U.S. Bases in the Middle East |
If
the Iraq
war is over and the Afghan war is winding down, what is prompting the
remorseless expansion of the Pentagon's vast network of overseas military bases?
Veteran
foreign affairs journalist Eric Walberg says the bases are the modern version
of colonies. The U.S.
has a whopping 1,100 of them in 63 countries so they're the preferred method by
which the Pentagon seeks to dominate the planet.
That's
why President George W. Bush could tell an Abu Dahbi audience on Jan. 13, 2008,
“The United States has no desire for territory.” It doesn’t need any
more. The Pentagon’s real estate holdings include 52,000 buildings on
gazillions of acres on bases around the world. It already is in a position to
intimidate or attack virtually every country with overwhelming firepower,
including nuclear weapons.
Since 9/11 alone, the Pentagon has put up new military bases in
“The
U.S. military is keen on
establishing military bases in every nation, and new NATO members in Eastern Europe top the list,” writes Lt. Col. Carlton
Myer, a former U.S. Marine Corps officer who has made a study of the issue for
his G2mil.com web site. He notes that the Czech Republic ,
recalling the unwanted Soviet presence, rejected a strong push during the Bush
administration to build a base on their soil. “Attempts to establish a base in Poland are
ongoing, using the bogus ‘missile defense’ sales strategy. That ruse was
recently tried on the new NATO nation of Romania . It agreed to an American
‘missile defense’ base and the U.S.
military has begun construction of a new permanent military base at Deveselu
airbase, near Caracal , Romania .”
The
crash of an F/A-18 Hornet fighter plane from Oceana air base into a Virginia Beach
residential community the other week highlights the tragic accidents spawned by
military bases that can impact local communities. Other penalties range from
pollution to prostitution and the setting aside of choice real estate for
military use that might have better served the community if dedicated to
peaceful pursuits. This last is a major complaint of Okinawans. Besides its
foreign bases, the U.S.
has an additional 1,000 bases Stateside. No other country has anything remotely
approaching the enormity of this vast operation in number, firepower, and
financial cost to its taxpayers. China ,
for example, does not have a single foreign base anywhere and Russia maintains only a handful in Central Asia .
“Bases
abroad have become a major and unacknowledged “face” of the United States,
frequently damaging the nation’s reputation, engendering grievances and anger,
and generally creating antagonistic rather than cooperative relationships
between the United States and others,” writes David Vine in “Foreign Policy In
Focus.”
“Most
dangerously,” he continues “as we have seen in Saudi Arabia and Yemen, and as
we are seeing in Iraq and Afghanistan, foreign bases create breeding grounds
for radicalism, anti-Americanism, and attacks on the United States, reducing,
rather than improving, our national security.”
The
U.S.
bases are so sited overseas that they can now exercise military control over
virtually the entire globe. Though Kosovo is nominally independent, it is the
site of Camp Bond Steel, the largest U.S.
base in Europe, Walberg says, housing 3,000 soldiers and “giving the U.S. control of the Balkans, within easy reach
of the Caspian Sea and Israel .”
There are 43 bases that ring Iran
alone. Iran ,
of course, has none anywhere. Given this disposition, which country would
appear to be the more likely aggressor?
“Polls
show the vast majority of American citizens support the closure of most U.S. military
bases overseas,” writes Lt. Col. Myer. “There are over a thousand U.S.
military installations elsewhere, (outside of the Middle
East ) and half can be closed, Myer asserts. He cites Bondsteel as
an example, writing:
“Since
it costs hundreds of millions of dollars a year to operate Camp Bondsteel ,
why does it still exist? It has little value as a regional base since it lacks
an airstrip with aircraft hangars; it just has several helicopter pads. It has
no port or rail facilities nor ammunition storage igloos or warehouses. It is
only 955 acres with no training areas or firing ranges. It's best described as
a luxurious prison camp, where American soldiers are sentenced to one-year of
service, and kill time by driving around the area armed with pistols.”
There
is a darker side to the presence of these bases, author Vine points out. “In
undemocratic nations like Uzbekistan ,
Kyrgyzstan , and Saudi Arabia ,
our bases support governments responsible for repression and human rights
abuses. In too many recurring cases, soldiers have raped, assaulted, or killed
locals, most prominently of late in South Korea ,
Okinawa, and Italy .
The forced expulsion of the
entire Chagossian people to create our secretive base on British Diego Garcia
in the Indian Ocean is another extreme but not so aberrant example.”
Additionally,
the U.S.
operates 11 floating bases----aircraft carrier task forces that may take
control of the waters washing any continent. These come packing a devastating
punch that, if used, could wipe out most countries overnight. Each carrier is
accompanied by a guided missile cruiser, two guided missile destroyers and an
attack sub, among others.
As
if all these fleets and bases were insufficient, U.S. domination of the entire
planet includes control of outer space, Walberg writes. ”Freedom of action in
space is as important to the U.S. as air power and sea power,” comments the Air
Force Flight Plan of 2004 he cites in his book.
“Unlike
domestic bases, which set off local alarms when threatened by closure, our
collection of overseas bases is particularly galling because almost all our
taxpayer money leaves the United States (much goes to enriching private base
contractors like corruption-plagued former Halliburton subsidiary KBR),” writes
Vine. “One part of the massive Ramstein airbase near Landstuhl, Germany, has an
estimated value of $3.3 billion. Just think how local communities could use
that kind of money to make investments in schools, hospitals, jobs, and
infrastructure.” Indeed!
Now
and then a bit of sanity creeps into the debate over shutting down the
threatening U.S. overseas holdings. “I do not think we should be spending money
to have troops in Germany 65 years after World War II. We have a terrible
deficit and we have to cut back,” said Massachusetts Democratic Congressman
Barney Frank. Actually, it's not just German bases that need closing. It's all
foreign bases that need to be shuttered. They are not "defensive" but
"offensive." Consider this: why would any nation build a thousand
foreign military bases if it didn't plan to use them? Their construction only
emboldens our presidents to blab about "preventive war" as their
existence makes such tyrannical aggression feasible. Are U.S. taxpayers
listening?
(Sherwood Ross formerly
worked as a reporter for the Chicago Daily
News and as News Director of a large civil rights organization. Reach him atsherwoodross10@gmail.com)
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