by Prof. Joseph H. Chung
June 12, 2023
from
GlobalResearch Website
Dr.
Joseph H. Chung
is professor of economics at the
University of Quebec in Montreal (UQAM), he is member of
the Center of Research on Integration and Globalization
of (CEIM-UQAM).
He is Research Associate of the Centre
for Research on Globalization (CRG). |
The Unz Review
Introduction
Former American President Jimmy Carter said in 2018 that in America,
there were 226 years of wars since its independence which took place
242 years ago thus leaving only 16 years of peace.
Since WWII, there were 32 American military conflicts involving
dozens of countries. Some of these military conflicts have lasted
for over twenty years and some others are still continuing.
In other words, the U.S. is a country of perpetual war.
War is terribly
destructive human activity.
Millions of human beings have been
sacrificed.
Tens of trillions of dollars worth of housing, school,
factories, hospitals and other infrastructure facilities have been
destroyed in the countries which have been the target of American
military attacks.
The perpetual war,
-
has destroyed the very foundation of freedom and
democracy
-
it has prevented healthy and equitable economic
development of the world
-
it has led to the violation of human
rights
-
it has ruined traditional values of many countries
-
above all, it has caused lasting human suffering...
America's multi-trillion dollar perpetual war has denied and
deprived millions of Americans of decent income, adequate housing,
needed foods, necessary health care, safety on the street, reliable
infrastructure facilities, essential education and other goods and
services needed for descent living.
Before I go any further, I would like to quote the historical
statement of President Dwight Eisenhower.
"Every gun that is
made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies in
the final sense a theft from those who hunger and are not fed,
those who are cold and not clothed.
This world in arms is
not spending money alone, it is spending the sweat of its
laborers, the genius of its scientists, the hope of children."
President Dwight Eisenhower
address to the North American
Society of News editors, April 16, 1953
In this paper, I am
asking the following six questions:
-
How many wars has
the U.S. undertaken since WWII?
-
How are the
American wars organized?
-
What is the
purpose of the American wars?
-
Who are the
beneficiaries of the American wars?
-
What are the
negative impacts of the American wars?
-
Will the American
wars continue?
How many wars
has the U.S. undertaken since WWII?
There are undoubtedly several ways of defining war. In this paper, I
define war in terms of American military interventions. Defined
thus, I have counted 32 wars undertaken by the U.S. since WWII.
I have classified these wars in terms of the following categories:
-
invasion (23
cases)
-
"civil war" (7
cases)
-
multi-target war (2),
...which gives 32 wars
that took place since the WWII, in the course of the so-called "post
war era".
There are reasons to believe that there are still many undeclared
military interventions conducted by war contractors and Special
Operation Forces units spread in 1,000 bases in 191 countries.
The
following shows the list of American wars:
Invasions:
Korean War
(1950-1953), Vietnam War (1955-1975); Cuban Bay of Pigs (1961),
Lebanon (1982-1984), Grenada (1983), Libya bombing (1984),Tanker
War-Persian Gulf (1984-1987), Panama (1989-1990), Gulf War
(1989-1991), Iraq War (1991-1993), Bosnia War (1992-1995), Haiti
(1994-1999), Kosovo (1998-1999), Afghanistan (2001-2021),Yemen
(2002-present), Iraq (2003-2011), Pakistan (2004-2018), Somalia
(2007-present) Libya (2011), Niger (2013-present) Iraq
(2014-2021), Syria (2014-present), Libya (2015-2019). [Ukraine,
yet to be categorized...]
Civil Wars:
Indo-China
(1959-1975), Indonesia (1958-1961) Lebanon (1958), Dominican
Republic (1968-1966), Korea DMZ (1966-1969), Cambodia
(1967-1975) Somalia (1991-present).
Multi-target wars:
Operation Ocean
Shield: location, Indian-Ocean (2008-2016).
Operation Observant
Compass: location, Uganda and Central Africa (2011-2017).
How are the
American Wars Organized?
To understand the nature and the implication of the perpetual war in
the U.S., it is necessary to introduce the concept of American
Pro-War Community (APWC).
In literature and media, we use the notion of
military-industrial
complex (MIC) to describe the vast system of perpetual U.S. wars.
But, actually, the system of perpetual war involves many more
individuals and organizations than in the MIC.
The APWC is a tightly knit community promoting its interests at the
expense of the wellbeing of ordinary Americans and the interests of
the people of the target countries.
It is so well organized and so
well rooted and so powerful that it is quasi impossible to dissolve
it.
