When War Business
Rules The World
by Douglas Mattern
Published by SCOOP New
Zealand - 2007
Every gun that is made, every warship
launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a
theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold
and are not clothed. The world in arms is not spending money
alone. It is spending the sweat of its laborers, the genius of
its scientists, the hopes of its children. This is not a way
of life at all in any true sense. Under the cloud of threatening
war, it is humanity hanging from a cross of iron.
- President Eisenhower - From a
speech before the American Society of Newspaper Editors, April
16, 1953
It's been over thirty-three years since
Eisenhower's powerful message and yet the obscenity of the war
business continues stronger than ever. Take a recent decision
by the Bush Administration to sell F-16 Fighter Jets to Pakistan
while at the same time offering to sell the same jet fighters
to India, always a potential adversary. Moreover, selling weapons
to both sides of a conflict has become standard policy. Data
compiled by the Federation of American Scientists shows that
since1992, the U.S. exported well over $150 billion worth of
weapons to states around the world.
The data also reveals the macabre world
arms market is dominated by the U.S., followed by Russia, China,
United Kingdom, and scores of other nations wanting their share
of this death for profit business.
The truly astronomical money comes from
the annual military budgets with the U.S. far in the lead, actually
spending nearly as much as all other countries combined. For
2006 the U.S. military (defense) budget came to $426 billion,
including $17.5 billion for nuclear weapons, and this does not
count the cost of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The cost of modern
weapons is staggering and immensely profitable. The largest weapons
company, Lockheed-Martin, had sales in 2005 amounting to $37.2
billion (this 50 percent higher than the annual United Nations
budget for all of its programs). And just think of all the missiles,
bombs, etc., that will be replaced for
profit by the armament industry after the U.S. military assault
on Iraq. This conflict is longer than U.S. involvement in World
War II, and has transformed Iraq into a nightmare of violence.
There's no business like war business!
The Department of Defense announced plans
to spend $1.4 trillion, yes trillion, on 70 new weapon systems
over the coming years. Moreover, the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) estimates that between 2012 and 2014 the Pentagon budget
will have to grow between 18 and 34 percent over the 2006 budget.
No Business Like War Business - A few examples:
Cruise missiles cost over $500,000 each.
The CVN-21 aircraft carrier will cost an estimated $13.7 billion.
A smaller George H.W. Bush Nimitz-class aircraft carrier will
cost $6.1 billion. The new Virginia-class submarine is estimated
to cost $2.5 billion each, and a new guided missile destroyer,
Arleigh Burke class will cost over $1 billion each. The new F-22
jet fighter, manufactured by Lockheed-Martin, will cost $335
million each, and the Pentagon plan is to purchase 183 F-22s.
The FIM-92A Stinger, which is an individual shoulder fired lightweight
guided missile, costs $6 million each. The U.S. armament industry
is the second most subsidized industry after agriculture.
Profits are up; ethics are down as war
business goes into orbit
The next frontier for the war business
is space with the Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Space Command,
General Joseph Ashy, concisely stating its overall purpose: "It's
politically sensitive, but it's going to happen. Some people
don't want to hear this and it sure isn't in vogue, but-absolutely-we're
going to fight in space. We're going to fight from space and
we're going to fight into space. That's why the U.S. has development
programs in directed energy and hit-to-kill mechanisms. We will
engage terrestrial targets someday-ships, airplanes, and land
targets from space." (From Aviation Week and Space Technology).
Today, scientists and engineers in the
weapons industry are working with Pentagon contracts to develop
space-based weapons scheduled for deployment 10 and more years
from now. The Rand think tank reports weapons under development
include space-based lasers, microwave guns, particle beam weapons,
and kinetic-energy weapons.
Another weapon is Space Rods, sometimes
called "Rods of God" that would be delivered to targets
on the earth from orbiting space platforms. Jack Kelly, Post-Gazette
National Security Writer, reports the rods would be made of tungsten
around 20 feet in length and a foot in diameter. The rods could
be guided by satellite to targets on Earth, striking at speeds
of around 12,000 feet per second that would destroy hardened
bunkers several stories beneath the surface.
Just imagine our world with weapons orbiting
the planet 24-hours every day blocking our last frontier. Is
this the end of freedom and human dignity as we gaze to the stars
and mystery of the universe, and at the same time, see orbiting
lights that are platforms loaded with weapons?
If civilization is to survive and progress,
the militarization of space must be stopped, the nuclear weapons
industry abolished in every country, and world's largest criminal
activity, the war business with its economic, political, and
cultural manifestations put permanently out of business.
There is no alternative to stop our planet
from becoming a final arsenal of mass destruction.
With apologies to Irving Berlin's Broadway
hit, 'There's No Business Like Show Business," we should
collectively sing this grim refrain--without restrain--in Ethel
Merman style--but without the smile:
There's no business like war business--
like no business so low
Everything about it is appalling-- everything that greed will
allow
Nowhere do you get that sickening feeling-- as when their selling
arms like now
There's no people like war people-- they smile as they make dough
Whether selling guns or tanks-- its adds money in their banks
That pays politicians in their ranks--so they can go on with
the show
To the worldwide audience: We must pull
down the curtain on the war usiness show. It has lasted far too
long and we can no longer tolerate, nor can civilization long
endure, the show's merchants of death and architects of destruction.
Together we must be the bright light of hope and resolve that
obliterates the black business of war by creating conditions
where future disputes between peoples and nations (and dealing
with terrorists) are settled through the framework of world law.
There is no alternative if we are to survive
and move forward to create a better and just world, and a new
civilization based on respect for life, respect for each other,
and respect for the environment.
*************
Douglas Mattern is president of the Assocation of World Citizens
and author of Looking for Square Two - Moving from War &
Violence to Global Community
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