Back in October 2016, as Hillary Clinton competed with Donald Trump over who was tougher and more willing to wage war (Clinton won that battle but lost the election), I wrote the article below on greed-war.
Even as President Trump enters his second (and last?) term in office, even as he says he’s committed to peace in places like Ukraine, the Pentagon budget continues to increase. The Elon Musk-led DOGE has yet to tackle military spending in any serious way, and apparently any cost savings from greater “efficiency” will simply be funneled to new war spending, perhaps to Musk’s own efforts with satellites or unmanned drones or whatever. (Conflict of interest? What conflict?)
Assuming the Russia-Ukraine War sputters to an end and some form of diplomatic settlement is achieved, expect an attack on Iran and yet more “pivots” to Asia, especially focused on “containing” China.
It’s rather amazing, isn’t it, that America, the world's self-professed pillar of democracy, is so taken, even consumed, by boasts of its military prowess and dominance. In America, we can’t plausibly boast of having the world’s best education system, the best health care, the best bullet trains, etc., but we can and do boast of having the world’s greatest military, despite a decidedly mixed record since 1945.
What does that say about us?
Greed-War: The Power and Danger of the Military-Industrial Complex
W.J. Astore (Written in October 2016)
President Dwight D. Eisenhower gave his most powerful speech as he left office in 1961. He warned the American people about an emerging military-industrial complex, a complex that was already beginning to erode democratic rule in America. Originally, Ike had Congress as a collaborator with and enabler of that Complex, but he deleted the reference in the final version, apparently deciding that by alienating Members of Congress, he’d only push them further into the Complex’s corner.
The military-industrial complex, the Complex for short, has only grown in power over the last half-century. Today, more than half of Federal discretionary funding goes to it. With the post-9/11 addition of Homeland Security and more and more intelligence agencies (seventeen of them at last count), the Complex continues to grow like Topsy. It consumes roughly $750 billion each and every year, a sum likely to grow whether Trump or Clinton wins the presidency. (Trump has promised to rebuild an allegedly shattered military; Clinton, meanwhile, is a steadfast supporter of the military as well as neo-con principles of aggressive foreign interventionism.)
In the U.S. today, the Complex is almost unchallengeable. This is not only because of its size and power. The Complex has worked to convince Americans that war is inevitable and therefore endless (it’s never the fault of the Complex, of course: it’s the terrorists, or the Russians, or the Chinese …), and also that military service (and spending) is virtuous and therefore a boon to democracy.
America’s founders like James Madison thought differently, knowing from bitter experience and deep learning that incessant wars and standing militaries are an insidious threat to democracy. Nowadays, however, Americans say they trust their military more than any other societal institution, and mainstream society universally celebrates “our” troops as selfless heroes, the very best of America. This moral, indeed metaphysical, elevation of the U.S. military serves to silence legitimate criticism of its failings as well as its corrosive effect on democratic principles and values.
All of these topics I’ve written about before, but I wish to cite them again by way of introducing an article by Maximilian C. Forte, an anthropologist who writes at Zero Anthropology (I first saw his work at Fabius Maximus). The article Forte wrote is on Bernie Sanders and his limitations, but what struck me most was his reference to C. Wright Mills and his analysis of the nexus of interests and power between U.S. capitalism and militarism.
The following extended excerpt from Forte’s article shines much light into the darker corners of America’s corridors of power:
In The Power Elite (1956) and “The Structure of Power in American Society” (The British Journal of Sociology, March 1958), Mills’ explanations can look like an elaborated, in-depth version of what former president Dwight Eisenhower described as the military-industrial complex, but with a stronger focus on the role of private corporations and special interest lobbies. These approaches endure today — because the problem they describe and analyze continues — as shown in the work of anthropologists such as Wedel on Shadow Elite: How the World’s New Power Brokers Undermine Democracy, Government, and the Free Market … [as well as works by other authors that showcase] the relationship between the stock market, multinational corporations and the US’ CIA-led coups against foreign governments …
For C. Wright Mills, the problem was not just “Wall St.,” nor the “Pentagon” alone — focusing on one over the other produces a half-headed understanding, with all of the political demerits that result. As he argued in his 1958 article, “the high military, the corporation executives, the political directorate have tended to come together to form the power elite of America” (pp. 32-33). The power elite is what he described as a “triangle of power,” linking corporations, executive government, and the military: “There is a political economy numerously linked with military order and decision. This triangle of power is now a structural fact, and it is the key to any understanding of the higher circles in America today” (Mills, 1958, p. 32).
