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Bases, bases
everywhere By Tom Engelhardt
The past few weeks have been base-heavy
ones in the news. The Pentagon's provisional Base
Realignment and Closure (BRAC) list, the first in
a decade, was published to domestic screams of
pain. It represents, according to the Washington
Post, "a sweeping plan to close or reduce forces
at 62 major bases and nearly 800 minor facilities"
in the United States.
The military is to
be reorganized at home around huge, multi-force
"hub bases" from which the Pentagon, in the
fashion of a corporate conglomerate, hopes to
"reap economies of scale". This was front page
news for days as politicians and communities from
Connecticut (the US naval submarine base in
Groton) and New Jersey (Fort Monmouth) to South
Dakota (Ellsworth air force base) cried bloody
murder over the potential loss of jobs and
threatened to fight to the death to prevent their
specific base or set of bases (but not anyone
else's) from closing - after all, those workers
had been the most productive and patriotic around.
These closings - and their potentially
devastating after-effects on communities - were a
reminder (though seldom dealt with that way in the
media) of just how deeply the Pentagon has dug
itself into the infrastructure of our nation. With
more than 6,000 military bases in the US, we are
in some ways a vast military camp.
But
while politicians screamed locally, Donald
Rumsfeld's Pentagon never thinks less than
globally; and, if you throw in the militarization
of space, sometimes even the global has proven too
small a framework for its presiding officials. For
them, the BRAC plans are just one piece of a
larger puzzle that involves the projection of
American power into the distant lands that most
concern us. After all, as Chalmers Johnson has
calculated in his book, The Sorrows of
Empire, our global base-world already consists
of at least 700 military and intelligence bases;
possibly - depending on how you count them up -
many more. Under Rumsfeld's organizational eye,
such bases have been pushed ever further into the
previously off-limits "near abroad" of the former
Soviet Union (where we now probably have more
bases than the Russians do) and ever deeper into
the Middle Eastern and Caspian oil heartlands of
the planet.
The George W Bush administration's
fierce focus on and interest in reconfigured,
stripped down, ever more forward systems of bases
and an ever more powerfully poised military
"footprint" stands in inverse proportion to press
coverage of it. To the present occupants of the
Pentagon, bases are the equivalent of imperial
America's lifeblood, and yet basing policy abroad
has, in recent years, been of next to no interest
to the mainstream media.
Strategic ally
Just in recent weeks, however, starting
with the uproar over the economic pain BRAC will
impose (along with the economic gain for those
"hubs"), bases have returned to public
consciousness in at least a modest way. This
month, for instance, the Overseas Basing
Commission released a report to the president and
Congress on the "reconfiguration of the American
military overseas basing structure in the
post-Cold War and post-September 11 era". The
report created a minor flap by criticizing the
Pentagon for its overly ambitious global
redeployment plans at a time when "[s]ervice
budgets are not robust enough to execute the
repositioning of forces, build the facilities
necessary to accommodate the forces, [and] build
the expanding facilities at new locations ..."
In other words, the global ambitions of
the Pentagon - and the soaring budgets that go
with those ambitions - are beyond our means (not
that that means much to the Bush administration).
The report's criticism evidently irritated
Rumsfeld and so the report, already posted at a
government website, was promptly taken down after
the Defense Department claimed it contained
classified information, especially "a reference to
ongoing negotiations over US bases in Bulgaria and
Romania". (As it happened, the Federation of
American Scientists had posted the report at its
own site, where it remains available to all,
according to Secrecy News.)
Perhaps in
part because of BRAC and the commission report,
numerous bits and pieces of Pentagon basing plans
- even for normally invisible Romania and Bulgaria
- could be spied in (or at the edge of) the news.
