![]() |
|
FEATURE ARTICLE |
|
|
|
The Military Can Waste Money Too
Powell Gammill Date: 06-28-2010 Subject: Military Industrial Complex There really is nothing for us to win in Afghanistan. Our
mission has morphed from apprehending those who attacked us, to
apprehending those who threaten or dislike us for invading their
country, to remaking an entire political system and even a culture. I remain highly skeptical that, as foreign occupiers, we can ever impose western-style democracy on another country. Our
troops have debilitating restrictions on defending themselves against
enemies, which are so often indistinguishable from civilians. They also face dire setbacks in winning hearts and minds when innocents are mistakenly harmed, which happens all the time. We can never make friends this way; the tactic never works.
This is an expensive, bloody, endless exercise in futility. Not everyone is willing to admit this just yet. But every second they spend in denial has real costs in lives and livelihoods.
Many of us can agree on one thing, however. Our military spending in general has grown way out of control. This is largely because fiscal accountability in military budgeting is seen, by many, as weak on defense. This is absolutely wrong and a dangerous way to think. It is certainly possible for the military to waste money, or to spend money counterproductively, and indeed it has. But
out of political correctness, the military has been getting blank
checks from the administrations and Congress for far too long.
It is important to defend our soil, but let us defend our own soil instead of defending Europe’s soil. Our
willingness to defend Europe enables their lavish social spending at
our expense, while they criticize our model of capitalism. It is time they allocated the money for their own defense. The same goes for Korea, Japan and other countries like Egypt and Israel.
It
is also important that while our troops are in combat, our soldiers
have what they need to do the best they can, even if we disagree with
why they are there. It is an embarrassment that
some soldiers and families have had to buy body armor at their own
expense when billions are awarded to politically well-connected defense
contractors for weapon systems that don’t work, are over-budget, past
deadline. This is the kind of waste that needs to end. I
firmly believe that there is enough waste in the military budget that
we can both save money overall and at the same time be safer.
|