Contrary to Bernie Sanders, Mills emphasizes the decisive influence of the military in the corporate oligarchic state (as Kapferer later called it):
“The military order, once a slim establishment in a context of civilian distrust, has become the largest and most expensive feature of government; behind smiling public relations, it has all the grim and clumsy efficiency of a great and sprawling bureaucracy. The high military have gained decisive political and economic relevance. The seemingly permanent military threat places a premium upon them and virtually all political and economic actions are now judged in terms of military definitions of reality: the higher military have ascended to a firm position within the power elite of our time”. (Mills, 1958, p. 33)
US politics are dominated, Mills argued, “by a few hundred corporations, administratively and politically interrelated, which together hold the keys to economic decision,” and the economy that results is “at once a permanent-war economy and a private-corporation economy”:
“The most important relations of the corporation to the state now rest on the coincidence between military and corporate interests, as defined by the military and the corporate rich, and accepted by politicians and public”. (Mills, 1958, p. 33)
Mills also pays attention to the history of this type of corporate-military state. The influence of private lobbies dates back deep into US political history, when the influence of railway tycoons, banana magnates, and tobacco barons was considerable at different times. From this Mills discerned the rise of what he called the “invisible government,” which existed starting from at least 50 years prior to his 1958 article…
“Fifty years ago many observers thought of the American state as a mask behind which an invisible government operated. But nowadays, much of what was called the old lobby, visible or invisible, is part of the quite visible government. The ‘governmentalization of the lobby’ has proceeded in both the legislative and the executive domain, as well as between them. The executive bureaucracy becomes not only the centre of decision but also the arena within which major conflicts of power are resolved or denied resolution. ‘Administration’ replaces electoral politics; the maneuvering of cliques (which include leading Senators as well as civil servants) replaces the open clash of parties”. (Mills, 1958, p. 38)
The corporate-military government is tied to US global dominance, and its power increased dramatically from 1939 onwards. As Mills noted, “the attention of the elite has shifted from domestic problems — centered in the ’thirties around slump — to international problems centered in the ’forties and ’fifties around war” (1958, p. 33). (As I argued elsewhere, this shift also registers in US anthropology, which moved from research at home, on domestic social problems, to fieldwork abroad as the dominant norm.)
Rather than challenge the arms industry, whose growing size and power stunned Eisenhower, Sanders would simply tax them more. It is open to debate whether Sanders is offering even half of a solution, and whether he sees even half of the bigger picture. Usually Sanders has voted in favour of military appropriations, supported the financing of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and has backed a range of regime change and “humanitarian interventionist” efforts, from NATO’s war in Kosovo, to support for the 1998 Iraq Liberation Act and for regime change in Libya (contrary to his false representations on the latter point). He is also an aggressive supporter of NATO and its anti-Russian posture. While he is not even half of anti-imperialist, some might argue that it is also too generous to see him as half of a socialist–either way, we need to do better than beat each other up with half-answers.
***
Forte’s criticism of Sanders is spot on. My guess is that Sanders refused to take on the Complex precisely because of its financial, its political, and finally its cultural and societal clout. There are only so many windmills you can tilt at, Sanders may have decided. Yet, notwithstanding his willingness to appease the Complex, Sanders has been relegated to the sidelines by a corrupt Democratic establishment that did everything it could to ensure that one of its own, Complex-abettor Hillary Clinton, won the party nomination.
The fundamental problem for the U.S. today is as obvious as it appears insoluble. The Complex has co-opted both political parties, Republican and Democratic. It has at the same time redefined patriotism in militaristic terms, and loyalty in terms of unquestioning support of, even reverence for, American military adventurism and interventionism. Candidates who have rival ideas, such as Libertarian Gary Johnson or Green Party candidate Jill Stein, are simply not allowed on the stage. Their voices of dissent are suppressed. They are never heard within the mainstream.
