Learn which "civilian" companies are making big
bucks on today's wars.
Chances are, if you’ve ever sent a package overnight, bought
a PC or a can of soda, you’ve paid your hard-earned money to a major Pentagon
contractor. While large defense corporations that make fighter jets and
armored vehicles garner the most attention, tens of thousands of “civilian”
companies, from multi-national corporations hawking toothpaste and shampoo tobig oil
behemoths and even local restaurantsscattered
across the United States, all supply the Pentagon with the necessities used to
carry on day-to-day operations and wage America’s wars. And they’ve made a
killing doing it since 9/11.
In 2001, the massive arms dealers Lockheed Martin, Boeing
and Northrop Grumman ranked one, two and five among Department of Defense
contractors, raking in $14.7 billion, $13.3 billion and $5.2 billion,
respectively, in contracts. Last year, Lockheed’s contract dollars were
almost double their pre-9/11 level, clocking in at $28 billion, while Boeing’s
had jumped to almost $19 billion and Northrop Grumman, still in the five spot,
had more than doubled its 2001 take, with $12.8 billion in contracts.
Chris Hellman of the National Priorities Project,
writing recently at TomDispatch.com,
noted that since the 9/11 attacks, the United States has spent about $8
trillion on national security. Even accounting for all the funds paid out
for troop salaries,overseas
base construction and the training and equipping indigenous allies in
Iraq and Afghanistan, among many other costs, it’s clear that vast sums of
Pentagon money are flowing somewhere other than to the top
weapons-makers. Unknown to most U.S.
taxpayers and even many Pentagon-watchers, some of the largest and most
recognizable corporations in the world have also been getting rich on America ’s
wars. Below are five examples of “civilian” companies that have reaped
major rewards from the Pentagon during its last decade at war:
1. BP: The oil giant, perhaps most famous for
dumping 206
million gallons of crude into the Gulf of Mexico last year, is also a perennial power when
it comes to Pentagon contracts. Back in 2001, BP nabbed a cool $357
million in contracts from the Department of Defense. Last year, the number
hit $1 billion and it’s no secret why. As defense-tech writer Noah
Shachtman noted atForeign
Policy last year, the U.S.
military burns “22 gallons of diesel [fuel] per soldier per day in Afghanistan , at
a cost of more than $100,000 a person annually.”
2. FedEx: The overnight shipping giant is a
long-time defense-contracting powerhouse that has also seen an exponential
increase in contract dollars since September 10, 2001, when its stock was
trading at just under $40
per share. By the end of that year, FedEx had been awarded about $211
million in contracts from the Pentagon. In 2010, the company received $1.4
billion from the Department of Defense and this year, with its stock closing in
on $80 per share, has already passed the $1 billion mark, again. This
includes a $182 million deal,
inked in August, to pack and ship fresh fruit and vegetables to U.S. military
bases overseas and a joint agreement,
which also includes United Parcel Service (UPS) and Polar Air Cargo, which
could last up to five years and potentially net the companies a combined $853
million.
3. Dell: If you’re in the military and you want
to pilot a drone, transfer supplies or write a memo, you need a
computer. That’s just what Dell provides. The desktop- and
laptop-maker has been plying the Pentagon with computers for many years and,
just like Lockheed, Boeing and Northrop Grumman, has done especially well by
the Department of Defense since 2001. That year, Dell was awarded $65
million in Pentagon contracts. By 2009, that number had jumped to $731
million and, over the course of the decade, has added up to a total of $4.3
billion in contracts for the PC manufacturer.
4. Kraft – From A-1 steak sauce, their signature mayonnaise
and Oreo cookiesto Oscar Meyer hot dogs, Planters peanuts and Wheat Thins
crackers, this company ranks as one of the largest and best known food concerns
in the world. Not surprisingly, it also does a brisk business with the
Pentagon which has grown ever larger during the last decade. Back in 2001,
Kraft inked $148 million in deals with the Department of Defense, by 2010, its
yearly take had risen to $373 million.
5. Pepsi – Once upon a time it was the “choice of a new generation.”
These days, it’s the choice of the Pentagon. In 2010, PepsiCo washed down
$217 million in Defense Department contract dollars, compared to the mere $61
million in deals it inked back in 2001. Earlier this year, the company
continued the trend by signing a multi-million dollar deal to provide the Army,
Navy, Air Force and Marine Corps with “bag-in-box beverages.” (That
very same day, Coca-Cola also received a slightly larger contract to provide
drinks for the military.)
Other big-name firms that are regularly awarded large,
lucrative deals from the Defense Department include tire titans Goodrich and
Goodyear, oil giants Shell and Exxon Mobil, big food suppliers like Nestle,
General Mills, Tyson, ConAgra and Campbell's Soup, and tech and telecom
stalwarts including AT&T, Oracle, Sony and Verizon.
A decade of waging wars abroad,
from Iraq and Afghanistan to Pakistan
and Libya to Yemen and Somalia hasn’t been kind to
average Americans. As the United States poured nearly $8 trillion into
national security spending, and the national debt ballooned from $6
trillion to $14.3 trillion, the official unemployment rate has more than
doubled -- from 4.5% to 9.1%. Meanwhile
the number of children living in poverty in the U.S. has jumped nearly 20% since
2000, according to theNational
Center for Children in Poverty. And for older Americans, the risk of
hunger has spiked almost 80% since 2001, according to a recent report by
AARP. But from car companies to candy makers and even the biggest brands inorganic
food, so many of the world’s favorite companies have, over these years,
cashed in on America ’s
wars.
In his famous 1961 farewell address, President Dwight
Eisenhower warned of the "acquisition of unwarranted influence" by
what he called the "military-industrial complex.” Today, however, the
"large arms industry" that Eisenhower warned about is only part of
the equation. Civilian firms such as FedEx and PepsiCo form the backbone of what
more accurately can be described as a military-corporate complex of “civilian”
businesses that enable the Pentagon to function, to make war and to carry out
foreign occupations.
Almost a decade after Eisenhower's farewell address, there
were still only about22,000 prime
contractors doing business with the Department of Defense. Last year, according
to U.S.
government records, the number stood at almost 135,000. The reasons why
are simple. Big war budgets and ever-increasing national security spending
have made the Pentagon’s deep, taxpayer-filled pockets especially attractive as
a stable source of income in economically uncertain times.
Most Americans will never buy anything directly from
Lockheed Martin, Boeing or Northrop Grumman, but many have spent money on Crest
toothpaste (Procter & Gamble), Cheerios (General Mills), a PlayStation 3
(Sony) or paid for cell phone service from AT&T or Verizon – all of
them big-time defense contractors. These and other large corporations have
done very well, reaping rewards not only from Americans at the checkout counter
but from their tax dollars by way of the Pentagon. Meanwhile, halfway
across the planet, large numbers of Afghans and Iraqis -- who have seen their
lives upended, their homes destroyed, and their family members killed and
wounded -- have suffered as a direct result of the efforts of these and other
members of the military-corporate complex.
Even with the specter of only modest growth (or even cuts)
in defense spending on the horizon, the number of companies seeking the
stability of a Pentagon paycheck is likely only to rise. And with it, the U.S. civilian economy is sure to become further
militarized by stealth corporations cashing in on a state of permanent war,
while the American public remains largely oblivious to their role in the
military-corporate complex and America ’s
war-making overseas.
Nick Turse is the associate editor of TomDispatch.com and
a senior editor at AlterNet. His latest book is The
Case for Withdrawal from Afghanistan (Verso). You can follow him on
Twitter @NickTurse,
on Tumblr, and
on Facebook.
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