- Now that it's safe to bet that world military
expenditures
in 2005 will exceed one trillion dollars (that's one with 12 zeros or
$1,000,000,000,000)
and possibly even more with Black Budgets, the world is sure to grow
increasingly
more chaotic . Small poor countries feel more threatened than ever by
neighboring
countries with bigger weapons. Some of these countries spend more on
military
and weapons than on health care, education, and other social services
combined.
The United States government's military spending accounts for almost 50%
of the world's total military spending, more than all other countries
combined.
The United States' largest national export is weapons, and the weapons
corporations sell to anyone anywhere that has cash. Weapons Corporations,
like International Money Lenders, have no allegiance to their own
countries.
Eighty percent of their weapons are sold to non-democratic regimes around
the world. In many cases these US-made weapons are used on American
soldiers
in subsequent conflicts. The United States is not the only one in the
weapons
game. Russia, China, Europe and other countries are also selling weapons
to the highest bidder and in many cases sell to both sides of a
conflict.
-
- The U.S. government is exporting what the Pentagon calls
"security" around the World and is, at any given time, training
soldiers in over 70 countries. One of the best known of these training
programs is the Pentagon's International Military Education and Training
Program (IMET). Soldiers in these US training programs come from warring
countries and countries with the most horrific human rights abuses on
record,
including Indonesia, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Congo, Columbia, Iraq,
Afghanistan
and many other countries inside what Thomas Barnett, author of "The
Pentagon's New Map" calls THE GAP. Thomas Barnett goes on to say that
the US is selling security in the "GAP" and the "GAP"
is measured in" billable hours." "Security" is the
new buzz word for the "military industrial complex" and has
increased
80% since the fall of the Soviet Union, making war a big money-maker for
the multi-national corporations. This has been dubbed "a permanent
war economy." Barnett says that if you give him any pissed-off 18-,
or 19-year-old American kid who likes to play video games, he will show
you the soldier of tomorrow.
-
- In 2002 James Glaser stumbled across the VFW web page
section for eligibility and, to his surprise, found 67 places on the globe
where America has been at war in some way since after WW II. Antiwar.com
and Lew Rockwell state that we have engaged the enemy 23 times since 1945,
but the Congress of the United States put that number at 67.
-
- Here is the list as written in the VFW site:
-
- * Taiwan Straits
- * Quemoy Matsu Island
- * Congo
- * Laos
- * Vietnam
- * Cuba
- * Dominican Republic
- * Korea
- * Cambodia
- * Thailand (in direct support of Cambodia
Operation)
- * Operation Eagle Pull-Evacuation of Cambodia
- * Operation Frequent Wind-Evacuation of Vietnam
- * Mayaguez Operation
- * Operation Urgent Fury-Grenada
- * Lebanon
- * Germany (West Berlin)
- * Austria
- * Korea
- * Japan
- * Italy
- * Trieste
- * Germany (except West Berlin)
- * Austria
- * Asiatic Pacific
- * Korean Service Medal (Army, Navy, Air Force)
- * Berlin
- * Libyan Operation El Dorado Canyo
- * Persian Gulf Operation Earnest Will
- * Panama Operation Just Cause
- * Somalia-United Shield-Operation Restore Hope
- * Haiti-Operation Uphold Democracy
- * Operation Southern Watch (Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq,
Oman, Gulf of Omen W. Of 62' E. Long, Yemen, Egypt, Jordan)
- * El Salvador
- * Bosnia-Operation Joint Endeavor
- * Operation Joint Guard
- * Operation Vigilant Sentinel
- * Operation Northern Watch
- * Operation Maritime Intercept
- * Operation Joint Forge (Bosnia-Herzegovina)
- * Operation Desert Thunder
- * Operation Desert Fox
- * Thailand Military Operation
- * Cuban Military Operation
- * Iranian, Yemen Indian Ocean Operation
- * Lebanon, Libyan Expedition
- * Panama - (pre and post invasion)
- * Liberia (Operation Sharp Edge)
- * Rwanda (Operation Distant Runner)
- * Vietnam Service Medal
- * Iraq Operation Desert Storm/Operation Desert
Shield
- * Combat Action Ribbon, Korean Service,
- * Kosovo Campaign Medal (Allied Force),
- * Joint Guardian, Allied Harbor Sustain Hope/Shining
Hope
- * Nobel Anvil, Kosovo Task Force Hawk
- * Kosovo Task Force Saber
- * Kosovo Task Force Falcon
- * Kosovo Task force Hunter
- * Kosovo Air Campaign
- * Kosovo Defense Campaign.
-
- Some of these countries are repeated, but the dates of
action are different. That means that we have repeatedly returned to some
countries for new engagements much like we are now doing in Iraq. As you
can see by this list, America has been very busy in the last 50 years and
our "Military Might" (Military Industrial Complex) has been in
the forefront of U.S. Foreign Policy. Today the United States has over
700 military out posts outside the U.S.
