraced the idea of the “long war” – a twenty-year strategy envisioning deployment of U.S. troops in dozens of countries, and the Army adopted the idea of “the era of persistent warfare” as its rationale for more budgetary resources.
The military budget doubled from 1998 to 2008 in the biggest explosion of military spending since the early 1950s – and now accounts for 56 percent of discretionary federal spending.
The military leadership used its political clout to ensure that U.S. forces would continue to fight in Afghanistan indefinitely, even after the premises of its strategy were shown to have been false.
Those moves have completed the process of creating a “Permanent War State” — a set of institutions with the authority to wage largely secret wars across a vast expanse of the globe for the indefinite future.
But the power of this new state formation is still subject to the same political dynamics that have threatened militarist interests twice before: popular antipathy to a major war, broad demands for reduced military spending and the necessity to reduce the Federal budget deficit and debt.
The percentage of Americans who believe the war in Afghanistan is not worth fighting has now reached 60 percent for the first time. And as the crisis over the federal debt reaches it climax, the swollen defense budget should bear the brunt of deep budget cuts.
As early as 2005, a Pew Research Center survey found that, when respondents were given the opportunity to express a preference for budget cuts by major accounts, they opted to reduce military spending by 31 percent. In another survey by the Pew Center a year ago, 76 percent of respondents, frustrated by the continued failure of the U.S. economy, wanted the United States to put top priority in its domestic problems.
The only thing missing from this picture is a grassroots political movement organized specifically to demand an end to the Permanent War State. Such a movement could establish firm legal restraints on the institutions that threaten American Democratic institutions through a massive educational and lobbying effort. This is the right historical moment to harness the latent anti-militarist sentiment in the country to a conscious strategy for political change.



41 Comments

I’m wondering what the effects will be of the Tunisian revolution on other countries in the Middle East, i.e., Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and thus on U.S. foreign policy and militarism. I’d like to see a perfect storm that stops this train wreck of permanent war. It’s unsustainable and morally bankrupt.
Recommended. Why are there military occupations in Irak and Afghanistan? Because Chickenhawk Obama enjoys killing babies and stealing money from the American people to give to his warmonger overseers.
It’s true – I remember when Obama took office – Iraq and Afghanistan were such peaceful places – and then like a lightening bolt warmonger Obama invaded…
Fifty Years On: From Military-Industrial Complex to Permanent War State
the very saddest part about bin laden’s victory, and boy was he victorious
I thought only a moron like bush would fall right into bin laden’s play book but there obama is, doing it even worse then bush
man were we beaten by that man, and bad
Thanks for this post. The Special Ops part of this war stands out. The victims have their houses raided at night time. If they are holding a weapon they get shot. If they come to the door, they get shot. If they don’t come to the door, they get shot. If they shout to warn their household they get shot. There’s at least two thousand names on their kill or capture list. The TF 373 teams make many errors as found on the Afghan War Logs. I wonder how long before this sort of thing starts happening here at home, but then we have SWAT teams responding to drug misdemeanor tip offs with armed home invasions. We also saw activists’ homes sweeped in Minn. based upon a grand jury subpoena. Many of these peace groups turn out to be infiltrated by undercover people. I would say we are way past merely being harassed for our free speech rights.
With the passage of time, Eisenhower is looking better and better, just like Harry Truman. He was slow on the uptake against McCarthy, though to be fair, tail-gunner Joe got his start under Truman, just like Nixon. Those of us of a certain age still regret Adlai Stevenson, the best candidate since FDR the Democrats ever fielded. In light of current views here concerning the present administration, it is probably worth recalling how cool most of us on the Democratic left were to Kennedy, whom we considered a poseur. He would have had a hard time beating Rockefeller in 1964 had Rockefeller got the Republican nomination and had he not been assassinated.
All empires have faied in history. No reason to think that our empire will endure.
The reason this might have gotten so bad is due to the every increasing greed on the part of the theocrats that run things. With the ability to make millions and billions of dollars its simply too difficult for these corrupt lowlifes to pass up. Unfortunately the american populace keeps reelecting these people and being shocked SHOCKED i tell you when they end up being even worse then they were before.
I would be curious to see what would happen if elected officials werent paid or paid at the minimum level. The fact that senators and congress people get what 150,000 per year is downright ridiculous.
Maybe if we weren’t an empire, then we would not fall.
Ike’s famous quote was obviously prescient, but I doubt even he could have imagined the permanence and almost routine character that our occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan have taken on. And what’s next? Yemen? Syria? Endless war…
http://www.sunstateactivist.org/ssablog
~~~Mod Note: Please limit blog whoring to one per day~~~
Frank, you waste your outrage. I doubt that Obama enjoys killing babies. I’m sure he feels their pain. That is the difference between Dems and Repubs. However, the “overseers” part is correct.
