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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts Volume III, Number 42 November 23 - 29, 2003 Quezon City, Philippines |
The
U.S. Military: Bringing Hope By
Ben Moxham*
Back
to Alternative Reader Index
The
extent of US military reach is unquestionably vast but exactly how vast is
deliberately hazy. According to the US Department of Defense's 2003 Base
Structure Report, a detailed itinerary of US owned military installations, the
United States has 702 bases in 40 countries and a further 96 bases in its
territories. This figure does not reflect the recent trend of stationing troops
on foreign bases where the United States has access rights but not formal
ownership of facilities but it does include the large number of US troops
stationed for the major military interventions of the 1990s, namely, Bosnia,
Saudi Arabia (post Gulf War), and Kosovo. In the wake of September 11, the US
invaded Afghanistan and now maintains facilities in Afghanistan, Pakistan,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Since the invasion of Iraq, Gulf States
such as Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman are housing US
military. The US fear of terrorists hiding out in North Africa has seen the US
military web extend to Djibouti on the horn of Africa. And to assist in the
other "war" the US administration is fighting - the war on drugs - US
reach in Latin America now covers half a dozen countries.
This is in addition to the "traditional" US presence in many
European countries, Japan and South Korea In
all, the US has a military presence in nearly 60 countries. Even then, this
figure doesn't include the vast network of surveillance installations. Nor does
it include the military access agreements or status of forces agreements (SOFAs)
the US has signed with nearly 100 countries. These agreements define the legal
status of US service personnel serving abroad. Infamously, they typically give
the United States jurisdiction over offenses committed by personnel
"carrying out official duty". The
number of installations is also set to grow. According to the Wall Street
Journal, bases are also being considered for Azerbaijan, Morocco, Algeria and
Tunisia in North Africa and Senegal, Ghana, Mali and Kenya in sub-Saharan
Africa. It also mentioned Singapore, Australia, Vietnam, Georgia, Romania,
thePhilippines and Bulgaria. (1) "Just-in-time"
warfare The
recent shifts in basing strategy were recently described by Foreign Affairs as
"the most sweeping changes in the US military posture abroad in half a
century." (2) Many of the major bases the administration
has relied upon to police the boundaries of the Cold War, such as Germany,
Turkey and South Korea, are being scaled down to make way for a network of
"forward operating bases". These are foreign owned facilities, usually
strategically placed airfields or ports to which the US has access rights, with
military hardware on stand-by and, although sparsely staffed, can be
quickly activated. Defense Department officials envisage these will eventually
cover what they have dubbed the "arc of instability" - a vast sweep of
the world running from Latin America to North Africa, Central Europe, the Middle
East and then to South East Asia. Beyond this would lie a ring of bare-bones
"forward operating locations" or FOLs. This
new basing strategy reflects the administration's doctrine of preemptive attack
against terrorists and hostile states. It is designed to quickly counter a foe
who could be anywhere. "We certainly don't have six months to do it",
commented Maj. Gen. James Jones of US Central Command, "we may only have
hours to do it." (3) A dispersed and flexible fighting force is in contrast
to the present US military juggernaut in Germany which maintains approximately
310 military facilities and 95,000 military and civilian personnel. The plan now
is to rotate some of the 60,000 troops in Germany
between the US and Poland, Bulgaria and Romania. In
another trend of late twentieth century restructuring, it seems that basing
personnel will also be victims to the roll back of the welfare state. As a part
of a leaner and meaner agenda, these new installations will give up "the
paraphernalia of welfare and family support arrangements that have marked
overseas basing since World War 2". (4) Where
there isn't a war on "terror", the US administration is relying on the
war on drugs to justify more bases.
Citing problems with cocaine production in Colombia and Bolivia, the US
has expanded its military presence in Latin America. With the winding down of
the US military presence in Panama in 1999, operations were transferred to
Puerto Rico and FOLs for the US airforce have been set up in El Salvador,
Ecuador, Curacao and Aruba
(islands off the coast of Venezuela). The
spoils of war The
spread of US bases reflects the strategic needs and spoils of prior conflict.