-
- The USAF had dropped 1.5 million tons of bombs on Laos
and 150,000 tons of bombs on Viet Nam. More recently, the U.S. bombings,
military invasions of forgiven countries, and the U.N. sanctions (mainly
maintained by the U.S.) are responsible for the high level of deaths and
violence due to sanctions. Such actions caused the deaths of over 1.5
million
Iraqis; about 50% of these deaths were Iraqi children less than 5 years
old. Of course, this number will continue to grow because of the use of
Depleted Uranium munitions. DU was also used in Yugoslavia and
Afghanistan.
-
- Over 10,000 tons of bombs were dropped on Afghanistan.
The United States reports that it flew over 110,000 air sorties against
Iraq, dropping to date over 100,000 tons of conventional bombs, nearly
seven times the equivalent of the atomic bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.
Of this bombardment, 93% consists of free-falling bombs, most dropped from
over 30,000 feet and indiscriminately killing millions of civilians. At
least 7% of the bombs in Iraq had satellite guided systems; more than 25%
missed their targets. Most of the targets were civilian facilities. In
2004, it's been estimated that the United States fired 2,500 tons of
depleted
uranium munitions on Iraq with the radio-active equivalent of thousands
of Nagasaki bombs with a half-life of 4.5 BILLION years. Data from William
Blum's book Rogue State, supplemented by casualty data from various
sources,
estimates that between 10 million to 16 million deaths were directly and
indirectly related to United States' hegemony sense after WWII.
-
- Researchers estimate that since 1945 at least 50 US and
Russian nuclear weapons have been lost and remain at bottom of the sea,
called broken arrows from subs, ships and planes. The US alone officially
lists 11 nuclear bombs lost and never recovered in accidents. Around the
world thousands of incidents of nuclear plants, nuclear facilities,
bombers,
subs and ships are on record, but due to government and business secrecy,
it is difficult to determine with certainty the extent of some events
documented
by government and non-government sources.
-
- Due to nuclear testing starting from 1945, 1,025 nuclear
detonations, including five upper-atmosphere tests called 'operation
starfish,'
I believe have added to today's global warming problem. Nuclear power
plants
for nuclear weapons production and energy around the world are
contaminating
massive amounts of water and land affecting the gene pool of plants and
animals. Cancer is now the leading cause of death. Cancer clinics are over
flowing and the uninsured in America are simply denied treatment and left
to die a horrible death.
-
- Currently, the total U.S. nuclear stockpile is estimated
to consist of almost 20,000 nuclear warheads, including almost 3,000
reserve
strategic and tactical warheads, which are not attached to delivery
vehicles.
The United States is also deploying very dangerous space based weapons
systems for world domination that has moved the arms race into the
heavens.
-
- The current Russian nuclear stockpile is estimated at
19,500 nuclear warheads. Unlike the United States, Russia possesses these
reserves at least in part because dismantling the warheads has proven
prohibitively
expensive. And unlike the United States, Russia continues to produce
limited
numbers of new nuclear warheads, largely because its warheads are designed
to have a far shorter operational lifespan and, therefore, must be replaced
more frequently. China at present has 2,350 nuclear warheads. Thousands
of these US, Russian, and Chinese nuclear warheads remain on hair-trigger
alert. Many of these weapons systems are outdated and controlled by failing
computer systems.
-
- It's now very clear that US aggression over the last
50 years is economic and strategic conquest pure and simple, as Zbigniew
Brzezinski in his book "The Grand Chessboard" so well put it.
Sadly, the United States has, to my estimate, dropped over 100,000,000
(million) tons of bombs on foreign lands over the last 50 years killing
millions and millions of civilians that want nothing to do with this
madness.
What will it take for these weapons systems to be completely dismantled
and for the world to come to its senses, a nuclear war if we survive, or
a serious accident? Who is responsible for this ever increasing mess, the
corporate media, the military industrial complex? Are the leaders of these
countries or the world elitist who control them responsible? We may not
have all the answers to the above questions now, but one thing is certain;
at this rate the human race will pay the ultimate price sooner rather than
later.
-
- Randy Atkins
- www.arsenalofhypocrisy.com/
-
- Footnotes:
-
- U.S. Bombing Watch
- Data from William Blum Rouge State
- Federation of American Scientist, Fast-Facts
- U.S. Government info / Resources
- The Independent
- Awakened Woman E-Magazine
- Pamela Bockley-O'Brian
- Arms Control Association
- International war crime tribunal
- Allen Lutins
- Zbigniew Brzezinski "The Grand
Chessboard"
- Wikipedia
-
- http://www.arsenalofhypocrisy.com/article.asp
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