The Empire of Bases,
The Spoils of War
excerpted from the book
The Sorrows of Empire
Militarism, Secrecy, and the End
of the Republic
by Chalmers Johnson
Henry Holt, 2004, paper
THE EMPIRE OF BASES
p151
During the Cold War, standard military doctrine held that overseas
bases had four missions. They were to project conventional military
power into areas of concern to the United States; prepare, if
necessary, for a nuclear war; serve as "tripwires" guaranteeing
an American response to an attack (particularly in divided "hot
spots" like Germany and South Korea); and function as symbols
of American power.' Since the end of the Cold War, the United
States has been engaged in a continuous search for new justifications
for its ever-expanding base structure-from "humanitarian
intervention" to "disarming Iraq."
I believe that today five post-Cold War
missions have replaced the four older ones: maintaining absolute
military preponderance over the rest of the world, a task that
includes imperial policing to ensure that no part of the empire
slips the leash; eavesdropping on the communications of citizens,
allies, and enemies alike, often apparently just to demonstrate
that no realm of privacy is impervious to the technological capabilities
of our government; attempting to control as many sources of petroleum
as possible, both to service America's insatiable demand for fossil
fuels and to use that control as a bargaining chip with even more
oil-dependent regions; providing work and income for the military-industrial
complex ... and ensuring that members of the military and their
families live comfortably and are well entertained while serving
abroad.
No one of these goals or even all of them
together, however, can entirely explain our expanding empire of
bases. There is something else at work, which I believe is the
post-Cold War discovery of our immense power, rationalized by
the self-glorifying conclusion that because we have it we deserve
to have it. The only truly common elements in the totality of
America's foreign bases are imperialism and militarism-an impulse
on the part of our elites to dominate other peoples largely because
we have the power to do so, followed by the strategic reasoning
that, in order to defend these newly acquired outposts and control
the regions they are in, we must expand the areas under our control
with still more bases. To maintain its empire, the Pentagon must
constantly invent new reasons for keeping in our hands as many
bases as possible long after the wars and crises that led to their
creation have evaporated. As the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
observed as long ago as 1970, "Once an American overseas
base is established it takes on a life of its own. Original missions
may become outdated but new missions are developed, not only with
the intention of keeping the facility going, but often to actually
enlarge it. Within the government departments most directly concerned-State
and Defense-we found little initiative to reduce or eliminate
any of these overseas facilities. The Pentagon tries to prevent
local populations from reclaiming or otherwise exerting their
rights over these long-established bases (as in the cases of the
Puerto Rican movement to get the navy off Vieques Island, which
it used largely for target practice, and of the Oldnawan movement
to get the marines and air force to go home-or at least go elsewhere).
It also works hard to think of ways to reestablish the right to
bases from which the United States has withdrawn or been expelled
(in places like the Philippines, Taiwan, Greece, and Spain).
p153
... Charles Glass, the chief Middle East correspondent for ABC
News from 1983 to 1993 and an authority on the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, writes, "Israel has provided the U.S. with sites
in the Negev [desert] for military bases, now under construction,
which will be far less vulnerable to Muslim fundamentalists than
those in Saudi Arabia. These are officially nonexistent sites.
There have been press reports of aircraft from the carrier battle
group USS Eisenhower operating from Nevatim Airfield in Israel,
and a specialist on the military, William M. Arkin, adds, "The
United States has 'prepositioned' vehicles, military equipment,
even a 500-bed hospital, for U.S. Marines, Special Forces, and
Air Force fighter and bomber aircraft at at least six sites in
Israel, all part of what is antiseptically described as 'U.S.-Israel
strategic cooperation." These bases in Israel are known simply
as Sites 51, 53, and 54. Their specific locations are classified
and highly sensitive. There is no mention of American bases in
Israel in any of the Department of Defense's official compilations.
p155
The United States operates so many overseas espionage bases that
Michael Moran of NBC News once suggested, "Today, one could
throw dart at a map of the world and it would likely land within
a few hundred miles of a quietly established U.S. intelligence-gathering
operation ....
