The US Senate has passed legislation for the Pentagon budget
next year, whopping US$858 billion. The unprecedented package is US$45 billion
more than President Joe Biden had requested and is set to have consequences for
global peace and security. The bill passed so easily in both chambers tells
about the priorities of Washington.
The
bill is the largest budget in the history of the world. It is about three to
four times larger than the budget of China whose population last year was
reported at 1.412 billion, in comparison to the 331.9 million of the United
States.
It is
also a conservative budget as it does not include other aspects of the US
military such as America’s nuclear weapons program, which is in the region of
trillions of dollars. Nor does it include the Central Intelligence Agency. Last
year, Congress gave the CIA US$25 billion more than it asked for.
Experts say this huge US military budget supports a network
of global occupation. An occupation that has a military presence that includes
Europe, parts of East Asia, in particular Japan and South Korea, nations across
West Asia, and parts of Africa.
The
amount of money being spent on the military has been met with anger among
Americans, especially during this period of economic hardship on the backdrop
of a global pandemic and war in Ukraine.
Since
2001, conservative estimates suggest the US has spent at least US$20 trillion
on war and military adventurism abroad.
This is
while the latest US$858 billion bill has no purpose to protect the people of
the United States. Nobody is threatening the US mainland which raises the question
of why such a large amount is being spent by Washington on its military. Nearly
half of the US discretionary budget is spent on the military.
The
diversion of these resources could be used for feeding, clothing, educating,
building, and treating Americans back home who are desperately in need of such
services.
There is a lack of healthcare or enough housing, adequate
food and clean water, or a clean environment inside the United States. These issues are rarely
mentioned by the US media.
There
has been a very extensive propaganda campaign inside the US in support of the
US proxy war in Ukraine, which seems to have won. This campaign is being
launched by bipartisan parties in Congress.
This is a war that could have easily been avoided and prevented
the suffering of the Ukrainian people as well as citizens across Europe.
The huge amount of money in the military is being used to
support the declining US worldwide empire. Washington has to resort to keeping
this sinking empire in power and in place through militarism expenditure.
The US is slipping in many ways, as far as being the
dominant world power when it comes to economics and finance, and diplomacy. But
it does claim to be the world’s leading military power, which other countries
can depend on.
History
has proven that to be false and such a claim by Washington of being the world’s
number one military power is not something to be proud of considering its
multiple military defeats.
The budget also allocates funds to send more military aid to
Ukraine which raises the question if Washington is seeking to prolong the war.
Experts
say the aim is to seek regime change in Russia, in particular, after Moscow
sent its forces to Syria to help Damascus fight terrorism.
The idea of dismantling the Russian Federation has been
openly talked about at the US state department. It is actively holding public
forums in various places with groups that the US claims are repressed
nationalities in Russia under the context of liberation movements.
Critics
say Washington is doing or trying to do what was done to the Soviet Union in
1991.
But critics also say some policymakers at the US State
Department are under the illusion or delusional enough to believe that
Washington can re-enact the events of 1991 (when the Soviet Union was
dissolved) and have the Russian Federation collapse by expanding NATO.
Washington
is playing with fire in Ukraine as Russia says if it sends Patriot missile
batteries to Kyiv that means American military personnel would be operating the
missile systems.
This could pit Russian forces in direct combat with American
forces and could potentially expand the war. Should the US military sustain
casualties by Russian retaliatory attacks, this would lead to nowhere but a
third world war.
It
highlights the instability of America’s delusional policy-making. The US
invaded Afghanistan but never succeeded in occupying the country in 20 years
with no plans on how to withdraw until it fled in a very chaotic nature in
similar scenes to Afghanistan.
The massive military policy bill also includes the
authorization of up to US$10 billion in military assistance and fast-tracked
weapons procurement for Taiwan.
One think tank says it will allow a regional contingency
stockpile that will allow the Pentagon to place weapons in Taiwan (which is
part of China) for use if a military conflict with Beijing arises.
The US
Indo-Pacific Command’s outgoing Admiral Phil Davidson, before leaving office,
said the island chain countries have to be prepared for war. In other words,
places like Japan, Taiwan, the Philippines, and others have to prepare for war
triggered by the US.
Analysts have interpreted this until today, as meaning that
countries surrounding China have to be built up militarily so that if a war
occurs with China these countries and regions get hit and suffer casualties as
well as destruction.
But Washington needs the same countries and regions to have
so much weaponry so they can continue fighting or serve as the basis for the US
to continue a war against China until victory.
It highlights how little concern the US has towards those
countries and how cold-blooded the US approach to war is.
It also
means the United States is disregarding the Shanghai Communique which
recognizes on both sides of the strait, everyone recognizes only one China. Now
Washington is not treating Taiwan as part of China which is very dangerous.
There has been an ongoing drive to militarize some nations
surrounding China, in a similar fashion to Russia.
In
Africa, the US is fighting in five or six places in addition to the Ukraine
war, the Yemen war, and other civil wars that Washington is waging through
various proxies.
The
timing of the budget comes at a time when the US national debt stands at around
US$31 trillion, which puts into question the thought process of those making
decisions in America.
US
senators backed the bill overwhelmingly which means there is always consensus
on the war in a congress that the US arms companies have the lawmakers their
pockets. The military-industrial complex, along with the banks and the oil
companies are the only beneficiaries of war.
Unlike healthcare, abortion, gun control, and so many other
issues that take so long to pass Congress amid deep divisions between the
Republicans and the Democrats, when it comes to militarism, there is no
bickering at all.