The APWC's core group comprises,
-
the war corporations
-
the federal
government led by the Pentagon, the Congress, the Senate
-
other
government agencies...
There are two supporting groups comprising all sorts of institutions
and organizations.
There is the group
supporting the supply of war goods and services.
Then, there is the group supporting the creation of demand for
war goods and services.
The efficiency of the
whole system of producing and selling war goods and services depends
on how the core group and the supporting groups can work in harmony
together to attain the objectives of wars, namely,
the maximization
of profit and the intra-APWC sharing of the profit...
Supply of War
Goods and Services
The supply of war goods and services is assured by,
-
war corporations
which produce weapons
-
building contractors which build all sorts of
buildings and manage them
-
catering services companies that provide
foods and drinks for the GIs
-
information firms which offer
information needed for wars
-
even the academics that offers ideas
and technologies...
In the U.S. 40 major
war corporations have annual sales of almost $ 600 billion.
The following table shows
the importance of the five leading war corporations in U.S.:
Table 1.
Five major War Corporations:
Annual Sales ($ billion) 2022 and Growth (recent years: %)
Note:
LM (Lockheed Martin),
NG
(Northrop Grumman
GD
(General Dynamics)
Source
The combined annual sale of the five leading firms in 2022 was as
much as $ 241.8 billion of which $183.3 billon was for the sale of
military goods and services, or 75.8% of the total sale.
The supply of war goods and services relies on the extensive
production chain involving foreign and domestic providers of raw
materials and intermediary products.
In addition, the academics and
information firms offer information, technology and other services
needed for the production of weapons.
The following is a list of the well known universities which are
deeply involved in American wars. Each one of these universities
produces, for the war industry, a variety of war products and
services.
In this paper, for each academic institution, just one typical
product or service is mentioned.
No less than 70% of university research projects are funded by the
Pentagon:
-
The Boston
College helps the Air Force
-
The University of
Massachusetts Lowell develops mono-technology for the Army
-
Tufts University
improves of soldiers cognitive and physical performance
-
MIT is producing
so many war goods ns services that it is known as a "war
corporation"
-
Columbia
University and Brown University develops, for
DARPA (Defense
Advanced Research Project Agency), the neural engineering
system
-
Princeton
University produces hardware for design and verification of
open-source integrated circuit
-
Dartmouth
University sells machine learning
-
Pennsylvania
University develops artificial intelligence
-
Stanford
University develops technology for chemical warfare and so
many other war goods and service that it is considered to be
in partnership with war corporations
-
Harvard
University develops educational materials for the war and it
is the main source providing human resources to the war
industries. By the way, it produced the napalm bomb widely
used in the Korean War, Vietnamese War and other wars
-
John Hopkins
University makes tools needed for the evaluation of
alternative offensive capability needed for battles in air
sea, cyberspace
The sad story is that
American universities depend on war money so much that they are
losing their original mission.
Christian Sorensen (Understanding the War Industry
- Clarity
Press 2022) has something to say about this problem.
He seems to
think that universities are neglecting their original mission of
producing and diffusing truth.
"But its intricate
ties to the War Department show the university's true color
carrying more about government funding than the nobility of
academia."
(Sorenson: p.221)
By the way, I have found
many useful information, data and ideas in Sorensen's book, which is
surely a significant addition to the critical literature of
perpetual wars.
The information-technology corporations are also actively
participating in the American wars.
In fact, Amazon,
Microsoft, and
Google provide for the military, clout computing
which facilitates the reduction of human and material cost of wars.
Demand for War
Products and Services
What distinguishes the war economy from the peace economy is the
amazing fact that the supply generates the demand.
In the American war economy, the final demand for war goods and
services is determined by the Pentagon (the Department of Defense)
and some foreign countries.
The Pentagon
However, the Pentagon does not have all the information needed to
estimate the demand for war so that it relies on the information
provided by the war corporations.
Therefore, the war corporations which are supplier of war goods and
services have the amazing role of determining the demand.
In this way, in the market of war goods and services, the supply
determines the demand.
This is the root of perpetual nature of American wars and the making
of profit going to the APWC.
Now, to have war, one has to have enemies.
But, the war corporations
do not have the research capacity to find real enemies or produce
fabricated enemies. The role of finding or fabricating enemies goes
to the think tanks which are lavishly funded by the war
corporations.
When the think tanks find or manufacture enemies, new wars or the
continuation of old wars are justified.
