nytimes | Eisenhower understood the trade-offs between guns and butter. “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,” he warned in 1953, early in his
presidency. “The cost of one modern heavy bomber is this: a modern brick
school in more than 30 cities. It is two electric power plants, each
serving a town of 60,000 population. It is two fine, fully equipped
hospitals. It is some 50 miles of concrete highway. We pay for a single
fighter plane with a half million bushels of wheat. We pay for a single
destroyer with new homes that could have housed more than 8,000 people.”
He also knew that Congress was a big part of the problem. (In earlier
drafts, he referred to the “military-industrial-Congressional” complex,
but decided against alienating the legislature in his last days in
office.) Today, there are just a select few in public life who are
willing to question the military or its spending, and those who do —
from the libertarian Ron Paul to the leftist Dennis J. Kucinich — are
dismissed as unrealistic.
The fact that both President Obama and Mitt Romney are calling for
increases to the defense budget (in the latter case, above what the
military has asked for) is further proof that the military is the true
“third rail” of American politics. In this strange universe where those
without military credentials can’t endorse defense cuts, it took a
former chairman of the Joint Chiefs, Adm. Mike Mullen, to make the
obvious point that the nation’s ballooning debt was the biggest threat
to national security.
Uncritical support of all things martial is quickly becoming the new
normal for our youth. Hardly any of my students at the Naval Academy
remember a time when their nation wasn’t at war. Almost all think it
ordinary to hear of drone strikes in Yemen or Taliban attacks in
Afghanistan. The recent revelation of counterterrorism bases in Africa
elicits no surprise in them, nor do the military ceremonies that are now
regular features at sporting events. That which is left unexamined
eventually becomes invisible, and as a result, few Americans today are
giving sufficient consideration to the full range of violent activities
the government undertakes in their names.
Were Eisenhower alive, he’d be aghast at our debt, deficits and still
expanding military-industrial complex. And he would certainly be
critical of the “insidious penetration of our minds” by video game
companies and television networks, the news media and the partisan
pundits. With so little knowledge of what Eisenhower called the
“lingering sadness of war” and the “certain agony of the battlefield,”
they have done as much as anyone to turn the hard work of national
security into the crass business of politics and entertainment. Fist tap Arnach.
1 comments:
deEisenhower, who'd have thunk it. I was twelve when he left office, still blissfully ignorant. I knew he was a famous general, but I was a grown-ass man before I learned that he had some depth to him.
Still, it would have been nice if the man had done something to impede the takeover of that military-industrial-Congressional complex, instead of just warning us on his way out.
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