The Military - Industrial Complex
and the Obsession with Privatization
from the book
Sharing the Pie
by Steve Brouwer
From the end of World War II until the end of the 1980s, the
Cold War with the Soviet Union provided the rationale for a massive
arms race. A steady and enormous flow of money emanated from the
Department of Defense and benefited America's largest industrial
corporations. In this process a vast network of lobbying groups
and media sources was created to heighten public perception of
a Communist military threat. The situation reached its extreme
in the early 1980s, when the Reagan administration, calling the
Soviet Union the "Evil Empire," pushed military spending
rapidly upward, from $118 billion in 1979 to $282 billion in 1987.
This provided a bonanza to the military contractors.
In the 1970s American corporations were already enjoying higher
profits in weapons production than were generally available elsewhere
in the economy. But the defense buildup of the early 1980s increased
the profit margins even further, to a rate nearly two and a half
times greater than similar nonmilitary production.
When the Soviet Union dismantled itself in 1989 and there
was no longer a Cold War to justify a huge defense apparatus in
the United States, some observers thought the U.S. military-industrial
complex would disappear, too. And there were, in fact, some cutbacks
in defense spending. The percentage of gross domestic product
devoted to the military declined from 6.3 percent at the height
of the Reagan buildup to 3.6 percent in the mid-1990s.
But this did not mean that the military-industrial complex
had been dismantled. It was merely awaiting the creation of a
new threat, which appeared in 1991. In a war that cost very few
American lives, the United States punished Iraq for its invasion
of Kuwait with one of the fiercest air bombardments in history.
Given the public's satisfaction with a "clean" war that
seemed like an extension of a child's video game, the defense
contractors looked forward to producing a whole new round of sophisticated
weapons. Advanced hardware, from "smart bombs" to planes
that could fly "blind," won favorable publicity. President
Bush claimed that forty-one of forty-two U.S. Patriot missiles
had hit their targets, the more primitive Scud missiles used by
Iraq. {The statement later proved to be a gross exaggeration;
according to reliable estimates few Patriot missiles ever hit
their targets. Furthermore, a detailed study released by the government
in 1996 revealed that high-tech bombs and missiles and the F-117
Stealth fighter plane were not any more effective than the older,
far cheaper aircraft and weaponry that previously comprised most
of the U.S. arsenal.
This analysis of effectiveness came far too late. Shortly
after the Gulf War ended in 1991, the Pentagon announced that
it was awarding a new contract to the Lockheed Corporation for
the production of an updated Stealth fighter plane that would
cost $65 billion. And this was not the only windfall from the
war. The recklessness of Saddam Hussein allowed the Pentagon and
its allies to begin a campaign to convince the Congress and the
American public that a new foreign threat existed. They called
it the "rogue state." According to defense analysts,
rogue states operated outside the norms of civilized nations and
were determined to unleash terror against larger, more pacific
countries. One drawback to the theory was that the states in question
were generally economic and military weaklings: Cuba, Iraq, North
Korea, Iran, and Libya. Their combined military spending amounted
to only $9.4 billion in 1995. In comparison, the NATO countries,
not counting the United States, spent $147.6 billion on defense,
while the U.S. itself was spending $264 billion, 40 percent of
the world's total military dollars.
It is unclear whether the rogue state hypothesis was convincing
to the general public, but few people protested when the Congress
added $11.2 billion on top of President Clinton's requested military
budget for 1997. Overall defense spending was staying fairly stable
despite steady reductions in the number of armed forces personnel
and the continued closings of superfluous military bases. Corporate
contractors did not suffer from such cutbacks. The B-2 Stealth
bomber, which had never flown in combat and cost more than $2
billion per aircraft, was funded again. The price of a variety
of "smart bombs, " either already being built or on
order, was $58 billion. Secretary of Defense William Perry told
contractors that spending on new weapons systems would increase
from $38 billion in 1996 to $60 billion per year in 2000.5 Overall
military expenditures in 1997 were maintained at a level that
would allow the United States to fight a major war, even though
there were no significant military opponents in sight.
In fact, as the twenty-first century begins, the Pentagon
continues to argue that it should be able to fight not one, but
two major wars in two different parts of the globe at the same
time. Retired Air Force Chief of Staff Merrill McPeak gave an
honest assessment of this argument: "The two-war strategy
is just a marketing device to justify a high budget."
Privatizing War and Privatizing Government
At the time President Eisenhower warned about the influence
that the military-industrial complex exerted upon the government,
most Americans believed that a massive Cold War defense budget
was necessary for national survival. Today it is no longer necessary
to marshal this level of public support for government spending,
because the process of ceding control of public activities- including
the defense of the United States-to private business is much further
advanced.