Now, on the other hand, the pressure groups put pressure on law
makers and policy makers to recognize the identities of enemies
produced by the think tanks; this is done through lobbying (bribes
giving).
As for
the media, they have the role of preparing the mind and the
souls of Americans to accept the monstrous defense budget without
being aware of the destructive consequences of the perpetual wars.
It goes without saying that both the pressure groups and the media
are funded by the war corporations.
The demand for war goods and services created by these pro-war
individuals and organizations is translated into the annual defense
budget of the U.S. amounting, in 2023, to as much as $886 billion...
Imagine this.
Washington's 2023
defense budget is 50% of South Korea's 2023 GDP of $1.8
trillion.
The American defense
budget is 40 % of the global defense budget of $ 2.2 trillion...
The Big Five:
-
Lockheed Martin
-
Raytheon Technologies
-
Boeing
-
Northrop Grumman
-
General
Dynamics,
...gets as much as $150
billion out of the defense budget.
Think Tanks
The think tanks play major role in perpetuating the American
wars.
Their function is to
produce reports and papers to show the seriousness of crisis and
the need for increasing military budget so that the crisis can
be tackled by military force.
The following shows how some major think tanks are lavishly
funded by war corporations.
The data are provided
by a Global Research paper (Amanda Yee: Six War Managing Think
Tank and the Military Contractors that fund them, March 7,
2023).
The Center
for Strategic International Studies (CSIS)
The CSIS received in 2022 $100,000 or more from following war
corporations:
Northrop Grumman,
General Dynamics, Lockheed Martin, SAIC, Bechtel, Cummings,
Hitachi, Hanhwa Group, Huntington Ingalls Industries,
Mitsubishi Corp., Nippon Telegraph and Telephone, Raytheon,
Samsung.
The Center for a
New American Security (CNAS)
The CNAS received in 2021, $50,000 or more from the following
war corporations:
Huntington
Ingalls Group, Neal Blue, BAE System, Booz Allen, Hamilton
Intel Corp, General Dynamics.
Hudson Institute
(HI)
The HI got, in 2021, $50,000 or more from the following war
corporations:
General Atomics,
Linden Blue, Neal Blue, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman,
Boeing, Mitsubishi.
The
Atlantic Council (AC)
In 2021, the AC received $50,000 or more from the following war
corporations:
Airbus, Neal
Blue, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and SAIC.
The International
Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS)
The IISS was given, in 2021, $25,000 or more by the following
war corporations:
BAE System,
Boeing, General Atomics, Raytheon, Rolls-Royce, Northrop
Grumman.
There was a case
where a think tank expressed an "expert opinion" in order to
protect the interest of its sponsor (war corporation).
It happened on August
12, 2021.
The huge military contractor CACI which had a contract of $907
million for 5 years in Afghanistan was disappointed of the U.S.
withdrawal from Afghanistan, which meant its profit loss.
Its think tank was the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
The
president of ISW, Kimberly Kagan declared that the U.S.
withdrawal would make Afghanistan become a second ground of
Jihadism.
By the way, retired
General Jack Keane is a member of IWS.
Pressure
Group
The pressure groups are led by individuals well connected to war
corporations, the Pentagon and the congress.
The following is the
partial list of pressure groups.
-
The Aerospace
Industry Association (AIA): Its CEO is the former
vice-president of a company producing rockets. AIA
represents more than 340 aerospace and defense corporation
-
The National
Defense Industry Association (NDIA) has 1,600 members
-
The political
Action Committee
-
The Association
of United States Army (AUSA): It produces Industry Guide for
war corporations
-
Business
Executives for National Security (BENS), It is composed of
non-profit 450 business executives who discuss security
issues
-
The Association
of Old Crows (AOC), It is a brotherhood of electronic war
veterans and leaders of war. It is supported by war
corporations such as AECOM and Raytheon
-
The American
Institute of Aeronautics and Astronomics (AIAA)
-
The National
Security Resource Board
-
The War Dept
Defense Policy Board
Pro-War
Media
Most of American media are pro-war.
There are several
reasons why
the Media are not critical of the perpetual war, if
not being outright pro-war.
First,
being corporate media, they are mainly concerned with making
money rather than being concerned with the collective
wellbeing of the American society.
The Corporate Media including CNN, MSMBC, Fox News attach
program priority to the rating.
They have no opinion about the awfully destructive
consequences of the perpetual war.
Even if they have some
useful opinions they do not dare to express them. When they
express an opinion, they are usually referring to the
opinion of the elite class.
Second, it has been the long tradition in the U.S.
that the media do not criticize the government.
