With total US military spending now
approaching ¾ of a trillion dollars per year - about as much as the
rest of the world's countries combined - cutting military spending is
becoming an issue of concern for the peace movement and beyond,
especially as the president has proposed a three-year freeze on
domestic discretionary spending. As much as one might work to reduce
military and defense-related spending, there are powerful cultural
influences embedded in our society which make if difficult to shift
spending to underfunded domestic needs.
High among these
influences is the symbiotic interconnection between sports and the
armed forces. Many major sports events start with such military
displays as a precision flyover of jet fighters, the unfurling of a
huge U.S. flag by members of the military services, the flag
presentation by a military service color guard, or the singing of the
National Anthem by individual or collective service members.
Besides
these heavy overlays of military pageantry, sports announcers lavish
praise on "Our brave men and women fighting for our freedom overseas."
Never do we hear in what ways our freedoms as citizens are being
enhanced by our involvement in military conflicts, the rationales for
which have become increasingly strained.
It is not true that wars
never enhance freedom, as, for example, millions were released from the
oppressive control of their conquerors and/or occupiers when the Nazis
and the Japanese nation were defeated. Yet, due to intimidation
preventing criticism of a nation's war policies and the erosion of
civil liberties premised on wartime exigencies, war negatively impacts
the freedoms of the warring nation's citizens.
A second powerful
cultural influence is the rally around the commander-in-chief motif, a
correlative to "Don't change horses in the middle of the stream." This
mode of thinking makes it difficult to divest ourselves of leaders who
have embroiled the nation in military quagmires through devious, deeply
flawed reasoning or even criminal means.
Another variety of
group-think which has become increasingly prevalent in recent history is
to label as a hero anyone who serves in a combat zone. I know that when
I was in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, such uncritical hero
worship was far from the norm. Enlistees were treated with withering
scorn by the far more numerous draftees and even the career military
questioned the intelligence of those who voluntarily put their very
lives in imminent risk.
It has also seemingly become mandatory
for anyone interviewing a service member to thank him or her for
service to the nation. This cowed deference stems from charges that
returning Vietnam War veterans were badly treated by the media. It is a
misfortune that military service has seemingly become designated as the
only way one can serve the nation.
Surprisingly enough, even our
National Anthem fosters the martial spirit among U.S. citizens. In the
months after 9/11, whenever the National Anthem was played at a
sporting event, the line which drew the most boisterous response was
the one about bombs bursting in air.
The militaristic
conditioning of our young is being fostered through penetration of
military recruitment -- often insidiously hidden -- into our schools;
the interactive video game fairs featuring images of military offensive
power; and the displays of military hardware, employing spit-polished
military personnel helping youngsters climb into tanks and warplane
cockpits.
Shifting the focus from the cultural underpinnings of a
militaristic society, the structure of the U.S. workforce is skewed
toward the protectors versus the producers when the U.S. is measured
against the other industrialized nations. In a study published in
1992*, three economists coined the term "garrison economy" -- also
described as the cost of keeping people down. The garrison economy
encompasses "guard labor" and "threat labor." Guard labor includes the
full range of enforcement activities necessary to maintain the peace:
workplace supervisors, police, judicial and corrections employees,
private security personnel, the armed forces, civilian defense
employees, and producers of military and domestic security equipment.
Threat labor consists of those who make credible the peril of job
dismissal: the unemployed, "discouraged workers" and prisoners.
There
were two key findings in the study: 1) the U.S. ratio of one guard or
threat laborer for every 2.3 civilian employees not engaged in
maintaining order was the highest among the industrialized nations --
it also correlated with the slower rate of economic growth in the U.S.;
and 2) there was an inverse relationship between management size and
productivity. Thus, the U.S., with 12.1 percent managers, had a
productivity growth rate of 0.7 percent, while Japan, with 3.7 percent
managers, had a productivity rate of 3.0 percent. Finland, with only
3.0 percent in the managerial ranks, had a productivity growth rate of
3.6 percent.
A key question is: Is a study done nearly two
decades ago still valid today? Given the creation of the Department of
Homeland Security, the subsequent explosive growth of security
companies, the ongoing increase in military personnel and mercenary
forces, the increase in the U.S. prison population to the highest level
ever, and the extremely high levels of discouraged and unemployed
workers in today's workforce, all suggest that the ratio of guard and
threat workers to civilian workers not engaged in maintaining order may
be even higher than it was in the early 1990s.
In today's
recession, job creation is perhaps the most urgent priority in our
economy. A recent study by University of Massachusetts economists
Robert Pollin and Heidi Garrett-Peltier** found, similar to previous
research over the last few decades, that public investment in military
spending is about the worst way to create jobs, especially good-paying
ones, and to stimulate the economy. Instead, investment in clean
energy, health care and education would all create more jobs and
stimulate more economic activity.
In conclusion, deeply embedded
cultural factors make it difficult to significantly reduce the size of
the U.S. military establishment. Also, a workforce structure premised
so strongly on security fears results in more and more resources are
being expended to protect less and less. The time is ripe for a mass
movement to challenge these factors and overwhelm militarism with peace
and priorities that reflect a new understanding of human security,
which would make us safer and strengthen the economy for everyone.
*Samuel Bowles, David M. Gordon and Thomas Weisskopf, "The Boom a Bust," The Nation, February 10, 1992.
**
"The U.S. Employment Effects of Military and Domestic Spending
Priorities: An Updated Analysis", Pollin and Garrett-Peltier,
commissioned by the Institute for Policy Studies and Women's Action for
New Directions, 2009
Lauri E. Kallio, who lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, serves as an
At-Large Board Member of Peace Action, the country's largest peace and
disarmament organization with over 91,000 members nationwide,
www.peace-action.org
Common Dreams