In fact, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are all about oil, not killing people. It’s just an unfortunate part of doing business that these people live in the areas where there is oil.
Ever since Bush was able to launch his vanity wars I’ve been of the mind that we need to eliminate the professional military. It has made it too painless for presidents to send troops to foreign lands to fight for non-obvious purposes. It drains our economy, especially since we’re never on a total war manufacturing footing. It is creating a “warrior class” of Americans who are increasingly disconnected from those who have no military in their family circles.
If presidents think we need to go to war, they should need to convince the country of the necessity to the point they will get the public’s support to raise an army. Having one ready to deploy means it’s just too easy to use for empire-building.
Not necessarily. Read about the TAPI pipeline, preferrably in Asia Times.
The war currently being fought in Afghanistan has nothing to do with bin Laden. Bin Laden was never more than an excuse to get in there and pacify the people so that the pipeline could be built. That’s why you’d prop up a former Unocal exec like Karzai and his CIA-drug-dealing brother. Something like 90% of Afghans have never even heard of 9/11.
Fascism, should more properly be called Corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power. Corporations have a single-minded mission to increase profits. If a corporation was a person, the mental health community would diagnose such a person as a psychopath. The military-industrial complex is Fascism USA style. Corporations guide our foreign and military policies toward increased profits at whatever cost. Until the ties between corporations and government are severed, there will be war without end, endemic poverty and suppression of the popular will of the people.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/28/business/yourmoney/28lock.html
[excerpt]
… Lockheed’s deep ties with the Pentagon raise some questions. “It’s impossible to tell where the government ends and Lockheed begins,” said Danielle Brian of the Project on Government Oversight, a nonprofit group in Washington that monitors government contracts. “The fox isn’t guarding the henhouse. He lives there.”
[end excerpt]
The cure for the permanent warfare state is democracy. However, history indicates that it will take a major economic or military defeat to reinstate democracy in the USA. We are in for a bad ride.
I do not take issue with Mr. Porter. He is correct but he is hacking at the branches rather than the root.
And yet it was Kennedy whose murder has served as a warning to every President since as to what happens when you think you actually are the leader of the country. Anyone who is willing to look hard enough and know where to look knows that the CIA was the post-WWII coal and iron police for international corporations, none more so than the oil industry. Fighting Communism was in actuality fighting those people who were standing in the way of profits. Assassinations and coups around the world were part of doing business. It shouldn’t be surprising that the same forces that would overthrow governments in Iran, Guatemala and so many other countries, often with lots of collateral damage, would go after the plum in the fruit basket.
Looking back over the last fifty years who else has been in charge?
Eisenhower spoke from experience. It was his administration that overthrew the democratically elected government of Mossadegh in Iran and installed the Shah. His cabinet was rife with the principals of United Fruit and he was instrumental in overthrowing the democratic govt. of Guatemala to install a US puppet govt. During his administration, the US openly supported the repressive dictatorships in Cuba, Nicaragua, Honduras, Venezuela, and the Dominican Republic. This was also the time of the “Red Menace” and the rise of McCarthyism. So, thanks for the warning, but no thanks for your actions, Ike.
Not vanity. Oil wars.
The thing is that while it’s easy to personalize what Bush did, Obama is doing the same thing; or more precisely, allowing the same thing to continue.
And what did Clinton do? He bombed Iraq, he starved them. And let’s bow our head for the late “peacekeeper” Richard Holbrooke, who started his career in Vietnam with AID helping to pacify villages with the Phoenix Program before he gave his life trying to find a peaceful solution while the US bombed villages to pacify them in Afghanistan. Or Breszinski, who was in Afghanistan in the 90s representing Unocal in negotiations with whatever tribal leader was on top of the pile back then. Keep pedaling back, and there’s the US providing to the Mujahadeen back in Carter’s days. I’ve skipped the Republicans only because their warmongering is more obvious and their oil connections clearer to see.
What is needed is to think of national security beyond just the military. Our nation is also made more secure by a stronger economy and by energy independence.
How much stronger would the United States be if we allocated half of the military budget to education? How much stronger would the United States be if we heavily taxed foreign sources of energy, making domestic, alternative, renewable sources much more competitive, and directed the tax revenue toward infrastructure and research?
Ike slow on the uptake re McCarthy? Or just fearful of the political repercussions if he had spoken out?
But he was slow on the uptake on another matter — in early 1953, just after taking office, when Stalin suddenly died. PM CHurchill urgently cabled Ike that he was getting signals the new SOviet leaders might want to talk about a new beginning in relationships. WC suggested he and Ike and the SOviets get together immediately and talk things over. Ike’s response: No.