In fact, the nature of corporate interest in defense activities
has expanded far beyond the provision of hardware and supplies;
today large companies are taking over areas of foreign aid and
military support that were once provided by the Department of
State or American troops. One company, Military Professional Resources,
Inc. [MPRI], which advertises itself as having "The World's
Greatest Corporate Military Expertise," has landed big contracts
to provide military training to two of the Balkan armies, the
Croatian and the Bosnian. Investigative reporter Ken Silverstein
found that twenty-two senior corporate officers of MPRI were once
senior military officers in the U.S. Armed Forces, including retired
general Carl Vuono, who was U.S. Army Chief of Staff in the early
1990s. MPRI is being paid $400 million to train the Bosnian Army
but most of the money comes neither from the United States nor
from Bosnia itself; instead it is supplied by countries such as
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Brunei, and Malaysia.
In June of 1997, the Defense Intelligence Agency (or D.I.A.,
a part of the Department of Defense) invited potential corporate
contractors to a closed-door symposium on "The Privatization
of National-Security Functions in Sub-Saharan Africa." In
effect, the D.I.A. was promoting a growth industry; the increasing
use of mercenary forces to support or topple the governments of
African nations has opened new opportunities for American companies
and unemployed ax-military personnel. Such efforts can threaten
the development of democracy in other countries, but they also
pose a danger to democratic decision-making in the United States.
Privately run military operations can either circumvent the intentions
of our government or they can be used clandestinely by the Defense
Department, the Department of State, or the CIA (a la Oliver North's
Iran-contra operation of the 1980s) in order to keep unseemly
strategies out of the public eye.
The privatization of military activity raises an even larger
issue about how democracies function and who is responsible for
public policy. "Market solutions" utilizing private
enterprise are now applied to many areas-prisons, police departments,
hospitals, welfare systems, and schools-that were formerly handled
by local, state, and federal governments or by nonprofit corporations
that were subject to public oversight. In some cases, private
business arrived on the scene at a time when local and state governments
were so financially strapped by budget cuts that they could not
afford to carry out their duties, much less invest in modernizing
technology. At other times, a political choice to "reduce
the size of government" led to immediate openings for private
operations to take over.
The Welfare Reform Act of 1996, for example, slashed benefits
for the poor, but allowed private companies to line up for their
share of the support checks. Because the Welfare Reform Act designated
that states would receive lump-sum payments for welfare programs
that previously had been handled by the federal government, states
suddenly had tens of billions of dollars that they had to process
and disburse to individuals each year. A number of states sought
to contract out the work to private businesses, such as Lockheed
Information Services (a subsidiary of the giant defense contractor
Lockheed Martin). In a bidding war in Texas, the object was to
take over $563 million in state welfare operations; among the
bidders was Electronic Data Systems, the outfit that once made
a huge fortune for Ross Perot by handling computerized records
of Medicare and Social Security disbursements. Another contractor,
a $4.2 billion subsidiary of the giant accounting firm Arthur
Anderson, warned of the possible boondoggles: "There's some
easy money if the states aren't careful."
These cautionary words involved more than competition for
a big contract. Abuse of the system had occurred before when Lockheed
Information Services was banned from New York City for its part
in a political influence-peddling scandal that involved parking
meter collections. Electronic Data Systems was called "grossly
inefficient" by the attorney general of Florida due to the
way it handled a large welfare contract in that state.
Lockheed Martin was so intent on entering the welfare market
that it hired a new senior vice president, Gerald Miller, who
had previously been employed by the state of Michigan to direct
the dismantling of social programs. If there was any doubt about
what was motivating "welfare reform, " Miller cleared
it up: "The private sector will ultimately run these programs.
The era of big government is over.'' He might have added that
the era of big business running big government was well under
way. Later in the same month, September 1996, Lockheed Martin
was still expanding operations in its old line of work, aerospace.
It signed a $7 billion contract to take over part of the space
shuttle program for NASA.
Can everything be privatized? At first glance, some public
ventures do not seem to lend themselves to colonization by giant
corporations. One of these is public education, an area of American
life where the tradition of direct community control through democratically
elected school boards is well established. However, when the new
breed of corporate investors looks at the nation's public school
systems, they see something else: the possibility of taking over
a giant economic entity that generates six hundred billion dollars
in revenue each year. The prospects are indeed bright for the
development of a new "education market." In 1996 the
Lehman Brothers investment firm sponsored "the first educational
investment conference"; their managing director foresaw a
rosy future for "a local industry that over time will become
a global business.''
Sharing
the Pie