For instance, last week our man in Kabul,
President Hamid Karzai, came calling on
Washington, amid some grim disputes between
"friends". On the eve of his departure, reacting
to a New York Times article about a US Army report
on the torture, abuse and murder of Afghan
prisoners in American hands, he essentially
demanded that the Bush administration turn over
Afghan prisoners, both in-country and in
Guantanamo, to his government, and give it greater
say in US military operations in his country. For
anyone who has followed the Bush administration,
these are not just policy no-no's but matters
verging on faith-based obsession. Having with
dogged determination bucked the International
Criminal Court, an institution backed by powerful
allies, Bush officials were not about to stand for
such demands from a near non-nation we had
"liberated" and then stocked with military bases,
holding areas, detention camps, and prisons of
every sort.
Not long after Karzai made
this demand, "an American official alarmed at the
slow pace of poppy eradication" leaked to the New
York Times a cable written from the US Embassy in
Kabul to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on
May 13 indicating that his weak leadership -
previously he had only been lauded by
administration officials - was responsible for
Afghanistan's rise to preeminence as the model
drug-lord-state of the planet. ("Although
President Karzai has been well aware of the
difficulty in trying to implement an effective
ground [poppy] eradication program, he has been
unwilling to assert strong leadership, even in his
own province of Kandahar.") And then, of course,
State Department officials publicly came to his
defense. On arrival in the US, he found himself
refuting this charge rather than on the offensive
demanding the rectification of American wrongs in
his country.
At a White
House welcoming ceremony, President Bush promptly
publicly denied Karzai the Afghan prisoners and
any further control over American military actions
in his country. As in Iraq, the Bush
administration's working definition of
"sovereignty" for others is: stay out of our way.
("As I explained to [President Karzai], that our
policy is one where we want the people to be sent
home [from Guantanamo], but, two, we've got to
make sure the facilities are there - facilities
where these people can be housed and fed and
guarded.") But the Afghan president was granted
something so much more valuable - this was, after
all, the essence of his trek to the US - a
"strategic partnership" with the United States
which he "requested". (The actual language:
"Afghanistan proposed that the United States join
in a strategic partnership and establish close
cooperation.") Great idea, Hamid! And quite an
original one.
Of
course, the term is ours, not
Karzai's, and we already have such "partnerships"
with numerous nations including Japan,
Germany and Greece. But Afghanistan is none of
the above. The "partners" in this relationship are
the country that likes to think of itself as the
planet's "sole superpower" - its global "sheriff",
the "new Rome", the new imperial "Britain"
(Britain itself now being a distinctly junior
partner providing a few of the "native" troops
so necessary for our Iraqi adventure) - and
the country that, in the UN's Human Development
Report 2004, was ranked the sixth worst off on
Earth, perched just above five absolute
basket-case nations in sub-Saharan Africa. This is
the equivalent of declaring a business partnership
between a Rockefeller and the local beggar.
In the somewhat vague, four-page Joint
Declaration of the United States-Afghanistan
Strategic Partnership issued by the two partners
while Karzai was in Washington, along with the
usual verbiage about spreading democracy and
promoting human - perhaps a typo for "inhuman" -
rights in Afghanistan and throughout the Central
Asian region, there were these brief lines:
It is understood that in order to
achieve the objectives contained herein, US
military forces operating in Afghanistan will
continue to have access to Bagram air base and
its facilities, and facilities at other
locations as may be mutually determined and that
the US and coalition forces are to continue to
have the freedom of action required to conduct
appropriate military operations based on
consultations and pre-agreed
procedures. The Afghans may get no
prisoners and not an extra inch of control over US
military movements note that "continue to have the
freedom of action required ... based on ...
pre-agreed procedures" - but they do get to give,
which is such an ennobling feeling. What they are
offering up is that "access" to Bagram air base
"and facilities at other locations". (The language
is charming. You would think that the Americans
were at the gates of the old Soviet air base
waiting to be let in, not that it was already
fully occupied and a major American military
facility.)