p156
FOREIGN DEPLOYMENTS OF U.S. MILITARY PERSONNEL AT THE TIME OF
THE TERRORIST ATTACKS ON THE WORLD TRADE CENTER AND THE PENTAGON
EUROPE
Belgium
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Germany
Greece
Greenland
Iceland
Italy
Macedonia (formerly Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia)
Netherlands
Portugal
Serbia (including Kosovo)
Spain
Turkey
United Kingdom
Afloat
FORMER SOVIET UNION (including Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova,
Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan)
EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC
Australia
Japan (including Okinawa)
Republic of Korea (South Korea)
Singapore
Thailand
Afloat
MIDDLE EAST (including NORTH AFRICA and
SOUTH ASIA)
Bahrain
Diego Garcia
Egypt
Kuwait
Oman
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates
Afloat
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
WESTERN HEMISPHERE
Canada
Chile
Cuba (Guantánamo)
Honduras
Afloat
p165
Since 1948, a highly classified agreement among the intelligence
agencies of the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia,
and New Zealand allows them to exchange information not just about
target countries but also about one another. This arrangement
permits the United States's National Security Agency, Britain's
Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), Canada's Communications
Security Establishment, Australia's Defense Signals Directorate,
and New Zealand's General Communications Security Bureau to swap
information with one another about their own citizens-including
political leaders-without formally violating national laws against
domestic spying. Even though the US. government, for example,
is prohibited by law from spying on its own citizens except under
a court-ordered warrant, as are all the other countries in the
consortium, the NSA can, and often does, ask one of its partners
to do so and pass the information its way. One former employee
of the Canadian Communications Security Establishment revealed
that, at the request of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher of Britain,
the GCHQ asked the Canadians to monitor certain British political
leaders for them.
Since at least 1981, what had once been
an informal covert intelligence-sharing arrangement among the
English-speaking countries has been formalized under the code
name "Echelon?' Up until then the consortium exchanged only
"finished" intelligence reports. With the advent of
Echelon, they started to share raw intercepts. Echelon is, in
fact, a specific program for satellites and computers designed
to intercept nonmilitary communications of governments, private
organizations, businesses, and individuals on behalf of what is
known as the "UKUSA signals intelligence alliance.' Each
member of the alliance operates its own satellites and creates
its own "dictionary" supercomputers that list key words,
names, telephone numbers, and anything else that can be made machine-readable.
They then search the massive downloads of information the satellites
bring in every day. Each country exchanges its daily intake and
its analyses with the others. One member may request the addition
to another's dictionary of a word or name it wants to target.
Echelon monitors or operates approximately 120 satellites worldwide.
The system, which targets international
civil communications channels, is so secret that the NSA has refused
even to admit it exists or to discuss it with delegations from
the European Parliament who have come to Washington to protest
such surveillance. France, Germany, and other European nations
accuse the United States and Britain, the two nations that originally
set up Echelon, with commercial espionage-what they call "state-sponsored
information piracy." 17 There is some evidence that the United
States has used information illegally collected from Echelon to
advise its negotiators in trade talks with the Japanese and to
help Boeing sell to Saudi Arabia in competition with Europe's
Airbus.
p167
The fatal flaw of Echelon is that it is operated by the intelligence
and military establishments of the main English-speaking countries
in total secrecy and hence beyond any kind of accountability to
representatives of the people it claims to be protecting. Among
the resultant travesties was the case of a woman whose name and
telephone number went into the Echelon directories as those of
a possible terrorist because she told a friend on the phone that
her son had "bombed" in a school play. 19 According
to several knowledgeable sources, the British government has included
the word amnesty in all the system's dictionaries in order to
collect information against the human rights organization Amnesty
International. Even though the governments of the world now know
about Echelon, they can do nothing about it except take defensive
measures on their messaging systems, and this is but another sign
of the implacable advance of militarism in countries that claim
to be democracies.
p167
Many garrisons are in foreign countries to defend oil leases from
competitors or to provide police protection to oil pipelines,
although they invariably claim to be doing something completely
unrelated-fighting the "war on terrorism" or the "war
on drugs' or training foreign soldiers, or engaging in some form
of "humanitarian" intervention. The search for scarce
resources is, of course, a traditional focus of foreign policy.
Nonetheless, the United States has made itself particularly dependent
on foreign oil because it refuses to conserve or in other ways
put limits on fossil fuel consumption and because multinational
petroleum companies and the politicians they support profit enormously
from Americans' profligate use. A year after the 9/11 attacks,
General Motors's sales of its 5,000-pound gas-guzzling Chevrolet
Suburban SUY, which gets thirteen miles to the gallon, had doubled.