Johnson, for example, has suggested cuts to the Complex approaching 20%; Jill Stein has suggested cuts as deep as 50%. Such suggestions, of course, are never seriously discussed in mainstream America. Indeed, when they’re mentioned at all, they’re instantly dismissed by the “power elite” as the ravings of weak-kneed appeasers or unserious ignoramuses. (Johnson, for example, is now depicted as an ignoramus by the mainstream media because he couldn’t place Aleppo or instantly name a foreign leader he adored.)
We have a new reality in U.S. government and society today: the Complex essentially rules unchallenged. Back in the 1950s, Ike had the military and political authority to constrain it. Today, well, no. There are no restraints. Just look at Hillary and Trump, both boasting of how many generals and admirals support them, as if they couldn’t run for office unless they’d been anointed by men in military uniforms wearing stars.
And America calls this democracy?
Democracy in America is dying. It’s dying because it’s being strangled by winner-take-all capitalism and corrosive militarism. Greed-war is consuming America’s resources. Not just material, not just political, but mental and emotional resources as well. The greed-war nexus as represented and nurtured by the Complex and its power elite is both narrowing and coloring the horizons of America. Tortured by mindless fear and overwrought concerns about weakness and decline, Americans embrace the Complex ever tighter.
The result: America builds (and sells) more weapons, supports higher military spending, and wages more war. Trump or Clinton, the war song remains the same. It’s a narrowing of national horizons, a betrayal of American promise, that we will overcome only when we reject greed-war.
Afterword: The sad part is that Martin Luther King said it far better than I can fifty years ago in this speech on Vietnam. Ike in 1961, MLK in 1967, both prophetic, both largely ignored today for their insights into the “spiritual death” represented by greed-war. Even earlier, General Smedley Butler, twice awarded the Medal of Honor, argued in the 1930s that war is a racket and that it would end only when the profit motive was eliminated from it.
So, if I had one question for Hillary and Trump, this would be it: When it comes to your decision to enlarge the military-industrial complex, to feed it ever more money and resources, what makes your decision right and the warnings of Ike, MLK, and General Butler wrong?
Outstanding piece, Bill. Very much appreciate the extended quote from Dr Forte’s article.
The short answer to Your question “Will Pentagon Spending Ever Decrease?” is NO.
At least not until there is a Revolution that overthrows America’s system of Government and Governance that enables a MICIMAT3 to even exist in the first place, let alone thrive. And the likelihood of that happening is slim to none.
Based on what has happened in the first six weeks of TRUMP 2.0, there is every reason to believe that this Nation is as close to a fully functional, autocratic, plutocratic, oligarchic, patriarchal, totalitarian Dictatorship as it has ever been in its 248+ year history; including the Great Depression/New Deal/World War II era of the last century, and the Civil War the century before.
And one can rest assured that the MICIMAT3 will be a major player in that Dictatorship.
The first six weeks of Team Trumusk have been a masterfully planned and executed Psychological Warfare Operation to determine just exactly how able and willing the American Peoples are to accept ~ and to just get on with the rest of their lives in ~ a Dictatorship.
All of which leads me to ask myself ~ and to ask other Americans to ask themselves ~ the following questions:
1. What ~ if anything ~ can be done to prevent that Dictatorship from happening? Or is it already too late to stop it?
2. Will the United States survive to celebrate its 250th Birthday on July 4, 2026, 487 days from today? And if it does, will the American Peoples be in any condition or mood to celebrate anything?
3. Has “The Decline” of The American Empire ended, and “The Fall” begun? And with it, the end of the Experiment that is The United States of America?
Interesting article Bill, especially since I tweeted this version of the same thing in other words to Morning Joe of MSNBC earlier this morning listening to the show in the living room as I'm at the computer in the kitchen when they were so upset Vance called England a "random" Nation.
Being CanaDian, I had to respond;
@Morning_Joe
As a Canadian who wakes up daily to watch your show, I feel compelled to share my perspective on your version of “America First”—a concept that long predates Trump’s version. Living my 81st year, I’ve witnessed much of modern history unfold, and I see clearly the many Sins of Historical Omission in your narratives.
