-Caveat Lector-

Wanted: Enemy to Justify $344 Billion War Budget

<http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=11427>

by Ben Cohen, AlterNet
September 4, 2001

You may know some despicable characters, but are they mean enough to apply
for this job posting?
ENEMY WANTED. Serious enemy needed to justify Pentagon budget increase.
Defense contractors desperate. Interested enemies send letter and photo or
video (threatening, ok) to Enemy Search Committee, Priorities Campaign,
1350 Broadway, NY, NY, 10018.
Here's the deal: We know our politicians have their work cut out for
them.  They need to find an enemy to justify maintaining the Pentagon
budget as if the Cold War never ended. But the pool of credible enemies is
evaporating.  North Korea is even going diplomatic. The Soviets took
themselves out of the running years ago. And countries like Iraq, or tough
looking trading partners like China, don't make the cut.
So, I am distributing a job description as widely as possible to help our
politicians find the enemy they seek. Even with the help of defense
contractors, who spend $50 million on lobbyists annually, our politicians
do not possess the creativity to find the right adversary. It's clear that
the old concept of enemy doesn't work anymore.
The trouble is the Defense Department needs to find an enemy in a
hurry.  The Bush Administration has proposed to increase Pentagon spending
by $33 billion, the largest defense increase since the Cold War.
This inexplicable proposal is under attack by children's advocates, who
would rather use the $33 billion earmarked for the Pentagon to begin
modernizing our crumbling public schools and to buy health insurance for
millions of U.S. kids and Head Start for the one-third of eligible children
who can't get in because it's under-funded.
As pressure mounts to pay for these domestic programs, and the size of the
projected surplus shrinks, defense contractors and the Pentagon PR machine,
including their legion of liaisons on Capitol hill, are getting
nervous.  Meanwhile, high tech airplanes crash inexplicably, Star Wars
tests miss their targets, and the budget crunch in Congress looms. All of
this raises questions, questions, questions:
                      - Why does the Pentagon need a budget of $344
billion, which would be over three times as much as the combined defense
spending of Russia, China, and America's potential adversaries (Cuba, Iran,
Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria)? And this does include not the
over $200 billion spent by U.S. allies annually on defense.
                      - How do Congress and the President know how much
money the Pentagon needs when it can't pass a financial audit, despite
legal obligations to do so? Without audited books, the President and
Congress do not know for certain what the Pentagon has and what it really
needs.
                      - Why does the federal government want to spend $344
billion on the Pentagon, when the federal government currently spends only
$42 billion on education, $26 billion on affordable housing, $6 billion on
Head Start, and only $1 billion on school construction? Does it appear that
our national priorities are mixed up or what?

These would be tough questions, even if America had a serious
enemy.  Without one, these are devastating questions, and it's so painful
to see our politicians trying to answer them that I want to help them find
an enemy as quickly as possible.
Larger trends are also causing our politicians to squirm when defending the
Pentagon budget, and frankly it's an embarrassing sight (hence, again, the
immediate enemy need). For example:
                      - In our country, the richest nation in the world --
14 million kids attend schools that need extensive renovation or
replacement. In international test scores, our eighth graders rank 18 in
math and 19 in science, below Slovenia, Singapore, and Hungary, among others.
                      - The child poverty rate hovers at over 15 percent,
meaning that about one in six kids lives in poverty.
                      - Over 40 million Americans, including about 10
million children, have no health insurance.

My enemy search, if successful, would go a long way toward easing the
consciences of our politicians who support the fat Pentagon budget, which
diverts money from poor children, the environment, and other good things.
As of today, however, my search is not going well. So, I am open to any and
all suggestions or leads that you might have. I am, of course on the
lookout for the right headhunter, but none has materialized.
If you've got any killer ideas, please let me know.
-----------
Ben Cohen is co-founder of Ben and Jerry's and President of the Priorities
Campaign (www.businessleaders.org).

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