Nothing "permanent" of course,
especially since Afghan students in recent
protests over mistreated Korans at Guantanamo were
also complaining about American bases in their
country; and no future treaties, since Karzai
might have a tough time with parliament over that
one. Afghans tend to be irrationally touchy, not
to say mean-spirited, on national sovereignty
issues. (Think of the Soviet occupation.) Just a
simple, honestly offered "request" and a "joint
declaration" - somebody must have been smoking one
- that quietly extends our rights to base troops
in Afghanistan until some undefined moment beyond
the end of time.
Spanning the world
Base news has been trickling in from the
'stans of Central Asia - formerly republics of the
old Soviet Union - as well. After the "Tulip"
revolution in Kyrgyzstan, for instance, we rushed
an official into the country - no, not the
secretary of state to celebrate the spread of
democracy, but our globe-trotting secretary of
defense, who hustled into that otherwise obscure
land just to make sure that Ganci air base (named
not for some Kyrgyzstani hero, but for Peter
Ganci, the New York City fire chief killed in the
September 11 attacks) in the capital of Bishkek
was still ours to use (as it is).
In the
Uzbekistan of grim, authoritarian Islam Karimov,
our ally in the "war on terror" (who received his
third visit from Rumsfeld in 2004), the Bush
administration, we're told, is wrestling with a
most difficult problem in the wake of a government
massacre of demonstrators: bases versus values
(John Hall, "US wrestles with bases vs values in
Uzbekistan", Richmond Times-dispatch, May 29).
After all, while the White House values the spread
of democracy, the Pentagon considers Camp
Stronghold Freedom, the former Soviet base we now
occupy there - "The air-conditioned tents at the
base ... are laid out on a grid, along streets
named for the thoroughfares of New York: Fifth
Avenue, Long Island Expressway, Wall Street" - to
be valuable indeed.
And then there's that
handy matter of stowing away prisoners. Uzbekistan
is one of the places where the US has reportedly
been practicing "extraordinary rendition" - the
kidnapping of terrorist subjects and the
dispatching of them to countries happy to torture
them for us. Here's a guess: whether Karimov (to
whom the Chinese leadership gave a giant smooch
last week) remains in office or not, in the modern
Great Game in Central Asia expect us to remain in
the aptly named Camp Stronghold Freedom. (I'd like
to see someone try to pry us out.)
In Africa last week, there was news, too. The
Bush administration was promising to pour ever
more "soldiers and money into its anti-terrorism
campaign [there], including in Algeria and chaotic
Nigeria, both oil-rich nations where radical Islam
has a following". ("Oil-rich" is the key phrase in
that sentence, in case you missed it.) "The new
campaign," writes Edward Harris of the Associated
Press, "will target nine North and West African
nations and seek to bolster regional cooperation."
American officials, calling for a "budgetary
increase" for anti-terror military aid to the
area, are now evidently comparing the vast
"ungoverned" desert expanses of the Sahara "to
Afghanistan during Taliban rule, when Osama bin
Laden's al-Qaeda terror group thrived". Talk about
ambition. Quick, someone report them to the
Overseas Basing Commission before anything else
happens.
While the Pentagon is planning to
shut down bases all over the US, it's like a
shopaholic. It just can't help itself abroad.
Rumors of future base openings are multiplying
fast - base workers from Connecticut, New Jersey
and South Dakota take note for future travel
planning - in the impoverished former Warsaw Pact
lands of southeastern Europe, which are also
conveniently nearer to the oil heartlands of the
planet than our old Cold War bases in places like
Germany. United Press International, for instance,
reported last week that the Pentagon was eyeing
bases on Romania's scenic Black Sea coast and that
the Romanians (whose plans for a world-class,
Disney-style Dracula theme park seem to have
fallen through) were eager to be of well-paid
service in the "war on terror".
Then a
Romanian general confirmed that base negotiations
were indeed well along: "General Valeriu Nicut,
head of the strategic planning division for the
Romanian general staff, said on Wednesday after an
international military conference on security
issues that the US would set up two military bases
in Romania within one year." He was promptly
demoted for his efforts. (Perhaps it was as a
result of Rumsfeld's pique.) No one on either side
is denying, however, that base negotiations are
underway.
