By Alan
Caruba
The
author of “1984”, George Orwell, once said, “The quickest way to end a war is to
lose it.”
In the
preamble to the U.S. Constitution, among the priorities listed is to “provide
for the common defense” of the nation. After having fought a six-year war during
the Revolution and replaced the failed Articles of Confederation, the framers of
the Constitution, many of whom had fought beside George Washington, well
understood the need for a standing army and navy to protect the new
nation.
In the
nation’s earliest years, Americans repeatedly elected Presidents with military
credentials and experience. In addition to Washington they included Monroe,
Jackson, Harrison, Tyler, Grant, Teddy Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy,
Johnson, Nixon, Carter, Reagan, Bush41 and 43. FDR had served as Secretary of
the Navy.
In
recent times, two Presidents, Clinton—a draft dodger—and Obama have had no
military experience to draw upon. Over the objections of their generals, both
introduced policies to include and protect homosexuals in the U.S. military
services. Now the doors have been opened to permit women to fight beside men.
The military is not a place where one conducts social experiments. It’s a place
where men go in harm’s way to protect the nation.
Today,
thanks to the failure of the Congress to address America’s spending and growing
debt problems, the U.S. military faces a draconian “sequestration”—massive cuts
to the defense budget—that would so seriously decrease the nation’s ability to
defend itself and project power globally, that it reminds one of the failure to
maintain a strong military that required a massive effort to get up to speed
after the Japanese Empire’s attack on Pearl Harbor in 194. The WWII declaration
of war included the Nazi Third Reich that threatened the United Kingdom, all of
Europe, and Russia.
A
recent Rasmussen
Reports poll found that 40% of likely voters “believe the United States
spends too much on defense and national security” while only 22% disagree and
32% believe the amount spent is about right. This is a definition of
stupidity.
A
nation requires a standing army, navy, coast guard, and air force, along with a
trustworthy banking system. After the 2008 financial crisis—the result of
government policies regarding housing—we had to bail out the banking system to
the tune of billions. Today we face the prospect of a military that is flying an
aging fleet of airplanes, has a navy that has as few ships in service as we had
at the end of World War I, and a volunteer military that requires that support
of thousands of civilian personnel.
Out-going Secretary of Defense, Leon Panetta,
has been loudly warning that the result of any spending cuts would be
“catastrophic.”
One can
argue that we have spent a fortune in treasure and blood in the Middle East
since 2001, but only the most foolish would argue that America and the West is
not facing the greatest threat in its history since Moslem armies were defeated
at the doors of Europe in 732 AD and 1529 AD.
In a
recent press conference, Panetta said that the practical results of the proposed
cuts in defense would be less training for units not imminently deploying to
Afghanistan; less shipboard training for all but the highest priority missions;
less pilot training and fewer flight hours; curtailed ship maintenance and
disruption to research and weapons modernization programs. He described it as
the hollowing out of the defense force of the nation.
Noting
that members of our military are fighting and sometimes dying to defend our
nation, Panetta said, “Those of us in Washington need to have the same courage
as they do to do the right thing and try to protect the security of this
country. We must ensure we have the resources we need to defend the nation and
meet our commitments to our troops, to our civilian employees, and to their
families, after more than a decade of war.”
Courage
and common sense are two elements that are missing in Washington these
days.
Retired
General
Paul E. Vallely, U.S. Army, states the case bluntly. “President Obama is
working very hard to destroy U.S. military superiority, consciously and
unconsciously to the advantage (of) our global enemies in an attempt to seize
control over national security and (in) another overt attempt to bypass
Congress, the Obama administration may have already made this play as of this
writing.”
Joined
at the press conference by Army General Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Dempsey described sequestration as “a self-inflicted wound
on national security”, bluntly saying it was “an irresponsible way to manage our
nation’s defense. It cuts blindly and it cuts bluntly. It compounds risk and it
compromises readiness.”
Americans are largely unaware that
our air fleet is the oldest in Air Force history, worn down by two-plus decades
of combat dating back to the 1991 Gulf War. The average age of the fleet exceeds
a quarter of a century. The U.S. Navy is a mere shadow of itself. Under normal
operations one third of the fleet is in repair, one third is in port for the
rest and relaxation of sailors, leaving approximately 90 ships to patrol the
seven seas to protect American interests. There are about 800,000 civilians that
provide support to our services and nearly 1.4 million in the active-duty
military.
We have
until March to know whether Congress will take action to repeal sequestration
and replace it with the steps everyone with a lick of sense knows must be taken;
reforming the nation’s tax code, reforming Social Security, Medicare and
Medicaid to avoid their impending failure, reductions in the spending and
borrowing that has imposed more than $16 trillion in debt, and reform of the
spiraling avalanche of regulations that are choking the nation’s economic
recovery.
How
serious is it? Gen. Dempsey warned that operations, maintenance and training
will be gutted. “We’ll ground aircraft, return ships to port, and sharply
curtail training across the force. (We) may be forced to furlough civilians at
the expense of maintenance and even health care. We will be unable to reset the
force following a decade of war.”
“Within
a year, we’ll be unprepared,” said Gen. Dempsey.
© Alan
Caruba, 2013
2 comments:
We spend more money on defense than the next 10 countries combined. The Republican obsession with defense is the reason why, for the first time since 1984, I voted democrat. We don't have the money to be the policeman and Meals On Wheels for the world. We have military bases all over the world, and what has it gotten us? They hate us. "Yankee go home!" Well, we're going home and call the U.N. if you need help.
Hmmmm......
The Founders say that everyone should have full access to "ARMS", and that's a good thing.
The Founders say that standing armies are 100% Satanic Evil, and specifically write their existence OUT of the Constitution (the "armies" are temporary, two year only structures), and then do a lot of supplemental writing about WHY standing armies are evil and why they do not want them, and that's a bad thing.
Hypocricy much?
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