Had Adlai been elected, that meeting would have occurred and, most likely, the beginning of détente would have happened. Instead, all we got from Ike was a lousy Farewell Address t-shirt. Thanks Ike — you had 8 years and were so well-placed politically to do far more about the MIC, but apart from some budget trimming, nothing major by way of reform happened.
As for knut’s remarks re 1964, Rocky, recently divorced and also a firm war hawk on Vietnam, was neither going to win nomination nor come close to beating the peace-seeking, no-combat troops in Nam incumbent Pres Kennedy. JFK: easily the most liberal and reform minded president since FDR, and certainly no poseur.
Of course the original reasons for the wars were Oil and an excuse for political repression of the Treasonous “Patriot” Act. However our President who campaigned for Peace and Prosperity was a monstrous liar. He has escalated the wars and protected Wall Street fraud.
The price of gasoline is over three dollars a gallon and going up. The reason for the oil wars, a cheap supply of Irak oil, is another failure. But Obama needs to exhibit his bloody, empire building. The wars have no end to them. What is victory? Never ending war profiteering.
The killing will continue with assassinations of third world peasants, and Obama will reward his neo-con masters with our tax money. Until proven otherwise, I assume that Obama DOES enjoy killing babies.
Well said.
From Bacevich’s “”Washington Rules: Gen. Colin Powell quoted Clinton’s Sec’y of State Madeleine Albright as saying (in reference to intervention in the Balkans), “What’s the point of having this superb military that you’re always talking about if you can’t use it?”
Check. Ike, probably for budgetary reasons, also vastly increased our nuclear arsenal, at the expense of conventional armaments, and since he’d also put the nuclear strike button in the hands of military instead of civilian leaders (JFK and SecDef McNamara would later change this to civilian only) he made this country’s security dependent on the sanity and sobriety of some awfully hawkish and borderline personality military brass (at least judging by the mindset of Air Force Chief Curtis LeMay and his deputy Gen Powers, a true madman).
Then there’s Ike’s post-presidency advice to his 2 successors: meeting with JFK upon leaving office, Ike advised him the situation in Laos was getting dire and he may need to send in US combat troops. He said nothing about VN, and also left JFK the lousy dishonest CIA-/Ike/Nixon-backed Bay of Pigs operation.
Meeting with LBJ in 1965, as the latter was about to finalize plans to massively escalate our military commitment to VN, Ike told him he agreed that SVN was too valuable to lose, and seconded Johnson’s remarks about sending over our troops. Johnson now had valuable bipartisan support for escalating the war.
Ike of course, if memory serves, was also the author of the bogus Domino Theory, which appealed to simplistic and unsophisticated minds, as LBJ was on foreign policy. (Btw, LBJ was greatly impressed by Ike’s advice about Nam, and no doubt repeated it to anyone in his admin who was wavering about going in to the war, just as he liked to keep handy for waving around that copy of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution.)
We need to worry less about our military and economic strength and more about meeting the basic human needs of the nation’s human population.
Feeding a different branch of the psychopathic corporate community (aka shareholders) will accomplish astoundingly little in the way of change, if anything.
Thanks to BobinPacifica and Brodie for two first-rate history lessons. We all need to learn this history. It’s certainly not in the books our children read.
I meant “vanity” as in for his own purposes. And yes, Obama is doing the exact same thing. As likely his successor will do. The military is now running the civilian government when it comes to policy decisions.
With reference to all of the above…
This is precisely the reason that Wiki-leaks is the most dangerous entity on the planet right now. It is dangerous to the tiny elite that profit from the predation of the rich on everyone else, whether it is through finance, militarism, energy or health-care.
Julian Assange has exposed the banks’ behaviour in Iceland. His wikki is credited with buttressing the peaceful collapse of the Tunisian dictatorship. The CEO of Julius Baer Bank in the Cayman Islands has reportedly handed over files of 2,000 ultra-rich politicians, business people and celebrities, identifying tax evaders in Europe, Asia and America. The dismal failures of securing democracy in conquered Islamic nations has been put on display. The organization claims to have a huge cache of data on an American mega-bank, suggesting such data may imperil that bank, and by corollary the entire industry.
The small cadre of wealthy and powerful individuals who have been managing the planet for the last God-knows how many years finally have reason to fear. What if the citizens (punters/suckers/great unwashed) hear the truth through our own communications? Disaster!
I worry that the data will not be released before the anointed find a way to smother the source. Such an event would set civilization back decades. It’s sad that the whole thing rides on the ostensible peccadilloes of a single man. How cool would it be if there existed a profession called journalism?
We just passed up a second chance to win Pakistan. They had a terrible flood, they’re still dying from it. Several years ago they had a terrible earth quake right in the mountains where Bin Laden’s hiding. If we had spent $40 Billion on the earth quake and another $40 billion on the flood, terrorists that hate us would have to leave Pakistan. But it was never about our security. It’s about profit!
