http://www.truthout.org/1020095
The Urgent Need to Demilitarize the National Security State
Tuesday 20 October 2009
by: Melvin A. Goodman, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed
(Photo Illustration: Ionia Kershaw / t r u t h o u t)
The national security policy inherited by President Barack Obama has been increasingly militarized over the past two decades despite the collapse of the
The president has addressed the problem incrementally, reducing growth in spending in his first defense budget, establishing a timeline for withdrawal of American military forces in
At the same time, however, President Obama has appointed too many retired general officers to sensitive national security positions; provided too much support for new weapons, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems; and continued support for Georgian and Ukrainian membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
The outcome of the current high-level debate over adding troops to support a misbegotten counterinsurgency strategy in Afghanistan will provide an indication of the president's willingness to demilitarize the national security arena and to restructure civil-military relations that have tilted heavily in the direction of the Pentagon.
President Obama's predecessors since 1981 contributed to the militarization of US national security policy. President Ronald Reagan demanded unprecedented defense spending in peacetime when the
President George H.W. Bush deployed 26,000 troops to
Clinton became the first president in 35 years to fail to stand up to the Pentagon on an arms control treaty, when he was unwilling to challenge the military's opposition to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). President Obama, unfortunately, has still not named a new head of AID, and has not thrown his support to ratification for the CTBT.
Militarization of national security policy or reliance on the military to pursue objectives better pursued by other means reached a
His policies of unilateralism and pre-emptive attack, which were proclaimed in his speech at
Finally, he abrogated the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, the cornerstone of deterrence since 1972, and funded a national missile defense that has not been established as workable, but remains the largest line item for a weapons system in the defense budget. There is very little competition in the building of US weapons systems, which are behind schedule and over budget as the
The United States is spending more than the rest of the world combined on its military ($670 billion), its intelligence community ($75 billion) and its homeland security ($50 billion), leaving the State Department and AID extremely underfunded. Cost overruns on the largest weapons system last year exceeded $300 billion.
The
These policies have increasingly alienated the
The policies of torture and abuse, secret prisons and extraordinary renditions, moreover, meant the
President Obama must understand that the Pentagon has fought every arms control and disarmament treaty over the past 35 years, beginning with President John F. Kennedy's Partial Test Ban Treaty and continuing with the SALT and START treaties, the CTBT, the Land Mines Ban and the Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty that banned an entire class of nuclear weapons systems.
President Obama needs to widen the dialogue with
The Pentagon's Office of Net Assessment engages in long-term planning for developing and using nuclear weapons, but there is no comparable institution in the policy or intelligence communities that advocates arms control and disarmament.
The Pentagon dominates the intelligence community with the control of most intelligence spending and intelligence personnel. Most intelligence collection requirements flow from the Pentagon, and deference within the policy community and the Congressional Intelligence Committees for the "warfighter" has meant that tactical military considerations have overwhelmed collection for strategic geopolitical considerations.
The militarization of intelligence has weakened the kind of community that President Harry Truman created 60 years ago and will complicate efforts to rebuild the nation's strategic intelligence capabilities. One of Truman's goals was to create an intelligence agency (CIA) that would challenge military estimates - not join the team.
President Obama has chosen retired generals to be the director of National Intelligence or the intelligence tsar, the national security adviser, the broker for a settlement in the
The current policy debate over
The Bush administration used the Pentagon to shift US strategic priorities away from Europe and Asia and toward the Middle East, Persian Gulf and Southwest Asia, with misguided conflicts in
President Obama's speech on
It has been 20 years since the collapse of the
Mark Twain warned us long ago that, "if the only tool in our toolbox is a hammer, then all of our problems will begin to look like nails." Unfortunately, President Obama has inherited that toolbox and needs to replace some of the hammers with the traditional tools of statecraft.
Melvin A. Goodman is national security and intelligence columnist for Truthout. He is senior fellow at the Center for International Policy and adjunct professor of government at
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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