Third, the government censor the media, especially,
the off-line media.
Fourth, the numbers of media are directly related to
the war industry.
For example, in
Defense News, T. Michael Mosely, retired 4-star Air Force
general wrote in April 2019 that the Air Force was woefully
under equipped.
There is a long list of pro-war media mostly armed forces
related media.
Fifth, war corporations openly put pressure on the
media not to mention the root of war.
For example,
"General
Dynamics wants corporate media never to question the
root cause of the war."
(Sorensen p: p.72)
Sixth, the
Smith Mundt Modernization Act of 2012 allows greater
propaganda on corporate media.
To sum up, the demand for
war is formed by the coordinated pro-war opinions created by the war
corporations, the think tanks, the pressure groups and the media.
These opinions are transmitted to the Pentagon, which determine the
size of financial and human resources to be allocated to the war.
The remarkable coordination among these individuals and
organizations looks like a well prepared symphony orchestra.
The think tanks play
violin to make sweet sound for the war corporations
The pressure groups play trumpet to make the sound louder
The media play drums to draw attention of the public to the
necessity of wars...
All these players are
conducted by the war corporations.
What is the
purpose of American wars?
There can be defensive purposes and offensive purposes of war.
The defensive purposes
can include the protection of national territory and national values
such as religion, democracy and national assets representing the
national tradition.
Then, there can be offensive purposes of war which can include the
imperial invasion of a foreign country in order to change the
political and economic regime, change religion, to appropriate the
foreign country's natural resources and maintain America's hegemonic
domination.
There is one more offensive purpose, namely,
-
In all
probabilities, the defensive purposes are not relevant. No
country dares to challenge American territory and its
values. On the other hand, all of offensive purposes are
relevant.
-
However none of
the offensive "purposes" of American wars seem to have been
attained.
-
Christianity had
for a long time hidden its presence.
-
American
democracy is falling rapidly.
-
Regime-change war
has ended up with regime destruction.
-
America's global
hegemony has to overcome several challenges.
As for the expropriation
of foreign countries natural resources, American imperialism should
have been a success made possible through the worldwide value chain.
Its main beneficiaries are American multinational corporations.
Now, with regard to the impact of the Perpetual American war on the
American economy, the usual analysis model is military Keynesianism.
A series of economic
studies show that it can have a short run positive effect on the
national economy, but in the medium term, it will harm the economy's
growth potential.
In other words, war is harmful to the national
(civilian) economy.
"After initial demand
stimulus, the effect of increased defense spending turns
negative around six years.
After 10 years of
higher defense spending, there would be 464,000 jobs less than
the base line scenario with lower spending."
(Dean Baker, economist quoted in journals.openedition.org)
In short, American wars
are not needed for the realization of defensive objectives.
Nor are they useful means for the materialization of offensive ends
with the exception of the expropriation of natural resources of
foreign countries.
Then, why does the U.S. continue its wars?
If the war continues
despite its dubious results, there must be some people who find
in the war some benefits.
The inevitable conclusion
is that these same people are the members of the American Pro-War
Community (APWC).
Who are the
Beneficiaries of American wars?
In order that the APWC receive benefit from wars, the profit of war
corporations must be abnormally maximized.
In fact, the profit of
war corporations must be very high due to these reasons.
First, war
corporations receive the Pentagon's research grants and tax
incentives from the federal government.
Second, the use of Artificial Intelligence-based
production systems can save greatly the cost of the war
corporations' production of war goods and services.
Third, war corporations enjoy the quasi monopoly status
through corporate merging in the sector of highly specialized
weapon production. The merging of Lockheed with Martin is a
typical example.
Fourth, in a situation of Pentagon-war corporation
collusion, the Pentagon's acceptance of a high contractual price
is of significance.
The Privatization of
War - The Everlasting Corruption Culture
Once the high corporate profit is assured, the next step of keeping
perpetual wars is the intra-AWPC sharing of the corporate profit.
This is done through bribes. Having received bribes, pro-war policy
makers and pro-war law makers must go along with war corporations
lobbying in favor of "more wars".
Bribes are given to the policy makers and law makers so that they
accept what the war corporations ask for. This is the beginning of
an everlasting corruption culture.
The following cases illustrate some of the dimensions of the
corruption culture:
In 2012, the war
corporations gave $30 million and in 2014 they gave $ 25.5
million to the Senate Armed Service Committee.
Christian Sorensen shows the source of corporate funds given to
the 25 members of the Senate Armed Services Committee.