Meanwhile, in neighboring
Bulgaria, the defense minister was claiming that
the US would soon occupy three bases in that land
and the deputy defense minister, chairing the
talks none of us knew were going on between the
two countries, "told journalists that Washington
is also interested in placing storehouses",
assumedly to be filled with pre-positioned
military supplies, there too. Earlier in the year,
the US head of North Atlantic Treaty Organization
forces had spoken of the possibility of our
occupying five bases in Bulgaria - and all of them
(so far) are hanging onto their jobs.
To
the southeast, there were yet more basing rumors
in a volatile area where, last week, a massive
1,700 kilometer-long pipeline bringing Caspian oil
from Baku in the former Soviet republic of
Azerbaijan to Ceyhan in Turkey via Georgia was
officially opened for business. The pipeline, as
Pepe Escobar of Asia Times Online (Pipelineistan's biggest game
begins, May 26) pointed out, is little
short of a "sovereign state"; its route, carefully
constructed to cut both Russia and Iran out of the
Caspian oil loop, ends "right next door to the
massive American airbase at Incirlik" in Turkey.
The presidents of all three countries attended the
opening ceremonies in Baku, while an Azerbaijan
newspaper reported that the "US and Azerbaijani
governments on April 12 agreed on the deployment
of US military bases ... Under the agreement, the
US forces will be deployed in Kurdamir, Nasosnaya
and Guyullah. Various types of aircraft will be
deployed at all the three bases, which have
runways modernized for US military needs." The
report was promptly denied by the Azerbaijani
Defense ministry, which under the circumstances
probably means little.
In neighboring
Georgia, our goals have been somewhat more modest.
With US military trainers already in and out of
the country to help bring Georgian forces up to
speed in the "war on terror", and thanks to the
"Rose" revolution - a friendly government in place
(the salaries of whose top officials are now
"supplemented" by a fund set up by George Soros),
a push had been on to rid the country of its last
two Russian military bases. This week an agreement
to vacate them by 2008 was
announced.
Bases in Iraq: 2003-05
And mind you, all of the above was just
the minor basing news of the week. The biggest
news had to do with Iraq. Bradley Graham of the
Washington Post published a rare piece in our
press on American bases in that country
("Commanders Plan Eventual Consolidation of US
Bases in Iraq"). As a start, he revealed that, at
the moment, the "coalition" has a staggering 106
bases in the country, none with less than 500
troops on hand, and that figure doesn't even
include "four detention facilities and several
convoy support centers for servicing the long
daily truck runs from Kuwait into Iraq".
With just over 160,000 coalition troops on
hand in Iraq, that would mean an average of about
1,600 to a base. Of course, some of these bases
also house Iraqi troops, various Iraqis needed by
US forces translators, for instance, who, when
living outside such bases, are being killed off by
insurgents at what seems to be a ferocious rate -
and some of the hordes of contractors
"reconstructing" the country, including the
thousands and thousands of hired guns who have
flooded in and are constantly at risk.
Some American bases, like Camp Anaconda,
spread over 15 square miles near Balad (with two
swimming pools, a first-run movie theater, and a
fitness gym) or Camp Victory at the Baghdad
international airport, are vast Vietnam-style
encampments, elaborate enough to be "permanent"
indeed.
It is, by the way, a mystery of
compelling proportions that American journalists,
more or less trapped in their hotels when it comes
to reporting on Iraqi (given the dangers of the
situation), have seemed no less trapped when it
comes to reporting on important aspects of
American Iraq. We know, for instance, that even a
year and a half ago the American base construction
program was already in "the several billion dollar
range", and such bases had long been at the heart
of Bush administration dreams for the region; yet
since April 2003 there have been only a few very
partial descriptions of American bases in Iraq in
the press - and those are largely to be found in
non-mainstream places or online.
