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The True Cost Of The Iraq War

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  • The True Cost Of The Iraq War

    CounterBias.com
    July 2 2004

    The True Cost Of The Iraq War

    Marc Krug

    The war in Iraq has sent to their graves more than 850 Americans,
    almost 120 coalition soldiers, and somewhere around 10,000 Iraqis - a
    good portion of whom were civilians. Similarly dispatched from this
    world were upwards of 90 contractors and 30 journalists.

    In monetary terms, the war has cost Americans over $120 billion as of
    June 30 and there is no end in sight. Nor will there ever be an end
    as long as the Bush administration remains in power.

    What is truly unfortunate is that these figures represent only the
    traditional costs of the war. And while nothing exceeds the value of
    a human life, the costs of this misbegotten war - both to America and
    the world - amount to so much more than these figures alone can ever
    convey.

    For instance, the war has cost us the respect of many in the world
    and of many astute Americans. Bush's unilateralist policies, in which
    he openly disdained those countries not sufficiently reckless to
    support his war, have greatly damaged the strong relations we once
    had with our allies. Relations that took decades to build - several
    of which were battle tested during World War Two - were nearly
    destroyed by Bush in weeks.

    It's not difficult to find evidence of these strained relations. On
    June 16, a bipartisan coalition of 27 former senior diplomatic
    officials and retired military commanders - including many who had
    worked in the Administrations of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush -
    issued a statement quite critical of how our current President has
    prosecuted this war, particularly the contempt he has displayed
    toward former allies and the U.N.

    "From the outset, President George W. Bush adopted an overbearing
    approach to America's role in the world, relying upon military might
    and righteousness, insensitive to the concerns of traditional friends
    and allies, and disdainful of the United Nations. Instead of building
    upon America's great economic and moral strength to lead other
    nations in a coordinated campaign to address the causes of terrorism
    and to stifle its resources, the Administration, motivated more by
    ideology than by reasoned analysis, struck out on its own. Our
    security has been weakened."

    And our security has indeed been weakened. The war in Iraq has cost
    Americans much of whatever security they may have felt after
    September 11. It's done the same for the Iraqis who say they feel far
    less safe now than when Saddam was still in power: actually, most
    Iraqis polled by the C.P.A. in late May said they would feel safer if
    we were to leave immediately. This sentiment derives partly from the
    horrors disclosed at Abu Ghraib and Bush's fictitious claim that the
    torture and murder of prisoners ended with the departure of Saddam.
    It also derives from the never-ending carnage in Iraq.

    For these and other reasons, the Iraq war provided the most effective
    recruitment device for terrorists conceivable. As Egyptian President
    Hosni Mubarak said on March 31, 2003, twelve days after the war
    began: "Instead of having one (Osama) bin Laden, we will have 100 bin
    Ladens." The London-based International Institute for Strategic
    Studies (IISS) claims the war spurred a sharp increase in the
    membership of al-Qaeda, who now number around 18,000. And who, after
    the war in Afghanistan caused them to disperse, may have come to
    America in large numbers.

    Also weakened is international security. First, al Qaeda does not
    target only the U.S., nor is it the only terrorist group whose
    membership the war has increased. Furthermore, these terrorist's most
    common targets, besides Americans, are citizens of those countries
    that have aligned themselves with America.

    Second, amidst much noise and controversy, the State Department
    recently revised the number of terror-related deaths worldwide from
    307 to 625. This latter figure is the highest number recorded since
    statistics of its type have been kept. So it would seem that the war
    against terrorism has not only failed to decrease it; the war has
    actually increased terrorism all over the world.

    And third, by fighting a pre-emptive war, Bush has not only placed
    certain countries at risk by setting a dangerous precedent; he has
    also violated international law. For instance, his pre-emptive
    invasion of Iraq has increased the likelihood that India might attack
    Pakistan, Rwanda might enter the Congo by force, and Armenia might go
    to war against Azerbaijan. Moreover, by fighting a pre-emptive war,
    he has violated the U.N. Charter and the Nuremberg Charter.
    Unfortunately, these are not the only international agreements Bush
    has acted in disregard of.

    By bombing civilian targets, our armed forces have violated the Third
    and Fourth Geneva conventions, which are concerned with the
    protection of civilian populations during wartime. American soldiers
    have further dishonored these conventions by using certain tactics
    against the Iraqi civilian population - specifically, imposing
    curfews, closing entire towns, demolishing houses, and arresting and
    kidnapping family members of wanted militants in the hopes that they
    will turn themselves in once they've heard what has become of their
    families.

    So it's not difficult to understand the intense enmity that many
    Arabs now feel towards Americans, thus making the U.S. a "flycatcher
    for terrorists," as one State Department figure put it. Consequently,
    Americans feel less safe now than they ever did before. And for good
    reason.

    This feeling was fueled, however illegitimately, by the
    Mueller-Ashcroft "press conference" in late May. In that bizarre
    televised event, our two leading law enforcement officials presented
    the pictures of seven nefarious terrorists - whose crimes,
    whereabouts, and connections to each other remained largely unknown -
    but who, no doubt, were at that very moment planning terrorist
    attacks against America. Notably absent from this "press conference"
    was Tom Ridge, Director of Homeland Security, who stated earlier in
    the day on ABC's Good Morning America, "that the threats are not the
    most disturbing I have personally seen during the past couple of
    years."