Starting with the CIA's 1953 covert overthrow
of the government of Iran for the sake of the British Petroleum
Company, American policy in the Middle East-except for its support
of Israel-has been dictated by oil. It has been a constant motive
behind the vast expansion of bases in the Persian Gulf... oil
is the only plausible explanation for acquiring more bases. In
these cases, the government has produced elaborate cover stories
for what amounts to the use of public resources and the armed
forces to advance private capitalist interests. The invasion of
Afghanistan and the rapid expansion of bases into Central and
Southwestern Asia are among the best examples, although there
are several instances from Latin America as well.
p170
... the Caspian Basin is ... the world's last large, virtually
undeveloped oil and gas field that could for a time compete with
the Persian Gulf in supplying petroleum to Europe, East Asia,
and North America. It seems to have about 6 percent of the world's
proven oil reserves and 40 percent of its gas reserves. China,
which has the world's fastest-growing economy, became a net oil
importer in November 1993 and continues to try to negotiate a
possible pipeline from Kazakhstan to Shanghai via Xinjiang Province.
China is also attempting to obtain oil from Russia via a pipeline
that would stretch from Angarsk in Siberia to the Daqing oil field
in Manchuria.
Imagining the five Central Asian republics
that became independent when the USSR broke up in 1991 as potential
suppliers of oil to the United States, however, involves numerous
problems. Kazakhstan (by far the largest in terms of land area),
Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan all share frontiers with China. Turkmenistan
borders on Iran. Uzbekistan, in the center, is the only one that
abuts all the others plus Afghanistan. All except one are ruled
by former Communist Party apparatchiks. Only President Askar Akayev
of Kyrgyzstan was not a former Soviet boss, and he has arranged
for all fuel for the military jets flying out of the U.S. base
in Kyrgyzstan, the biggest American garrison in Central Asia,
to be supplied by a firm owned by his son-in-law.
All the leaders of these Central Asian
republics have hopeless human rights records, the two worst being
the president of Uzbekistan, where the big US. air base at Khanabad
is located, and the president for life in Turkmenistan, who has
established a personality cult surpassing that of Stalin and who
has placed all oil revenues in an offshore account that only he
controls. Even Kazakhstan, which is relatively developed and sophisticated-the
famous Russian Cosmodrome that launched the world's first space
missions is located at Baykonur in south-central Kazakhstan and
the country has a population that is 35-40 percent Russian-is
hardly a model republic. Its foreign minister revealed that in
1996 President Nursultan Nazarbayev moved $1 billion in oil revenues
to a secret Swiss bank account without informing his parliament.
p181
In the weeks following 9/11, the Pentagon's formidable public
relations apparatus went into top gear to describe to a public
almost totally ignorant of Afghanistan and of Central Asian oil
politics generally how we proposed to smash Osama bin Laden and
his al-Qaeda organization. The secretary of defense, Donald Rumsfeld,
became something of a stand-up comic in his daily press conferences,
quipping about how the United States wanted bin Laden dead or
alive and was "smoking out" al Qaeda operatives, who
were said to be "on the run." The primary strategy,
however, was to reopen the Afghan civil war by having the CIA
spread some $70 million in cash among the Tajik and Uzbek warlords
that the Taliban had defeated .41 The reemergence of the Northern
Alliance, backed by massive American air power, resulted in the
almost instantaneous collapse of the Taliban regime, leaving Afghanistan
to revert to fighting among local satraps and the cultivation
of opium poppies.
With astonishing speed and efficiency,
the U.S. military managed to use the war to obtain the rights
to military bases in Afghanistan and surrounding countries. For
its immediate military operations, which were largely over by
the beginning of 2002, it occupied three main sites within Afghanistan
itself-Mazar-i-Sharif airport in the extreme north of the country,
Bagram Air Base in the suburbs of Kabul, and Kandahar International
Airport in the south. It also placed troops in Kabul to provide
immediate security for Hamid Karzai's newly installed government,
whose powers hardly extended beyond Kabul, much less the rest
of the country. For the first few weeks, all of these places were
occupied by Special Forces, marines, and frontline army troops,
but as the Taliban collapsed and al-Qaeda dispersed into the countryside
and across the Pakistan border, these combat forces were replaced
with army units engaged in establishing semi-permanent garrisons.