Given
what's generally available to be read (or seen on
the TV news), there is simply no way most
Americans could grasp just how deeply we have been
digging into Iraq. Take, for instance, this
description of Camp Victory offered by Joshua
Hammer in a Mother Jones magazine piece:
Over the past year, KBR [Kellogg,
Brown & Root] contractors have built a small
American city where about 14,000 troops are
living, many hunkered down inside sturdy,
wooden, air-conditioned bungalows called SEA
(for Southeast Asia) huts, replicas of those
used by troops in Vietnam. There's a Burger
King, a gym, the country's biggest PX - and, of
course, a separate compound for KBR workers, who
handle both construction and logistical support.
Although Camp Victory North remains a work in
progress today, when complete, the complex will
be twice the size of Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo -
currently one of the largest overseas posts
built since the Vietnam War. There
has not, to my knowledge, been a single
descriptive article in a major American paper
during our two-year occupation of Iraq that has
focused on any one of the American bases in that
country and I don't believe that the American
public has any idea - I certainly didn't - that
there were at least 106 of them; or, for that
matter, that some of them already have such a
permanent feel to them; that they are, in essence,
facts-on-the-ground long before any negotiations
about them might begin with a "sovereign" Iraqi
government.
In any case, Graham reports
that, according to the latest Pentagon plans, we
would focus our Iraqi bases - once called
"enduring camps", now referred to as "contingency
operating bases" (but never, never use the word
"permanent") - into four "hubs" ("BRAC for Iraq"),
none too close to major population centers - "the
four are Tallil in the south, al-Asad in the west,
Balad in the center and either Irbil or Qayyarah
in the north".
Several officers involved in
drafting the consolidation plan said it entailed
the construction of longer-lasting facilities at
the sites, including barracks and office
structures made of concrete block instead of the
metal trailers and tin-sheathed buildings that
have become the norm at bigger US bases in Iraq.
The new, sturdier buildings will give the bases
a more permanent character, the officers
acknowledged. But they said the consolidation
plan was not meant to establish a permanent US
military presence in Iraq ... The new buildings
are being designed to withstand direct mortar
strikes, according to a senior military
engineer. This plan is being presented
- hilariously enough - as part of a "withdrawal"
strategy. It seems we are (over what will have to
be interminable years) planning to turn the other
100 or so bases over to the Iraqi military (itself
a bit of a problematic concept). For this, of
course, "no timetable exists". Once the massive
bulk of bases are let go, only those four (or -
see below - possibly five) bases will remain to be
dealt with; and, in that distant future, while
maintaining "access" to our former Iraqi
strongholds, we will withdraw to our bases in
Kuwait from which we will practice what one
colonel interviewed by Graham termed "strategic
overwatch". (Given the intensifying insurgency in
Iraq, this seems like nothing short of a Pentagon
pipe dream.)
The future of a fifth base,
the Camp Victory complex, headquarters of the US
military in Iraq, remains "unresolved". After all,
who wouldn't want to keep a massive complex on the
edge of the Iraqi capital, though the military has
proven incapable thus far of securing even the
road that runs from Camp Victory (and Baghdad
international airport) into downtown Baghdad and
the Green Zone. Today, it is the "deadliest road
in Iraq", perhaps the most dangerous stretch of
highway on the planet, which of course says
something symbolic about the limits of the
Pentagon's plans to garrison the globe.
Naturally, these four (or five) bases
aren't "permanent", even if they are about to be
built up to withstand anything short of an atomic
blast and have the distinct look of permanency.
The problem is, as Major Noelle Briand, who heads
a basing working group on the US command staff,
commented to Graham, "Four is as far as we've gone
down in our planning."
The word
"permanent" cannot be spoken in part because all
of the above decisions have undoubtedly been taken
without significant consultation with the
supposedly sovereign government of Iraq with whom
the Pentagon is undoubtedly just dying to have one
of those strategic partnerships as well as a
"status of forces agreement" or SOFA. The SOFA is
considered a future necessity since it would
essentially give American troops
extraterritoriality in Iraq, protecting them from
prosecution for crimes committed and offering them
impunity in terms of actions taken. No Iraqi
government, however, could at present negotiate
such an agreement without losing its last shred of
popularity.