The following gives
some examples.
-
John McCain
(R): General Electric, Raytheon and several other war
corporations
-
Jeanne
Shaheen (D): Boeing General Electric
-
Lindsey
Graham (R): Northrop Grumman, Raytheon
-
Bill Nelson
(D): Lockheed Martin, Raytheon
A former CIA lobbyist
made a meaningful statement regarding the state of corruption:
"Years of
legalized bribery had exposed me to the worst elements of
our country's political working. Not even my half
million-a-year salary could weigh my conscience...
Today, most
lobbyists are engaged in a system of bribery but it is legal
kind, the kind that runs rampant in the corridors of
Washington."
(Sorensen: p.65)
For the last
presidential election, Lockheed Martin donated $ 91 million.
Fifty eight members
of the House Armed Service Committee received in average $79,588
from the sector (war industry), or three times more than other
representatives.
Lobbying expenditures
by the member of the warmongering community was $247 billion
during the last two presidential elections.
The Swinging-Door
Relationship
However, in addition to the bribe system, there is the swinging-door
relationship between the war industry and the Pentagon.
The swinging-door relations result in the industry's direct
participation in the defense policy making. In fact, the decision
makers in the Pentagon and the decision makers in the war industry
are the same people.
The first swinging door allows the two way traffic of corporation
leaders and the Pentagon leaders.
Here are some cases of
swinging door system of decision making:
-
Ryan McCarthy
assistant to Robert Gate, War Secretary went back to
Lockheed Martin. He is now Under Secretary of Army.
-
General James Mattis is now on the Board of Directors of General Dynamics,
then, he became Secretary of War, then back to General
Dynamics
-
An Assistant
Secretary of War was president of Goldman Sachs focus on oil
and gas
-
An administrator
of the Defense Technical Information (DTC) has directorship
in multiple corporations
-
The Under
Secretary of War in charge of the finance of the Pentagon
was partner of an accounting firm, Kearney which has strong
business with the Pentagon
-
Lester Lyle,
director general of General Dynamics was Air Force National
Commander
-
Wilbur Ross, US
Commerce Secretary had the following members of his advisory
group: CEOs of Apple, Visa, Walmart, Home Depot, IBM, US
Chamber of Commerce, the Association of Community College.
There are also what we
might describe as the "three way traffic swinging-doors", namely,
"The Corporations,
Pentagon and Think Tanks Triad"...
Some of the key members
of the Washington war camp work for war corporations, the Pentagon
and think tanks. In this dynamics, The Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) is often implicated.
The bribery system and the swinging-door apparatus of policy making
is necessarily supportive of the culture of corruption.
"Corporate America as
a whole was also corrupting hearts and minds numbing the public
with entertainment and deluging with commercialism."
(Sorensen: p.60)
What are the
negative impacts of American wars?
There are internal and external negative impacts of American wars.
The internal negative impacts of the American wars include human
cost and economic cost.
The human cost of American perpetual war is high. Nobody knows how
many Americans are killed or wounded.
But some estimates say
that as many as 50,000 Americas have been wounded in addition to
tens of thousands of GIs who have been killed due to the perpetual
wars.
"There is no honest
accounting of the where how and why we are killing-how United
States citizens are being protected and what security benefits
are actually accruing to the United States in continuing
perpetual war."
(William M. Arkin: Newsweek)
The economic and social
costs are high.
The destruction of
America's potential economic growth is attributable to insufficient
investments in education, health and infrastructure.
The U.S. invests almost $1.0 trillion a year to sustain its
perpetual wars, forcing Americans to contribute $2,200 a year (in
taxes) to finance the wars.
The opportunity cost of American wars is high.
The opportunity cost
means investments which have been avoided due to the wars...
Here are some examples of "opportunity costs":
-
$70 billion to
fight poverty
-
$42 billion to
repair 43, 586 deficient bridges
-
$10.6 billion for
the proposed program for the Center for Disease Control
-
$11.9 billion for
the Environment Protection Agency
-
$17 billion for
children who are starving...
Besides, Washington needs
money to save 100,000 Americans who die every year from drug
overdoses.
Washington must finds way to eliminate street killings which happen
four times every single day.
More than 10% of Americans are not covered by medical insurance.
Even those who do have medical insurance, the insurance cost is
beyond the reach of the majority of Americans.
Another serious internal negative impact of the war is increasing
public debt.
In 2023, the U.S.
public debt is $ 31 trillion as against $ 27 trillion for its
GDP. This means that public debt is 14.8% more than GDP.
