Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

marmar

(77,086 posts)
Wed Oct 23, 2013, 12:49 PM Oct 2013

Why Washington Can’t Stop: The Coming Era of Tiny Wars and Micro-Conflicts


from TomDispatch:



Why Washington Can’t Stop
The Coming Era of Tiny Wars and Micro-Conflicts

By Tom Engelhardt


In terms of pure projectable power, there’s never been anything like it. Its military has divided the world -- the whole planet -- into six “commands.” Its fleet, with 11 aircraft carrier battle groups, rules the seas and has done so largely unchallenged for almost seven decades. Its Air Force has ruled the global skies, and despite being almost continuously in action for years, hasn’t faced an enemy plane since 1991 or been seriously challenged anywhere since the early 1970s. Its fleet of drone aircraft has proven itself capable of targeting and killing suspected enemies in the backlands of the planet from Afghanistan and Pakistan to Yemen and Somalia with little regard for national boundaries, and none at all for the possibility of being shot down. It funds and trains proxy armies on several continents and has complex aid and training relationships with militaries across the planet. On hundreds of bases, some tiny and others the size of American towns, its soldiers garrison the globe from Italy to Australia, Honduras to Afghanistan, and on islands from Okinawa in the Pacific Ocean to Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean. Its weapons makers are the most advanced on Earth and dominate the global arms market. Its nuclear weaponry in silos, on bombers, and on its fleet of submarines would be capable of destroying several planets the size of Earth. Its system of spy satellites is unsurpassed and unchallenged. Its intelligence services can listen in on the phone calls or read the emails of almost anyone in the world from top foreign leaders to obscure insurgents. The CIA and its expanding paramilitary forces are capable of kidnapping people of interest just about anywhere from rural Macedonia to the streets of Rome and Tripoli. For its many prisoners, it has set up (and dismantled) secret jails across the planet and on its naval vessels. It spends more on its military than the next most powerful 13 states combined. Add in the spending for its full national security state and it towers over any conceivable group of other nations.

In terms of advanced and unchallenged military power, there has been nothing like the U.S. armed forces since the Mongols swept across Eurasia. No wonder American presidents now regularly use phrases like “the finest fighting force the world has ever known” to describe it. By the logic of the situation, the planet should be a pushover for it. Lesser nations with far lesser forces have, in the past, controlled vast territories. And despite much discussion of American decline and the waning of its power in a “multi-polar” world, its ability to pulverize and destroy, kill and maim, blow up and kick down has only grown in this new century.

No other nation's military comes within a country mile of it. None has more than a handful of foreign bases. None has more than two aircraft carrier battle groups. No potential enemy has such a fleet of robotic planes. None has more than 60,000 special operations forces. Country by country, it’s a hands-down no-contest. The Russian (once “Red”) army is a shadow of its former self. The Europeans have not rearmed significantly. Japan’s “self-defense” forces are powerful and slowly growing, but under the U.S. nuclear “umbrella.” Although China, regularly identified as the next rising imperial state, is involved in a much-ballyhooed military build-up, with its one aircraft carrier (a retread from the days of the Soviet Union), it still remains only a regional power.

Despite this stunning global power equation, for more than a decade we have been given a lesson in what a military, no matter how overwhelming, can and (mostly) can’t do in the twenty-first century, in what a military, no matter how staggeringly advanced, does and (mostly) does not translate into on the current version of planet Earth. .........................(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175763/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_what_planet_are_we_on/



2 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Why Washington Can’t Stop: The Coming Era of Tiny Wars and Micro-Conflicts (Original Post) marmar Oct 2013 OP
Some might wonder why a nation with 5% of the world's population needs to spend 44% of the indepat Oct 2013 #1
We're like the British Empire with the "thin red line" doing battle with the restless natives. FarCenter Oct 2013 #2

indepat

(20,899 posts)
1. Some might wonder why a nation with 5% of the world's population needs to spend 44% of the
Wed Oct 23, 2013, 05:58 PM
Oct 2013

world's total expenditure on national defense. This is in no small part because no other nation is burdened with having to divide the world into six military commands and employ 11 aircraft carrier battle groups if global hegemony is to be exerted. No other nation is burdened with this task and they can therefore allocate a greater portion of their resources to create a better quality of life for its citizens and other residents. These enormous military-type expenditures, coupled with the truism that the bidness of 'Murika is bidness, so corporations must be largely free of governmental regulation and oversight, provided a ludicrously low minimum wage, and have an effective corporate income tax rate of only 7% to maximize corporate profitability and wealth accumulation largely unfettered by taxation. The right-wing mantra has been 'Murika is the best place in the world, but what that really means is 'Murika is the best place in the world for oligarchs to operate with vast profitability and, the sad fact is, 'Murika has fallen to or near the bottom of all quality-of-life ranking factors among industrialized nations of the world primarily for the aforesaid reasons. Sadly, this right-wing lie is continuously perpetuated by countless right-wing talking heads and the MSM in general.

Latest Discussions»General Discussion»Why Washington Can’t Stop...