Still, congratulations to
Graham for giving us an important, if somewhat
encoded, version of the Bush administration's
latest basing plans for Iraq. But here's the
catch, these "latest" Pentagon plans look
suspiciously like some rather well-worn plans, now
over two years old. Unfortunately, our media have
just about no institutional memory. As it happens,
though, I remember - and what I remember
specifically is a New York Times front-page piece,
"Pentagon Expects Long-Term Access to Four Key
Bases in Iraq", by Thom Shanker and Eric Schmitt
that was published on April 19, 2003, just as the
Bush administration's Iraq war seemed to be
successfully winding down. Since next to nothing
else of significance on the subject was written
until Graham's piece came out last week, it
remains a remarkable document, as well as a fine
piece of reporting. It began:
The United States is planning a
long-term military relationship with the
emerging government of Iraq, one that would
grant the Pentagon access to military bases and
project American influence into the heart of the
unsettled region, senior Bush administration
officials say. American military officials, in
interviews this week, spoke of maintaining
perhaps four bases in Iraq that could be used in
the future: one at the international airport
just outside Baghdad; another at Tallil, near
Nassiriya in the south; the third at an isolated
airstrip called H-1 in the western desert, along
the old oil pipeline that runs to Jordan; and
the last at the Bashur air field in the Kurdish
north. Let's just stop there and
consider for a moment. In April 2003, the Pentagon
was looking for long-term "access" to four bases;
at the end of May 2005, it's revealed that the
Pentagon is looking for long-term "access" to ...
four bases. After two years and billions of
dollars worth of base construction, the general
distribution of these bases remains relatively
unchanged. In fact, the base chosen for the
Shi'ite south at Tallil remains the same. One of
the four bases mentioned in the Times' account of
2003, at Baghdad international airport, now Camp
Victory, is the "unresolved" fifth base in the
Post's 2005 account; in the West, H-1 has been
replaced by al-Asad in the same general area; in
the Kurdish north, Bashur (2003) has been replaced
by either Qayyarah or Irbil, approximately 50
kilometers to the south; and Balad, north of
Baghdad, is assumedly the non-urban version of the
2003 airport choice. In other words, between 2003
and 2005, the numbers and the general placement of
these planned bases seems to have remained more or
less the same.
"In Afghanistan, and in
Iraq," Shanker and Schmitt wrote, "the American
military will do all it can to minimize the size
of its deployed forces, and there will probably
never be an announcement of permanent stationing
of troops. Not permanent basing, but permanent
access is all that is required, officials say."
This was, of course, at a moment when Bush
administration neo-conservatives expected to draw
down American forces rapidly in a grateful,
liberated land.
Shanker and Schmitt then
put the prospective Iraqi bases into a larger
global context, mentioning in particular access to
bases in Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Romania and
Bulgaria, and adding:
[T]here has been a concerted
diplomatic and military effort to win permission
for United States forces to operate from the
formerly communist nations of Eastern Europe,
across the Mediterranean, throughout the Middle
East and the Horn of Africa, and across Central
Asia, from the periphery of Russia to Pakistan's
ports on the Indian Ocean. It is a swath of
Western influence not seen for
generations. Three days after the
Shanker/Schmitt report was front-paged, Rumsfeld
strongly denied it was so at a Pentagon news
conference reported in the Washington Post ("US
Won't Seek Bases in Iraq, Rumsfeld Says") by
Bradley Graham. His piece began:
Defense Secretary Donald H Rumsfeld
said yesterday the United States is unlikely to
seek any permanent or "long-term" bases in Iraq
because US basing arrangements with other
countries in the region are sufficient ... "I
have never, that I can recall, heard the subject
of a permanent base in Iraq discussed in any
meeting," Rumsfeld said ... "The likelihood of
it seems to me to be so low that it does not
surprise me that it's never been discussed in my
presence - to my knowledge." And, for
the next two years, that was largely that. The
Times hasn't seriously revisited the story since,
despite the fact that their original front-page
piece was groundbreaking. You would think it a
subject worth returning to. After all, despite
everything that's happened between May 2003
("Mission Accomplished!") and the present
disastrous moment in Iraq, the Pentagon is still
planning on those four bases. Coincidence? Who
knows, but might it not be worth at least a blip
on the inside pages somewhere?
