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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDefense Spending Cuts? Stealth Attack On VA Benefits and Privatized Military Pensions?
Stealth Target of Defense Spending Cuts: Americas Highly Effective Socialized Medicine Provider, the VA System, and Military Benefits Generally
One element of the coming budget pact that is not getting the attention it warrants is a covert effort to gut military benefits by privatizing them. Privitization has rarely delivered on its promise of delivering better performance and/or lower costs. Indeed, in the military, it has served as an egregious ground for looting. And curiously the officialdom has chosen to turn its eyes to it. In the Iraq war, for instance, contract drivers allege that trucks that were used for moving corpses and body parts, which decomposed rapidly in the desert heat, were, in violation of regulations, then used for transporting food, such as ice in bulk, without so much as a hosedown in between. The forms of war profiteering have been numerous as the traditional protections against abuses in contracting, such as not allowing the firm that designed a contract to bid on it, have either been eroded through a misguided vogue for deregulation or simply ignored. And in Iraq, the use of sub-contractors, with as many as five or six layers, each taking a cut, means that as much as 50% of the value of a contract ends up being fraudulent through one ruse or another.
The manufactured fiscal cliff crisis means that more profiteering is coming to the military, this by fundamentally changingthe relationship of soldiers to the armed forces. An article in Open Democracy describes how servicemembers were once assured of a high level of benefits in return for the sacrifices made. But the military, which resisted the blandishments of neoliberals, started to succumb in the 1990s. Tellingly, the Army changed its logo from The Army Takes Care of Its Own to The Army Takes Care of its Own so that They Can Learn to Take Care of Themselves. This reflected a basic change in attitude:
The contracting out of the Pentagons support coincided with neoliberal efforts to combat dependency in the military. Policies forcing recipients of public assistance programs to achieve independence largely through mandating employment requirements had been gaining ground in conservative and neoliberal policy debates in the late 1980s and early 1990s. They also took hold in the military, where in the early 1990s the military retrenched its support for soldiers and their families. As the Army pulled back on spending for support services and contracted out services, for example, it also instituted programs to teach soldiers and their spouses self-sufficiency.
The plum for privatizers is the healthcare and pension budgets:
Instead of using the current government-contracted HMO/PPO model, called TriCare, military personnel and their families would receive health care vouchers allowing them to either purchase whatever health care plan they chose from an array of private sector providers. Instead of earning defined retirement benefits pensions soldiers, sailors, airmen and marines would each pay into privately held 401K programs or simply take a lump sum of cash. In a win-win for corporate advocates, cuts to what they call the excessive and burdensome human side of the military will simultaneously fund greater spending on expensive weapons and communications systems. And under the pretext of providing choice to military personnel, the programs decrease total benefits and increase private sector access to government funds and the money of military personnel.
On the healthcare side, this is simply an excuse for the medical industrial complex to get its blood suckers into the huge military budgets, for the VA system is vastly more efficient than private sector providers. From a 2012 post, Socialized or Not, We Can Learn from the VA, on the Rand Corporations blog:
snip
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012/12/stealth-target-of-defense-spending-cuts-americas-highly-effective-socialized-medicine-provider-the-va-system-and-military-benefits-generally.html
woo me with science
(32,139 posts)I still think there's a good possibility that SS will be ostentatiously spared again and used as propaganda to distract from the fact that we are still being looted and assaulted on virtually every other front.