The establishment of one base during or in the aftermath of one war provides a
basis for projecting force in that region and potentially launching the next
conflict. Classic
examples are the heavy stationing of US troops in Okinawa in Japan and Germany
in World War 2 and Saudi Arabia after the first Gulf War. And the pattern
continues. Defense department officials plan to keep the Central Asian bases
established for the conflict in Afghanistan: Uzbekistan (with its Saddam-esque
treatment of dissidents) (5) Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan are all new US military
friends. The US also plans to hold onto four bases in Iraq - although Iraqi
resistance thinks otherwise. (6) Where
there's oil, there's bases With
the revival of US imperialism, comes a new honesty in stating US geo-strategic
objectives. The Rand Corporation, an influential conservative US think tank,
argued that a major consequence for a US-led war against Iraq will be the US
control and boosting of Iraqi oil output, thereby weakening the OPEC quota
system and driving down the global price of oil. "OPEC could plunge into a
death spiral", notes Rand policy analyst James Bartis.(6) Media Magnate
Rupert Murdoch agreed, "The greatest thing to come out of this for the
world economy...would be $20 a barrel for oil. That's bigger than any tax cut in
any country."(7) Perhaps it was because of this persuasive argument that
all 175 of his newspaper editors were beating the drums of war? (8) However, with
continued resistance in Iraq, the sabotage of pipelines has indefinitely
postponed this tax relief. Combined with awkward US-relations with the house of
Saud, this has added further impetus to the US Administration's plan to wean the
US economy off Middle Eastern oil. Like flies to a picnic, all the potential
alternative points of supply have attracted rumors of US bases being set up. The
oil rich Gulf of Guinea in West Africa from which
the US imports 1.5m barrels a day is now on Washington's security
radar. The African Oil Policy Initiative Group, a lobbying group comprising oil
executives and Pentagon officials reported to congress that the region and its
vast oil supplies made it "a 'vital interest' in US national security
calculations."(9) It suggested establishing a US military sub-command for
the Gulf of Guinea and setting up bases on the islands of the Republic of Sao
Tome and Principe. Unless the US did more to prop up the oil industry there,
commented one senior CIA official, "the oil industry ran the risk of
imploding as a result of the region's inherent instability". (10) Similarly,
there are now two US military aircraft facilities on the Caribbean islands of
Aruba and Curacao, a very short bombing run away from the coast of oil-rich,
politically troubled and Washington-unfriendly Venezuela. The Caspian region of
central Asia, with four percent of the world's proven oil and gas reserves, will
soon to be blessed with three permanent US military bases. US funded military
are guarding the Occidental Petroleum Oil facilities in Colombia and in the wake
of the war in Afghanistan, the stationing of the US military has now made it
possible for US oil company UNOCAL to build a pipeline from Afghanistan to
Pakistan. (12) An
imperial design The
new US security strategy is to stop a threat that is potentially ubiquitous - to
stop terrorism's "cancer growing in the middle of nowhere" according
to Maj. Gen. Jeffrey B. Kohler. (13) It is no coincidence that this
"nowhere" covers most of the Global South. Failed development at the
hands of a US-led cabal of corporations and governments has turned 80% percent
of the world's population into forgotten people. And the solution? With
missionary zeal, the Whitehouse's National Security Strategy seeks to
"bring the hope of democracy, development, free markets, and free trade to
every corner of the world." (14) If Iraq is any indication of what this
means, the people of the world should start digging bunkers. Those
deviating from the US brand of "globalization" may have to contend
with the military muscle of what the Project for a New American Century, the pet
think tank of Washington's back room boys, describes as "America's grand
strategy". (15) "It is always possible to fall off this bandwagon
called globalization" comments US military strategist Thomas Barnett.
"And when you do, bloodshed will follow. If you are lucky, so will American
troops." (16) But the US is not some benign global coast guard. With guns
blazing in over 200 foreign military interventions, US history suggests that
Barnett's perverse chain of logic is in the wrong order. (Posted by Bulatlat.com) *
Ben Moxham is a volunteer researcher with Focus on the Global South (1)
The Wall Street journal June 10th 2003 (2)
Foreign Affairs, September / October 2003 (3)
Washington Post, June 9, 2003 (4)
CDI, "Worldwide reorientation of U.S. basing in prospect, September 19,
2003, www.cdi.org (5)
The Guardian, 26 May 2003. US looks away as new ally tortures Islamists. (6)
International Herald Tribune, April 21, 2003 (7)
Iraqi Oil and the Global Economy, James Bartis,Albany Times- Union, January 6,
2003 (8)
The Bulletin, February 12th, 2003 (9)
The Guardian, February 17th, 2003 (10)
Guardian Weekly, July 10, 2003 (11)
Guardian Weekly, July 10, 2003 (12)
New York Times, January 18, 2002 (13)
New York Times, July 4, 2003 (14)
United States National Security Strategy (15)
Project for a New American Century, Rebuilding America's Defenses. (16) Esquire March 2003 Bulatlat.com We want to know what you think of this article.
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