An
empire of bases As the Overseas Basing
Commission indicated in its recent report, such
global basing plans are nothing if not wildly
ambitious and sure to be wildly expensive
(especially for a military bogged down in fighting
a fierce but not exactly superpower-sized enemy in
one part of a single Middle Eastern country). When
we take the bits and pieces of the global-base
puzzle that have sprung up like weeds between the
cracks in recent weeks and try to put them
together into a map of the Pentagon's globe, it
looks rather like the one described by Shanker and
Schmitt in 2003.
Begin with those
prospective bases in Romania and Bulgaria (and
while you're at it, toss in the ones already in
existence in the former Yugoslavia); make your way
southeastwards past "Pipelineistan", keeping your
eye out for our Turkish bases and those possible
future ones in Azerbaijan; take in the four or
five bases we'd like to hang onto in the embattled
Iraqi heartland of the Middle East (not to speak
of the ones we already control in Kuwait, Qatar,
Bahrain and elsewhere in the region); take a quick
glance at "oil-rich" North Africa for a second,
imagining what might some day be nailed down
there; then hop over base-less "axis of evil"
power Iran and land at Bagram air base (don't
worry, you have "access") or any of the other
unnamed ones in Afghanistan where we now have a
long-term foothold; don't forget the nearby
Pakistani air bases that President General Pervez
Musharraf has given us access to (or Diego Garcia,
that British "aircraft carrier" island in the
Indian Ocean that's all ours); add in our new
Central Asian facilities; plot it all out on a map
and what you have is a great infertile crescent of
American military garrisons extending from the old
Soviet-controlled lands of Eastern Europe to the
old Soviet republics of Central Asia, reaching
from Russia's eastern border right up to the
border of China. This is, of course, a map that
more or less coincides with the Middle Eastern and
Caspian oil heartlands of the planet.
Put
in historical terms, in the last decade-plus, as
the pace of our foreign wars has picked up, we've
left behind, after each of them, a new set of
bases like the droppings of some giant beast
marking the scene with its scent. Bases were
dropped into Saudi Arabia and the small Gulf
emirates after the first Gulf War in 1991; into
the former Yugoslavia after the Kosovo air war of
1999; into Pakistan, Afghanistan and those former
Central Asian Soviet republics after the Afghan
war of 2001; and into Iraq after the invasion of
2003. War in Iraq, in turn, has spawned at least
106 bases of various sizes and shapes; while a
low-level but ongoing guerilla conflict in
Afghanistan has produced a plethora of fire bases,
outposts, air bases and detention centers of every
sort. It's a matter of bases and prisons where
there is opposition. Just bases where there isn't.
This, it seems, is now the American way in the
world.
Most Americans, knowing next to
nothing about our global bases or the Pentagon's
basing policies, would undoubtedly be surprised to
learn that ours is an empire of bases. In fact,
our particular version of military empire is
perhaps unique: all "gunboats", no colonies.
Nothing has been of more concern to the
Pentagon-centered Bush administration abroad than
bases, or of less concern to our media at home.
Despite two years of catastrophic setbacks, the
ambitions of the Bush White House and the Pentagon
evidently remain remarkably unchanged and wildly
ambitious - and, I suspect, the rule of inverse
media interest still holds.
Tom
Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute's
Tomdispatch.com ("a regular antidote to the
mainstream media"), is the co-founder of the
American Empire Project and the author of The
End of Victory Culture, a history of American
triumphalism in the Cold War.
(Copyright 2005 Tom Engelhardt.)
(Published with permission of TomDisptach.com) |
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