A military response to violence creates more violence. For real security,
we need to stop climate change and work toward shared prosperity.
by
"We currently spend roughly $598 billion on defense, which is more than the next seven biggest military spenders combined." (Photo:Daniel Achim / iStock) |
The recent 15th anniversary of the September 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks on the World Trade towers was a reminder of the terrible
consequences when a nation ignores the lessons of history—including its own
recent history. The U.S. military budget is a tragic example.
We currently spend
roughly $598 billion on defense, which is more than the next seven biggest
military spenders combined: China, Saudi Arabia, Russia, the
United Kingdom, India, France, and Japan. This represents 54 percent of federal
discretionary spending. In return, we get an ability to rapidly deploy
conventional military power anywhere in the world.
The 9/11 attack on the
World Trade Center was the most devastating foreign-sourced attack on the
United States since the War of 1812. It was carried out by a largely
self-organized band of 19 religious fanatics of varied nationalities,
affiliated with a small, dispersed, and loosely organized international
network. We responded by invading and occupying Afghanistan and Iraq. This led
to hundreds of thousands of pointless deaths, destabilization of the Middle
East, and a cost to the U.S. Treasury of some $4 trillion to $6 trillion.
I view all this in part
through the lens of my experience as an Air Force captain during the Vietnam
War. I briefed pilots headed for Vietnam on the psychological consequences of
bombing civilian populations. I later served in the Defense Department’s office
overseeing defense-related behavioral and social science research.
The available research on
the psychological consequences of bombing was clear and predictable: It unifies
the civilian population, just as 9/11 unified the U.S. population. The same is
true for mass military operations against dispersed combatants who blend in
with and are indistinguishable from civilian populations. Conventional military
operations work only when there are clearly identifiable military targets that
can be hit with limited collateral harm to civilians.
The United States bears no risk of invasion by a foreign military force. And the terrorist threat, which comes from bands of loosely affiliated political extremists, is substantially overblown. Furthermore, it is fueled by the much greater security threats created by environmental abuse, global corporate overreach, and the social divisions of extreme inequality. Under circumstances of growing physical and social stress from environmental devastation and inequality, politics easily turns violent. Violence is all the more certain when people feel deprived of alternative avenues to express their rage at being deprived of a dignified means of living.
With David Korten at the Green Festival, Seattle, W |
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