Your discussions about the “special relationship” with Great Britain often overlook the deeper roots of this dynamic. England was “England First” during its 247-year Global Empire, and the U.S. inherited the Imperial mantle after World War II, becoming the dominant military-economic superpower.
This is the true basis of your perceived special relationship—not some unique bond, but a continuation of Imperial Legacy.
What’s missing from your analysis is the understanding that this pattern began with the first biblical military-economic superpower: Babylon, now known as Iraq. If you’re genuine investigative journalists, this moment in my personal history should awaken you to the broader context.
In 1976, during America’s bicentennial celebrations, as a CanaDian I walked into The Kansas City Times, a complete unknown, and they published the first of two reports on September 13, 1976. The follow-up was published on All Souls Day, November 2, 1976. These articles chronicled the signs of the times that the world is now facing, 49 years later.
These are brief excerpt from what they published September 13, 1976, “He came to town for the Republican National Convention and will stay until the election in November TO DO GOD'S BIDDING: To tell the World, from Kansas City, this country has been found wanting and its days are numbered [...] He gestured toward a gleaming church dome. “The gold dome is the symbol of BABYLON,” he said.” [...] He wanted to bring to the Public’s attention an “idea being put out subtly and deceptively” by the government that we have to get prepared for a War with Russia.”
That 1976 FUTURE is NOW with the Revelation of the details GENERALLY unfolding in the spirit of the letter. The World is waking up to see Americans may hasten “its days are numbered” part of the 1976 Vision, and waits with bated breath.
It’s also a fact of my Life during that 1976 Republican National Convention, the Secret Service pulled me out of a compressed crowd of delirious Republicans in the lobby of the Crown Center Hotel for questioning. I was led to stand at the President’s podium, in full view of the crowd and live broadcasts by CBS, NBC, and ABC. With shoulder-length hair, a beard, and my trademark #13 jersey, it was a revolutionary image for the Spirit of ’76.
FYI, Canada, with a much smaller population than England, lost 158 soldiers in your 20-year war in Afghanistan—one of the poorest countries on Earth. The only winners in that war were U.S. arms merchants and Contractors. Canadians fought in World War I and World War II two years before the U.S. entered those conflicts.
Canada refused to join the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq because it violated International law—the same Law you now invoke to demonize Russia. Such blatant hypocrisy only makes the world a more fearful and dangerous place. In biblical terms, this is the beginning of the great tribulation. You demonize Trump for attempting a détente with Russia, yet making peace requires dialogue, and dialogue requires an end to verbal demonization before the military hostility ends. As a self-proclaimed Christian, Joe, you should understand this fundamental truth.
Among your sins of omission is the failure to acknowledge that the Russians paid a far higher price than Americans to defeat Hitler. The only reason they reached Berlin was as allies to the West, with the U.S. supplying weapons. After the war, industrialists in the arms industry understood that the end of war meant the end of their gravy train. A new enemy had to be designated quickly to keep the arms merchants in business. Russia became that enemy, and U.S. domestic propaganda ensured Americans equated anti-Russian sentiment with patriotism. The Russians liberated Auschwitz but the petty, small minded US/NATO won't even invite Russia to participate in the annual commemorations.
In 1962, the US initiated the 1st Act of WAR because of Russian missiles in Cuba. The US isn't that exceptional. Russia feels the exact same way about US missiles in Ukraine right on Russia's border.
There’s one serious matter of optics that people like you in the mainstream media aren’t covering—a grave sin of omission. Trump claims his motivation is to prevent the tragedy and hell of war, lamenting the loss of life. Yet, while he expresses concern for Ukrainian lives, he gives Israel the green light to unleash hell in Gaza.
This double standard risks leading humanity to Armageddon—the great day of the battle of God Almighty, as described in Revelation. The Middle East is already shaping up as the battleground, with Jewish Israel, Christian America, and the Muslim states poised for conflict. What could go wrong when the plans of the wise are brought to nothing?
Finally, let’s not forget what Canada did for you in Afghanistan with 158 CanaDian Troops killed—a war that was yours, not ours. Now, the U.S. has declared economic war on Canada with tariffs, deliberately aiming to cause a recession, if not worse. The economic damage could soon become irrevocable for both our nations and the world. For decades, we’ve been each other’s best customers and friends.
Why now? And for what reasons?