A good part of this debt is attributable to wars. In fact, the
Iraq war produced a U.S. public debt of $3 trillion.
This is a very dangerous situation, because with this kind of
public debt, the country's fiscal policy becomes utterly
useless.
Now, as for the external negative impact of American wars, the
impacts are beyond description.
Almost 1.3 million people were killed in Iraq, Afghanistan and
Pakistan alone, not to mention. the flow of millions of
refugees.
Over the years, the
perpetual American wars have ruined national economies:
What is really disturbing
is this.
The American wars are
supposed to promote and keep world safer.
But, in reality, the
American wars have instead worsened global security and safety of
civilians.
"After two decades of
fighting, in fact, not one country in the Middle East – not a
country in the world – can argue that it is safer than it was
before 911.
Every country that is
now a part of the expanding battle field of perpetual war is a
greater disaster than it was than decade ago."
(newsweek.com
ibid).
So, who are benefitting
from American wars? Sorensen offers an answer.
"The only people who
ultimately benefit from militarized drugs war are perfidious
flag officers, the D.C. regime executives, war corporations and
a few native American elites."
(Sorenson: p. 298)
I may go further.
I say that the
beneficiaries are the members of the APWC...
Will the American
wars continue?
Despite its terribly negative impact, these wars will continue,
because it is beneficial to the APWC.
The perpetual war requires the following strategies:
-
perpetual
existence of enemies on the one hand
-
on the other, the adoption
of invisible and politics-free war
If there is no demand for the war, there will be no war.
Hence, in order that the war perpetuates, there must be sustained
demand for war.
But, in order that there be demand for war, there must be crisis and
there should be crisis making countries or individuals.
These
countries and individuals become enemies of America.
There have allegedly been several waves of military crises in the
eyes of APWC.
-
The first wave of
crisis: the spread of communism, 1950-1989
-
The second wave of crisis: the threat of terrorism, 1990-present
-
The third wave of crisis: danger of nuclear proliferation,
1950-present
-
The fourth wave of crisis: the war on drugs, 1990-present
-
The fifth wave of crisis: human right violations 2001-present
Thus, there are several
ongoing crisis and enemies.
Hence, the APWC has
little to be concerned with the lack of enemies.
According to William M. Arkin, Washington has bombed or is
bombing these countries:
Afghanistan, Iraq,
Syria, Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen, Libya, Niger, Mali, Uganda...
Moreover, there are ten
more countries which might be bombed.
These are mostly African
countries including,
Cameron, Chad, Kenya
and 7 other countries.
Moreover, the APWC is
used to invent enemies...
The probable next crisis
target could be the "Yellow-Peril crisis" involving China and other
Asian countries.
President,
Joe Biden has decided to intervene in case of
"crisis" in foreign countries even without the authorization of the
countries involved...
This can provide a lot of potential enemies.
Anyway, as far as the existence of enemies is concerned, the APWC
has little to be worried about.
There will be plenty of them, if
not, the APWC will invent them.
For instance, not-being pro-U.S. could be treated as crisis and
crisis-maker, categorized as an enemy of America.
The next hurdle to overcome for APWC is to tackle the anti-war
movement in the U.S. and elsewhere in the world.
The solution is to
find ways of making wars invisible, saving American lives but
profitable.
This can be done
through the use of unmanned weapons and production cost saving
by using AI-based technology, which allows long-distance warfare
by virtue of "hub-spoke" war strategy under which one can attack
the enemy without being present at the battle ground.
More and more, war is
undertaken by a system of hub-spoke.
In the current war
against terrorism, hubs are located in several Middle East
countries, Kuwait being the Army hub and Bahrain being the Navy
hub.
The spokes are spread
throughout the world, especially in the Middle East and Africa.
William M. Arkin
describes the efficiency of the hub-spoke model of war.
"It is so little
understood, so invisible, so efficient, even so as four
successive presidents have promised and then tried to stop
warfare, the spokes have grown and expanded."
The reason for developing
this type of warfare is the need for being free from anti-war public
and anti-war politics.
"The War Brings
Money" - The Vicious Circle of Human Greed
But the most important reason for the perpetuity of America wars is
the vicious circle of human greed.
...and ad infinitum.
This is the vicious
circle of human greed.
Since human greed has
no boundary, American wars will remain perpetual.
Thus, American wars can go on and on until there will be no more
valuable enemies.
In other words, the war will go on until the total destruction
of the world.
So, to save the world,
the perpetual American wars should be stopped...!
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