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Sunday, September 29, 2024

The Pentagon Goes to School - TomDispatch.com

The Pentagon Goes to School - TomDispatch.com William Hartung, Bringing the Militarization of University Research Back to Earth September 29, 2024 Pentagon expert William Hartung first wandered into TomDispatch in March 2008, less than seven years after this country's Global War(s) on Terror were launched, full-scale disasters that were already costing the American taxpayer a fortune and a half -- or perhaps, given the subject, all too literally an arm and a leg. As he wrote then, "How much, for instance, does one week of George Bush’s wars cost? Glad you asked. If we consider the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan together -- which we might as well do, since we and our children and grandchildren will be paying for them together into the distant future -- a conservative, single-week estimate comes to $3.5 billion. Remember, that’s per week! By contrast, the whole international community spends less than $400 million per year on the International Atomic Energy Agency, the primary institution for monitoring and preventing the spread of nuclear weapons; that’s less than one day’s worth of war costs." Only $650 million or so of that weekly sum, he estimated, was "spent on people." So, he wondered, "where does the other nearly $3 billion go?" The answer he offered then: "It goes for goods and services, from tanks and fighter planes to fuel and food. Most of this money ends up in the hands of private companies like Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and the former Halliburton subsidiary, Kellogg, Brown and Root." And knowing about that expense of $3.5 billion a week "and counting" on America's wars, he added sarcastically, "Doesn’t that make you feel safer?" Ever since then, Hartung, a Pentagon expert, has focused on this strange reality of ours: no matter how many wars the United States loses, it only pours yet more taxpayer dollars into the Pentagon budget and into the coffers of those giant weapons-making companies of the military-industrial-congressional complex. Even the titles of a few of his pieces over the years catch the grim spirit of his all-too-striking analysis: "There's No Business Like the Arms Business, Weapons 'R' Us (But You'd Never Know It)" (July 2016); "The Urge to Splurge, Why Is It So Hard to Reduce the Pentagon Budget?" (October 2016); "The American Way of War Is a Budget-Breaker, Never Has a Society Spent More for Less" (May 2017); "Merger Mania, The Military-Industrial Complex on Steroids" (July 2019); "America Dominant Again (in Arms Sales), And Again... and Again... And Again" (May 2021); "Fueling the Warfare State, America's $1.4 Trillion 'National Security' Budget Makes Us Ever Less Safe" (July 2022); "Spending Unlimited, The Pentagon's Budget Follies Come at a High Price" (March 2024). And of course, that's just a small dip into the pieces he's written for TomDispatch. Yet, after all these years, what couldn't be more striking today is that, in the same spirit as those older pieces, Hartung focuses (as he so often has) on a different aspect entirely of the Pentagon's distinctly over-funded world, one that, amid all the news coverage in this country, gets little or no attention: how the Pentagon, as he puts it, "goes to school" to enlist American science in the battle to create yet more horrific weaponry. And so it goes, again and again and again. Tom

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