    The message seemed to be that America stood in peril of imminent
    terrorist attack. But apparently not to any greater degree during
    Ashcroft and Mueller's imitation of America's Most Wanted than at any
    other time before or since. One can then only wonder why the "press
    conference" was held at all, aside from the fact that fear of
    terrorism plays right into one of Bush's few remaining strengths.

    Nevertheless, the growing fear of Islamic terrorism has now become
    part of the American landscape. But it is only one of many costs that
    this war has forced Americans to endure.

    Fighting this war, while simultaneously lowering taxes, has not only
    created a substantial and ever increasing deficit; it has also
    resulted in decreased federal and state spending. The deficit alone
    has partly caused an increase in interest rates and a rise in the
    Consumer Price Index.

    Deficits are rather easy to understand: they happen when your
    expenses exceed your income. In the case of the federal government,
    the cost of the war plus its other expenses exceed the income it
    derives largely from taxes, which now are substantially less because
    of the cuts. To finance this deficit, the US Treasury Department must
    borrow money by selling IOUs in the form of bills, notes, and bonds
    to the public.

    But as the debt increases, the government has to sell more of these
    IOUs to what often is a reasonably fixed group of buyers. In other
    words, the supply of IOUs goes up, while the demand does not - at
    least not to the same extent. To compensate, the government has to
    increase the incentive for individuals and institutions to buy more
    of these IOUs. It does this by raising the financial reward for
    buying them - namely, the interest paid to the purchaser. As a
    result, one type of interest rate goes up. And, eventually so do
    other types of interest rates.

    Unfortunately, it gets worse. Keep in mind that interest constitutes
    one cost of producing goods and services; so rising interest rates
    cause the price of those goods and services to eventually rise as
    well. Actually, this process already began months ago: the Consumers
    Price Index for the first quarter of 2004 came in at 4.4 %, more than
    twice what it was for all of 2003 (1.9%). Also keep in mind that the
    first quarter ended before the rapid upward spike in oil costs,
    caused largely by the war in Iraq. So most likely, we could be
    looking at a 6% rise in the Consumers Price Index for the second
    quarter.

    Put simply, when the price of petroleum products goes up, so will the
    price of everything shipped by truck or plane as both use petroleum
    products. Furthermore, your drive to buy those increasingly expensive
    goods will cost you more - as will your drive to the job whose
    paycheck now buys you increasingly less. In addition, if crude oil
    prices stay at around $40 a barrel, the U.S. Gross Domestic Product
    (GDP) will fall by over $50 billion a year. And remember, a recession
    is defined by two straight quarters of negative GDP growth.

    In addition to the costs of higher interest rates, higher gas prices,
    and rising inflation, the war in Iraq has brought about other
    hardships as well. For example, it wasn't until June 7, 2004 that all
    American soldiers had bullet proof vests. Before then, their families
    or loved ones often spent $600-$1,000 buying this equipment
    themselves before shipping it overseas at their own expense.

    Additionally, many National Guard units have now become depleted by
    losing so many members to fighting the Iraq war that some states
    worry whether they have enough people to fight whatever natural
    emergencies that might occur within their boundaries. So the next
    cost of the war in Iraq could be the fire that burns out of control
    for weeks because there aren't enough National Guard members to help
    stop it.

    Also, the families of National Guard members currently in Iraq have
    learned by necessity how to survive without their primary breadwinner
    - often by living in substandard housing and using food stamps to
    eat and welfare to buy necessities. And when the Guard members do
    return, they often do not find their old jobs waiting for them. The
    law guaranteeing them their right to the job they left behind has
    lately been very laxly observed and even more laxly enforced.

    To make matters worse, the Bush administration's initial proposal for
    discretionary veterans' benefits for FY 2005 was $3.8 billion short
    of what was needed, according to leading veterans' organizations. The
    House of Representatives in May boosted Bush's proposal by $1.2
    million, still leaving a $2.6 million shortfall.

    But for all Americans, the war meant that many programs would be cut,
    such as grants for low-income schools and family literacy. In fact,
    the FY 2005 budget proposes deep cuts in many essential domestic
    programs. With the exception of Homeland Security, funding for
    domestic discretionary programs was essentially frozen. Programs
    slated for elimination included Community Development Block Grants,
    Rural Housing and Economic Development, and Arts in Education grants.
    Nevertheless, the tax cuts proceed unabated.

    Perhaps the greatest beneficiaries of the war in Iraq were the
    defense contractors, particularly the politically connected
    Halliburton, whose subsidiary KBR (Kellogg Brown & Root) became the
    recipient of $7 billion in slightly over two years. To show their
    gratitude, KBR overcharged $61 million for gas and $16 billion for
    meals, 2/3rds of which were never delivered. Eventually, in March
    2004, the government stepped in and withheld $160 million slated to
    reimburse KBR for these phantom meals.

    Just this last June, four former Halliburton employees claimed that
    the company routinely wasted money, charging $45 for cases of Coke
    and $100 dollars for bags of laundry. The company also instructed
    employees to overstate on their time cards and to abandon nearly new
    $85,000 trucks in the desert when they got flat tires. In many cases,
    these trucks were entirely empty, although the U.S. Government was
    billed for transporting what employees derisively referred to as
    "sailboat fuel."

    So there you have the war in Iraq: death, destruction, damaged
    relations with our allies, disrespect for prevailing international
    law, diminished purchasing power for the dollar, and decreased
    spending on what America truly needs.

    I, for one, can truly live without it. As can the tens of thousands
    who may yet die if the war continues too much longer.

    http://www.counterbias.com/070.html
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