As a presidential candidate, John
McCain stands out not only for his vocal endorsement of the unpopular
war in Iraq, but also because one of his own sons is a Marine Corps
officer on active duty there. He supports the war, even at the price of
his own career or the life of a child he loves.
Yet although
the senator from Arizona is obviously no chicken hawk, he carefully
avoids “straight talk” about the real costs of this war in dollars and
debt. Like every other politician who agrees with the Bush policy of
prolonged war and occupation, he still pretends that we can spend
hundreds of billions of dollars on this endless misadventure without
collecting enough tax revenue to pay the actual costs.
Hundreds
of billions? Sorry, but that vague estimate is probably far too modest,
according to a new book by Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph
Stiglitz and author Linda J. Bilmes. In The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict, they
warn that the war’s “true budgetary cost,” excluding interest, “is
likely to reach $2.7 trillion.” Aside from the price of munitions,
contractors, transport, fuel and other fixed costs, their calculations
are based on the government’s continuing obligation to provide medical
care and disability payments over the coming decades for the thousands
of wounded veterans who served in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Those
costs represent a moral debt on which we cannot default—and they will
grow larger every day that we maintain the occupation. Even if the war
could be ended immediately, the fiscal obligations incurred by the
invasion and occupation will continue. Beyond the mandatory disability
payments, medical and psychiatric care and additional benefits to which
our vets are entitled, the nation will face years of increasing
military budgets to restore the equipment and readiness of our battered
armed forces, especially the Army and the National Guard.
Borrowing to Pay for the War
Even
in the “best-case” scenario envisioned by Stiglitz and Bilmes, with our
troop presence declining rapidly, the U.S. commitment in Iraq is still
likely to cost no less than $400 billion over the next several years,
on top of the $800 billion or so that we have spent to date. Those
figures, which don’t include veterans’ benefits, add up to $1.2
trillion. What the authors call their “realistic-moderate scenario” for
a prolonged presence in Iraq will cost twice as much or more.
Having
served at the highest levels of the federal government, both authors
understand that the Bush administration’s war budgeting has been a
travesty—aided and abetted by lawmakers such as McCain, who have gone
along all the way. Instead of accounting honestly for the war’s costs
and requesting the necessary funds to pay for them, the White House has
routinely used “emergency” supplemental requests as a device to hide
the truth. The emergency process prevents the Office of Management and
Budget as well as congressional staff from thoroughly reviewing the
data.
Inevitably, they explain, this lack of transparency and
competence has resulted in waste, fraud and corruption in payments to
contractors, most of them politically wired, while essential equipment
and veteran care remain under-funded.
Compounding the disgrace
is the fact that the Bush administration and Congress financed these
“emergency” budgets by borrowing, rather than raising taxes, as the
United States has traditionally done in times of war. The Bush
administration has insisted on reducing taxes, with most benefits
accruing to the wealthiest individuals, while piling on debt for
succeeding administrations and generations (and leaving the nation’s
infrastructure to rot away, too).
Politicians like McCain who
have cooperated in this outrage should tell us why they still call
themselves “conservative.” Back in 2001, when he was still in his
maverick phase, the Arizona senator voted against the Bush tax cuts.
Today, he says that he objected to the budgetary flimflam that cut
taxes without reducing program costs, but at the time he claimed to
worry about the excessive premiums for the very rich. Now, he runs
around promising “no new taxes” just like every standard right-wing
Republican.
In an unguarded moment, McCain once confessed that
he doesn’t know much about economics. Even he should be able to
comprehend the disastrous fiscal effects of the Iraq war, which its
proponents originally promised would cost us almost nothing. Perhaps he
should ask an economist to calculate the real cost of occupying Iraq
for a hundred years, as he imagines—and how many generations will pay
dearly for this mistake.
2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.
What’s your take? Write: editor@shepex.com.
Dean0
Sat., Nov. 22, 2008, 9 PM - Midnight. Maxies Southern Comfort, 6732 W. Fairview Ave., Milwaukee, WI. No Cover. Check out www.libertybluegrassband.com for all the lastest info.