Arguably, ever since entering World War II, the United States of
America’s economy has been a war economy. Starting or fostering wars
became essentially, independently of geopolitical reasons, a “good”
business proposition. The early 1940s marked the start of the era of
systematic wars for profit. War defined as the ultimate capitalist
enterprise. The extraordinary war efforts of World War II turned the
United States into a giant global arms factory for the war in Europe and
in the Pacific. It was even, cynically, credited as the main factor in
ending the Great Depression of 1929.
This trend continued at a slower pace, but without any real
interruption, with the Korean war in the early 1950s, the Vietnam war in
the 1960s until the early 1970s, and various proxy wars worldwide-
including Afghanistan in the 1980s- against the Soviet Union. The event
of 9/11/ 2001 gave American politicians the unique opportunity to start
the perfect war on behalf of their friends and patrons of the military
industrial complex. It is the endless war: the “war on terror” without
any geographic boundaries, time frame or even the necessity to have a
well defined enemy.
This permanent war business proposition is criminal in nature, but
absolutely fool proof in terms of maximum returns on the investment.
Money is made when the weapons are manufactured. They are used to kill
million and to destroy countries which eventually will get rebuild
through programs such as the Marshall Plan used in the aftermath of
World War II in Europe.
The blood thirsty machine that is the US industrial-military complex
makes billion at all three phases of the war industry process: the
manufacturing of ever more lethal and complex weapon systems, the
destruction stage, and then finally the occupation and rebuilding phase
in countries such as Germany, Japan, Korea, and more recently Iraq and
Afghanistan. This war machine and its political associates always needs
new conflicts. The United States of America is the uncontested
juggernaut of the war business or war for profit, defining the economy
of permanent war.
According to a report released August 24, 2012 by the Congressional
Research Service ( CRS), business has been booming for the
industrial-military complex with export of US weapons abroad increasing
more than three times from $21.4 billion in 2010 to $66.3 billion in
2011. This is the largest increase for a single year in the history of
US arms export. The United States is, by far, the largest arm dealer of
the planet with 78.1 percent of the overall market. The CRS report put
Russia at a very distant second at $8.7 billion and Britain third at $3
billion.
The leading buyers of US weapons from 2004 to 2011 were Saudi Arabia
with $75.7 billion, India with $46.6 billion, the United Arab Emirates
with $20.3 billion, Egypt at $14.3 billion and Pakistan at $13.2
billion. The accumulation of weapons in the Middle-East sold by the US
to Saudi Arabia and the UAE- with the blessing of Israel- is
unquestionably in preparation of the next big profitable venture for the
industrial-military complex: a war with Iran.
The “staging” of it is on its way, with the civil war in Syria
serving as an appetizer or a dress rehearsal. Iran appears to be the
next victim of the criminal capitalist logic of war for profit. The
accomplices of the war crimes are plenty, they are not limited to the
politicians declaring wars or the soldiers pulling the triggers. They
are also the engineers designing the weapon systems, the workers making
them, the stock holders buying shares of public traded companies of the
military industrial complex, and of course the ultimate war profiteers:
the merchants of death from Wall Street.
Anonymous
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