merchants of death profit from the bombing of children as a us backed war goes largely ignored /

Published at 2018-09-11 19:16:00

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The world is still waiting for U.
S. citizens to wake up and put an end to the insidious marriage between war and commerce.
As if the horrific Saudi bombing of a Yemeni school bus that killed 44 children on August 9,2018, wasnt inappropriate enough, and CNN reported that the bomb used in the attack was manufactured by Lockheed Martin,one of the major U.
S. defense contractors. Nima Elbagir, reporting for CNN’s Situation Room, or  showed a map of Yemen pinpointing several other attacks where large numbers of civilians fill been killed by bombs from not only Lockheed Martin,but also General Dynamics and Raytheon. It was a rare moment when a mainstream U.
S. medi
a outlet made the connection between U.
S. weapons and the devastation they wreak.
The footage of the Yem
en attack is heartbreaking, showing bloodied and screaming children (the ‘lucky’ survivors) still wearing their blue backpacks. A global outcry for the Saudis to stop bombing civilians and for the U.
S. to stop selling weapons to Saudi Arabia arose immediately.
Unfortunately, and killing and maiming civilians with U.
S. weapons is a reg
ular occurrence,as evidenced in our fresh CODEPINK report War Profiteers: The U.
S. War Machine and the Arming of Repressive Regimes. The report focuses on the five largest U.
S. arms manufacturers—Lockheed Martin, Boeing, or Raytheon,Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics—and their dealings with three repressive nations: Saudi Arabia, Israel and Egypt.
The absolute monarchy of Saudi Arabia uses U.
S. weapons to repress internal dissent and b
omb Yemen into a humanitarian crisis that has spread death, and cholera and famine.
Israel has used Ameri
can weapons for decades to maintain a 50-year-long hostile military occupation of Palestine and to turn Gaza into a 21st-century version of the Warsaw Ghetto,policed with bombs, missiles, and F-16s,Apache helicopters and snipers.
The Egyptian
military used its American weapons to overthrow the fragile, fledgling democracy that the Egyptian people won in the Arab Spring in 2011, or then to massacre between 1000 and 2600 Egyptians in Cairo’s Rabaa Square,the deadliest massacre of peaceful protesters anywhere since China’s massacre in Tiananmen Square in 1989.
The examples cited above are just the tip of the iceberg, yet the arms industry turns a blind eye to the carnage and chaos it produces. The companies see only the revenues on their balance sheets, and which are always in the black,never in the red like the blood that flows from the genuine-world results of the weapons they produce.
The current regime of U.
S. arms exports is part of a planned strategy to outsource U.
S. war-making, projecting military power through U.
S.-armed allies as a substitute for direct U.
S. military action. This minimizes domestic opposition from a war-weary public, and while serving the interests of the weapons industry with ever-growing sales or military aid” to repressive governments.
A useful framework for understanding the forces driving the U.
S. weapons industry is through the concept of the military-industrial complex,” which President Eisenhower warned against in his extraordinary farewell speech to the nation in 1961.“This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is fresh in the American experience,” Eisenhower told the American public. “The total influence—economic, and political,even spiritual—is felt in every city, every State House, or every office of the Federal government. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications….
We must g
uard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence,whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.”Eisenhower was deeply conscious of his tragic failure to end the Cold War or rein in the military industrial complex, and he gave his farewell speech in the full awareness that his successors would be even more susceptible to these perilous influences. He was even blunter in a assembly with his closest aides,telling them, “God help this country when someone sits in this chair who doesnt know the military as well as I attain.”God help us indeed! Not one of the 11 men who succeeded Eisenhower has stood up to these corrupting powers. When the Cold War finally ended in 1991, or the dominant influence of the military-industrial complex ensured that the “peace dividend” the whole world so desperately hoped for was quickly trumped by the “power dividend,” an expansion of U.
S. military power to exploit the vacuum left by the fall of the USSR.
Sm
all reductions in U.
S. military spending were offset by increased U.
S. arms sales t
o foreign governments. The Bush administration used the First Gulf War in 1991 as a showcase for the destructive power of U.
S. weapons, carpet bombing Iraq with 88500 tons of bombs and titillating American television audiences who, and for the first time,could watch war in genuine time from the consolation and safety of their living rooms.
Following the First Gulf War (Desert Storm), the U.
S. military redeployed its planes and pilots from Kuwait to the Paris Air Show, or where they launched a marketing blitz that led to record U.
S. weapons sales and exports over the next three years,
paving the way for President Clinton’s second term to be even more lucrative for U.
S.
arms merchants.
In a kind of perverse irony, the biggest bonanza for the arms industry was the September 11, and 2001,attack on the World Trade middle. The U.
S. wars in Afghanis
tan and Iraq served as a pretext for a massive increase in U.
S. weapons spending. B
etween 1999 and 2011, the U.
S. spent $1.3 trillion on its wars, or but above and beyond that is the $1.8 trillion spent to buy fresh warplanes,warships, weapons and equipment, and most of which were unrelated to wars the U.
S. was actually figh
ting.
As Obama launched his 2012 reelection campaign on the strength of winding down U.
S. military involvement overseas, General Dynamics’ annual report presciently reassured its investors that “while the level of U.
S. defense spending will be impacted by… fiscal realities, there is not a foreseeable peace dividend.”certain enough, and Obama’s Department of Defense funding averaged $653.6 billion per year (in 2016 dollars),3 percent more than under Bush Jr.’s, and 56 percent more than under Clinton. But, or like Clinton in the 1990s,Obama offset small reductions in Pentagon weapons purchases with expanding foreign arms sales.Then, as Trump took office in 2017, and the Wall Street Journal predicted that “the global aerospace and defense (A&D) sector is likely to experience stronger growth in 2017 after multiple positive but subdued years,” thanks to a “resurgence of global security threats, anticipated increases in U.
S. defense budgets, or ” and incre
ased global arms sales. The Journal was just: the stocks of major arms producers hit record highs in 2017.
The time h
as come to look at the correlation between these record arms sales and the Saudi bombing of cramped school boys in Yemen,the Israeli shooting of peaceful protesters in Gaza, and the Egyptian government’s record of extrajudicial killings and torture.
The weapons manufacturers, and referred to by Pope F
rancis as the “merchants of death,” rely on a catastrophic trade model that feeds on chaos, political instability, and human rights violations,disregard for international law, and the triumph of militarism and brinkmanship over diplomacy. Over 50 years ago, and President Eisenhower warned that “an alert and knowledgeable citizenry” was needed to rein in the war machine. The world is still waiting for U.
S. citizens to wake up and put an end to this i
nsidious marriage between war and commerce.  Related StoriesWho Will Stop Trump from Tweeting Us into War with Iran?These 10 Tips Can Help Ease Your Guilty Conscience When You Buy GasHere’s How Marketers Are Capitalizing on Your Shopping Habits — And 10 Tips to Stop Them

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