Pepe Escobar Writes For Asia Times online. A Four Part Series On Pipelinistan.
From TomDispatch . . . see the 4th in the series Here.
Or visit AS Dot Com and search or AT Online and search for MORE bout TAPI and the other oil and gas pipelines.
Essential reading if one wants to know and discuss the issues in AfPak . . . and the issues about the SOURCE of our empire’s present day meddling in foreign countries. Basically the source of our militarism/corporatism/fascism.
Oh, I should add a big thanks to Gareth Porter who’s work over the past five years and more are ALSO essential reading in regards to foreign policy, empire and fascism.
HE can be found by searching AS Dot Com and AT Online, as wel.
He’s a tremendous source of great reporting.
Rcc’d.
And thanks MyFDL and editors for bringing Mr. Porter to our eyes in this forum.
As well as Mr. Engelhardt.
i greatly appreciate reading them here at MyFDL.
“a movement” founded on “a massive educational and lobbying effort” to counter the threats posed to US democracy – well and good and sorely needed but wouldn’t you have to go back to the drawing board as far as “educational effort” is concerned?
that effort needs to start at the school level and as schools have had to focus on preparing students for ‘tests’ to reach benchmarks set under the no child left behind regimen, education in political literacy is simply not on the radar screen
the issue is by now entrenched in that the upcoming generation of teachers lack that early educational experience themselves to be adequately prepared to transmit the requisite skills to their pupils
i won’t even go into the lobbying effort since members of the congress are mostly beholden to lobbyists for movements endowed with deep pockets
it’s going to be a hard slog but good luck – the world would be eternally grateful – wish wikileak’s revelations on murdoch are released soon as that may help – there really is no reason for the media organisations that have that information not to release them given the legal quagmire his empire is embroiled in in the uk and the guardian’s excuse of uk libel laws don’t really wash
As General Butler once said, war is a racket. Rather than learn our lesson from the 70′s gas crisis by developing now energy technologies along with new industries, TPTB decided that there was more short term profit in perpetual war for perpetual peace. Hopefully some day the Boeing’s, Ratheon’s and General Dynamics of the world will have a culture change come over them, but I’m not holding my breath. Change albeit slowly will have to come from the same grass roots rebellion that people displayed during the Viet Nam debacle.
#6 Creation of a vast surveillance network of domestic spying personnel and integration/”fusion” of intelligence and police entities. As never seen before in America. See Ann Wright’s article on this at Consortiumnews.com.
A so few know about it
I just think “elections” are a thing of the past.
It cost 100 million of pretty all corporate $$$ to put Obama in the WH, now the word is the next presidential erection will cost 1 billion.
As Paul Harvey said “we don’t want people to vote” no, it doesn’t seem to matter whether we do or not. Esp after Citizens United.
Populism has become “socialism”
I really do wonder what will happen globally when the US fails
Makes me wonder what the privatized military would do if they were called off?
A friend of mine who fought in ‘Nam said he hoped the military would put a stop to their endless bloodletting and take on eh politicians. Very strange for a guy who feels the military betrayed him and everyone in ‘Nam.
I told him it doesn’t seem the military has much respect for “civilians” and that we’d probably see a coup.
Same thing happened in Rome when all the weapons were given top mercenaries. they thought “why should WE run the show?” So, they sacked the place.
I think it’s pretty similar to what’s happening in America right now to keep these endless wars running: squeeze US for everything we’ve got and then……\
Potero, CA springs to mind
It won’t happen without a free press.
My bad above in comments . . AS Dot com should be AW Dot com, antiwar.com, Justin Raimondo’s site . . . a treasure of a site too, as is Asia Times Online dot com.
EG, you just missed our Book Salon with Bill Hartung, Author of Prophets of War: Lockheed Martin and the Making of the Military-Industrial Complex
I’ve gotta point out that you are projecting.
Who knows what evil lurks within the heart of men? I prefer to take Obama’s own words for how he feels about drone strikes.
They don’t call his the reign of terror for nothing:
These don’t include deaths in Pakistan. Be still his bleeding heart. He’s a liar.
Great article and wonderful comments, for the most part. bobinpacifica is on it. It’s refreshing to read like-minded individuals. Out here in the wilderness, it feels like you’re all alone. I had a bit of an argument with some typical “Liberals” here (see link below), using pretty much the same cogent analysis I’m reading in this comments section. It wasn’t met with much fanfare. In fact, many attempts were made to somehow pigeonhole me and erect strawmen in my place.
http://www.cogitamusblog.com/2011/01/even-lost-wars-make-corporations-rich-by-chris-hedges.html#comments
If you’re feeling bored, you could take the opportunity to reinforce what I already said and smack these knuckleheads who pose for the “left” around.