What Must We Defend?
“We need to be honest with the president, with the Congress, with the American people” about the consequences of cutting the defense budget, said Secretary of Defense Robert Gates in his valedictory policy address to the American Enterprise Institute.
“[A] smaller military, no matter how superb, will be able to go fewer places and do fewer things.”
Gates seeks to ignite a debate the country seems reluctant to have. With a federal budget running out of balance by 10 percent of gross domestic product, what are we Americans willing to sacrifice? What are we willing to forgo? What are we willing to cut?
The biggest budget items are Social Security, Medicare, and defense. To Democrats, the first two are untouchables. To most Republicans, defense is off the table. Indeed, the likelihood is that any budget deal to which both parties agree will contain escape clauses to enable Congress to avoid the painful decisions and kick the can up the road.
Consider the situation the U.S. military faces.
The useful life of the planes, ships, missiles, guns, and armor that date to the Ronald Reagan buildup of the 1980s is coming to an end, and the cost of replacement weapons is far greater. A fleet of 2,440 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters, for example, will cost over $1 trillion.
Military health-care costs have risen 150 percent in 10 years to $50 billion a year. The pay and benefits of today’s forces, which are one-tenth the size of those we deployed in World War II, have seen comparable increases. These costs are eating deeply into the dollars for new weapons systems.
And while we no longer face a Soviet Union with nuclear and conventional forces equal to our own, U.S. commitments have not been reduced but augmented since the end of the Cold War. Six Warsaw Pact nations were brought into NATO, along with three republics of the old Soviet Union.
Meanwhile, the disarmament of Europe continues in the wake of the debt crisis. Of special concern are cuts by the Tory government of Great Britain, our most reliable ally for 70 years.
While the U.S. Army and Marine Corps have been shuttled in and out of Iraq and Afghanistan, China has fought no wars—but grown its defense budget by double-digits annually for two decades.
She now possesses submarines, missiles, and aircraft sufficient to challenge the United States in the Western Pacific and is clearly intent on forcing a U.S. strategic retreat from the region.
“The tough choices ahead,” said Gates, are “about the kind of role the American people—accustomed to unquestioned military dominance for the past two decades—want their country to play in the world.”
We face the necessity of choice, and perhaps the place to begin is for Americans to ask two questions.
First, what is so vital to our security we must defend it at the risk of war? Second, what Cold War commitments can we relinquish now that the Soviet Empire no longer exists and Russia no longer represents a global threat?
Once the Afghan War is over, certainly, a U.S. withdrawal from South and Central Asia would seem in order, as this is about as far from the United States as one can get.
The same would hold true of Korea. From 1950 to 1953, the United States, with a 330,000-man army, fought both North Korea and China. At issue was not only the fate of the peninsula, but the orientation of Japan in the Cold War.
Today, Seoul has twice the people and 40 times the economy of the North. Pyongyang has no Stalinist Russia or Maoist China backing it up in a war with the South. Can we not now withdraw our remaining 28,000 troops and restrict our commitment in any new war to air and naval support?
China today not only claims Taiwan, but the Senkaku Islands that Japan claims, and all of the islands in the South China Sea, which are also claimed by Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines.
Is it our obligation to validate all of these claims against China? What is our vital interest in any of these disputes when every president since Richard Nixon has agreed that Taiwan is part of China? Cannot these countries buy from us the weapons to defend themselves?
Europe is as prosperous and more populous than the United States. And the Russian army is no longer in Germany, but 1,000 miles to the east, behind the Baltic republics, Belarus, and Ukraine.
What is the necessity now for a U.S. troop presence in Europe?
Retrenchment is rarely attractive. But what is apparent today to almost all is that this country is now and has been for at least a decade living far beyond her means.
We borrow hundreds of billions annually from allies, to defend those allies. We borrow hundreds of billions annually from our children’s future to maintain our present lifestyle. Our leaders have yet to show the toughness and maturity the new times demand.
COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM
Read more by Patrick J. Buchanan
- What Should Americans Die For? – May 16th, 2013
- Who Are the War Criminals in Syria? – May 6th, 2013
- Their War, Not Ours – April 29th, 2013
- Is War With North Korea Inevitable? – April 4th, 2013
- Goading Gullible America Into War – March 21st, 2013





ghouri
May 31st, 2011 at 3:36 am
They have to defend americans to be looted and become beggers and richer get their share from war budget.
Army and security agencies are controlling american and politicians have to obey them.
This is the only truth.
liberranter
May 31st, 2011 at 4:47 am
What is the necessity now for a U.S. troop presence in Europe?
It serves as a key prop in the maintenance and ongoing operation of the MIC. But of course Pat knows this…
John V. Walsh
May 31st, 2011 at 5:01 am
Good article but a bit off base on China. In 1978 China spent 4.6% of GDP on defense; in 2010 it spent 1.34%. The US spends ~6% of GDP on "national security," and US GDP is about 3 times that of China. This means that China is serious about a "peaceful rise," and sees economic prosperity not military might as the key to success in the 21st Century and beyond.
The US should follow this lead and work for win-win situations, returning our attention to our prosperous island. China has throughout her millennia shown no interest in overseas adventures. Let us not force it to take such a path.
John V. Walsh
avatar singh
May 31st, 2011 at 8:35 am
It ain't really about the Middle East, boys and girls — it's about world domination, by any means necessary. The only question is one of identifying the moves as they happen, instead of many years later."".
avatar singh
May 31st, 2011 at 8:36 am
It ain't really about the Middle East, boys and girls — it's about world domination, by any means necessary. The only question is one of identifying the moves as they happen, instead of many years later."".