In August 2002, Central Command chief General Tommy Franks commented
that U.S. soldiers would be in Afghanistan for "a long, long
time" and compared the situation to South Korea, where army
and air force troops had been based for more than half a century.
In addition to occupying strategic points
in Afghanistan, the Bush administration entered into an agreement
with General Pervez Musharraf, the president of Pakistan, to take
over three important bases of the Pakistan Air Force: Jacobabad,
300 miles northeast of Karachi...
p185
The assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs
... Elizabeth Jones. In December 2001, at a press conference in
Almaty, she promised, "When the Afghan conflict is over,
we will not leave Central Asia. We have long-term plans and interests
in this region."
THE SPOILS OF WAR
p188
From the time of the Romans and the Han dynasty Chinese to the
present, all empires have had permanent military encampments,
forts, or bases of some sort. These were meant to garrison conquered
territory, keeping restless populations under control, and to
serve as launching points for further imperial conquests. 'What
is most fascinating and curious about the developing American
form of empire, however, is that, in its modern phase, it is solely
an empire of bases, not of territories, and these bases now encircle
the earth in a way that, despite centuries-old dreams of global
domination, would previously have been inconceivable.
Yet, although our own nation is filled
with military installations there are 969 separate bases in the
fifty states ...
p214
As the American empire grows, we go to war significantly more
frequently than we did before and during the Cold War. Wars, in
turn, promote the growth of the military and are a great advertising
medium for the power and effectiveness of our weapons-and the
companies that make them, which can then more easily peddle them
to others. According to the journalist William Greider, "The
U.S. volume [of arms sales] represents 44 percent of the global
market, more than double America's market share in 1990 when the
Soviet Union was the leading exporter of arms." As the military-industrial
complex gets ever fatter, with more overcapacity, it must be "fed"
ever more often. The creation of new bases requires more new bases
to protect the ones already established, producing ever-tighter
cycles of militarism, wars, arms sales, and base expansions.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union,
we began to wage at an accelerating rate wars whose publicly stated
purposes were increasingly deceptive or unpersuasive. We were
also ever more willing to go to war outside the framework of international
law and in the face of worldwide popular opposition. These were
de facto imperialist wars, defended by propaganda claims of humanitarian
intervention, women's liberation, the threat posed by unconventional
weapons, or whatever current buzzword happened to occur to White
House and Pentagon spokespersons. In each war we acquired major
new military bases that in terms of location or scale were disproportionate
to the military tasks required and that we retained and consolidated
after the war. After the attacks of September 11, 2001, we waged
two wars, in Afghanistan and Iraq, and acquired fourteen new bases,
in Eastern Europe, Iraq, the Persian Gulf, Pakistan, Afghanistan,
Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan. It was said that these wars were a
response to the terrorist attacks and would lessen our vulnerability
to terrorism in the future. But it seems more likely that the
new bases and other American targets of vulnerability will be
subject to continued or increased terrorist strikes.
Following our usual practice, we established
our bases in weak states, most of which have undemocratic and
repressive governments. Immediately after our victory in the second
Iraq war, we began to scale back our deployments in Germany, Turkey,
and Saudi Arabia, where we had become much more unpopular as a
result of the war. Instead, we shifted our forces and garrisons
to thinly populated, less demanding monarchies or autocracies/dictatorships,
places like Qatar, Bahrain, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, and
Uzbekistan.
A new picture of our empire has begun
to emerge. We retain our centuries-old lock on Latin America and
our close collaboration with the single-party government of Japan,
although we are deeply disliked in Okinawa and South Korea, where
the situation is increasingly volatile. Our lack of legitimacy
in the war with Iraq has undercut our position in what Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld disparagingly called "the old
Europe' so we are trying to compensate by finding allies and building
bases in the much poorer, still struggling ex-Communist countries
of Eastern Europe. In the oil-rich area of southern Eurasia we
are building outposts in Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan,
and Central Asia, in an attempt to bring the whole region under
American hegemony. Iran alone, thus far, has been impervious to
our efforts. We did not do any of these things to fight terrorism,
liberate Iraq, trigger a domino effect for the democratization
of the Middle East, or the other excuses proffered by our leaders.
We did them ... because of oil, Israel, and domestic politics-and
to fulfill our self-perceived destiny as a New Rome.
Sorrows of Empire
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