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As America teetered on the brink of entering World War II, Charles A. Lindbergh gave a fateful speech that did more damage to the America First movement for peace than all the propagandistic efforts of the pro-war groups he named in Des Moines that day. In his oration, the great aviator and American hero sought to define who and what had brought us to the point of no return:
"The three most important groups who have been pressing this country toward war are the British, the Jewish, and the Roosevelt administration.
"Behind these groups, but of lesser importance, are a number of capitalists, Anglophiles, and intellectuals who believe that the future of mankind depends upon the domination of the British empire. Add to these the Communistic groups who were opposed to intervention until a few weeks ago, and I believe I have named the major war agitators in this country."
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BBC comment(atleast her washingtons correspondent's comments) on scooter LibBy's gulity verdit on 6th march,2007–"it does not matter to white house as long as iraq war turns out to be all right"!! for BBc illegal occupation of iraq and killing of million civilians does not matter -it will be al r ight for american occupation. This is human rights and democracy ala BBc and british propaganda.
see and watch todays bbc and realize how much bbc and other british propaganda machinary is responsible for bush war crimes.
He also assuredly told that this "white house is quite safe"as wished for by the british ofocurse. during gore-bush florida tussle bbc was advocating gore to leave bush alone as britian was waiting for american missile defence to come her shore soon and so no delay in small matter of who should be presidentof usa be allowed.d-bit belicve it? look at all british propaganda between 1st novembr till 20th novembr of 2000.
it is high time that engish spies in american establishment be eliminated..
it is high time that these english spies in usa are taken care of .
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these protestant baptists((and so callled religious fundamentalists and evnagalicals bastards)) are the agents of england inside america and have always been.
thse baptists are the ones who created civil war for the benefit of british to reconquer america and during attack of britian in 1812 these baptists were acting as enemy agents inside amaerica.
these baptisat are called patrioit–now what a shame? the southern flag is sympbol of american patriotism when it was really an instrument of treachery to the american independence.
" I am afraid the meddling small minded, fearful white boy is indicative of a large group of the amerikan types who still support a corrupt regieme of neo-con syncopants. He and those like him live in suspicion and fear of anyone different from themselves.
He was once a settler who cut down and burned the forest of New England because he was afraid of the wildlife. He was once a trader who passed out smallpox blankets to the Indians. Then later a buffalo hunter who decimated entire herds and left them to rot on the plains. His grandfather herded Japanese into camps, his father was at MyLai. His brothers are at Abu Graib and Gitmo. Where will he be tommorrow?"
" but all non-WASP got (and still get) their time as scapegoat-du-jour: Native, Black, Chinese, Irish, Italian, Jew, Japanese, Catholic, Latino, and now Middle-Eastern, just to name a few. Along with the scapegoating goes the profiling, which is little more than prejudice and stereotypes made legal."
avatar singh
May 31st, 2011 at 9:27 am
. USA and britian have used other countries to fight each other and comes in for the final kill–Germany, Japan, Russia ect.
delia_darrow
May 31st, 2011 at 9:50 am
The US wants to bomb the world into submission but wants the world to pay for the bombs. It's only fair, c'mon, we wouldn't have to bomb you if you didn't exist!
Like the mafia offering "protection". When the only protection the world really needs is against the US.
ML3
May 31st, 2011 at 11:46 am
Meddling, killing for profit. It's in our blue capitalist blood.
Can't deny what we've become.
andy
May 31st, 2011 at 1:59 pm
"A smaller military.. will be able to go fewer places and do fewer things"…
Such considerations never trouble other countries or their armies.
The only thing the military has to do is defend the borders and territorial integrity of the USA. Just keep us safe from Canada and Mexico, not a terribly hard job. Everything else is just empire and AIPAC….
Sam
May 31st, 2011 at 2:08 pm
Rising the debt ceiling could be a solution.
JDonald
May 31st, 2011 at 4:32 pm
As a Canadian watching the Memorial Day celebrations from north of the 49th parallel, I must say how gullible most Americans are about the importance of their military We moved back to Canada after 9/11 when we saw that the American response was one of vengence and mass retaliation. The 500,000 Iraqi deaths and the 50,000 Afghan deaths don't seem to matter. If US citizens want to spend their money in this manner, so be it, but don't come looking for a hand out from other countries, especiially Canada, to solve your indebtedness when the cards start falling. We will continue to develop our tar sands for American consumption along as it enriches our people but don't cry fowl when we sell the black stuff to a higher bidder. Continue to march, place flags and borrow money from China, etc. to continue your game of Empire but eventually your will wake up to realize that there are more important things in life than running the world.
Hexexis
June 19th, 2011 at 9:18 am
Does anyone recall the U.S. miltary defending this country on 9/11? No; couldn't be bothered: too busy w/ "training exercises."
AlphaOmega100
June 21st, 2011 at 5:50 am
The Chinese Dragon is coming to the rescue of the Eros zone,, I mean the Euro, in hopes of restoring sanity in Washington and ending Greed on Wall street but unfortunately Mad men know not reason and Glutony is a virtue of fools.
AlphaOmega100
June 21st, 2011 at 6:06 am
Only the idiots at the Pentagon are unaware that the US Mercenary forces are suffering severe command & control dilema's! The morale of US Military personnel are at a breaking point and mass desertion is very likley in the near term, not to mention the severe strain on the command structure. Spending money you dont have is not going to solve the problem but it may and hopefully
crash the Dollar and end the wars of agression against innocence
AlphaOmega100
June 21st, 2011 at 6:10 am
I pray to God that the walls come tumbling down at the Pentagon and restore sanity to the American people and that the Federal Government collapses due to no more funding! that would be a great day! Not my will be done but thine will be done!