GRAY MATTERS: D-Day
Saturday, 05 June 2010
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Saul Friedman (bio) writes the weekly Gray Matters column which appears here each Saturday. Links to past Gray Matters columns can be found here. Saul's Reflections column, in which he comments on news, politics and social issues from his perspective as one of the younger members of the greatest generation, also appears at Time Goes By twice each month.
Ordinarily, this column, devoted to issues confronting older Americans, doesn’t get into more cosmic subjects of war and peace. But I can’t let tomorrow’s date go by without notice for it marked the most significant event in the war of my youth, my generation.
We gathered in the athletic stadium of my high school that morning to hear the news. It was D-day and American and allied forces had landed on the beaches of Normandy. We heard the voice of General Dwight Eisenhower telling us and the soldiers, sailors and airmen under his command: “You are about to embark on the Great Crusade.”
There was never a doubt in our minds that this was the beginning of the end of this noble and terrible war and the threat of fascism that had occupied most of our young lives.
Now, we are engaged in an endless, pointless 10-year-old war – the longest in our history – against corrupt and backward Third World nations that were and are no threat to us. They are certainly not in the same league as the Nazis, the Japanese and the old Soviet Union. But these wars are robbing us of the national pride and the sense of purpose that we felt in 1944, and have passed on to our children and grandchildren.
For my generation and its boomer children, the financing of Medicare, Medicaid and the dozens of domestic programs have been compromised by the costs of these wars. Deficits are wrongly blamed on Social Security and social insurance programs for the poor and elderly, but not the wars.
Ironically, the wars are being paid for, in part, with money borrowed from the Social Security trust fund.
More tragically, these wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and elsewhere have now cost our treasury, which means you and me and our kids, one trillion dollars and thousands of lives – more than 4,000 American dead in Iraq; more than 1,000 dead in Afghanistan - and more thousands of the dead and terribly maimed here and in the countries we say we seek to save.
Imagine what even part of that trillion dollars could have done in this country for health care, long term care, education and the renewal of roads, collapsing bridges and decrepit schools. Indeed, it’s fair to ask – in the midst of this longest war, which seems to have no end – has it been worth it? Is it still worth it? Nearly ten years and still counting.
As of May 30, at 10:06 A.M., the National Priorities Project, which maintains a computerized counter on the costs of these wars, announced that the U..S. had spent $1 trillion. That’s $1,000,000,000,000.
So far, $747.3 billion and $299 billion have been appropriated., respectively, for the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. New pending spending measures working through the mostly compliant Congress will add nearly $137 billion. (See the National Priorities Project) And that doesn’t include the costs of burying the dead and healing the wounded and giving comfort to families here and in the countries we occupy.
In practical terms, according to the Project, that trillion could have paid for Pell Grants for 19 million of our kids for nine years, health care for nearly 300 million people for a year, nearly 8 million low cost housing units, the cost of 16 million elementary school teachers for a year.
If you think you’re not paying for these wars, the Project estimates that taxpayers in Brooklyn (Kings County), New York will pay $9 billion of their taxes for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
This past Memorial Day, television and most of the press gave us unctuous, flag waving interviews with veterans and high ranking officers who recommended honoring the Americans who died. Edmund Wilson called it “patriotic gore.” None was asked if any of these wars were truly just. None was probed on the human and financial costs of these wars.
Only one of our best social commentators, comedian Bill Maher, observed that the U.S. has gotten into more wars than most other nations. Only a few members of Congress, all Democrats, took action to demand that the country get out of the wars in Iraq and tribal Afghanistan, which only wishes to return to the 13th century and grow opium.
Unfortunately, President Obama seems unable to complete what he has promised, like getting out of Iraq. Other great presidents labored, often in vain, to keep the nation out of war; Obama chose to go to war.
Representative John Conyers [D, Mich.], the second longest serving member of the House (44 years), recounted the losses to the American taxpayers as a result of the wars., and what that $1 trillion might have paid for:
“We might be enjoying the fruits of a green economy... investments in wind and solar...a single-payer health care system...we’ll never know because our political leadership never explored alternative means of achieving peace...instead of overextending our military forces abroad.”
He called for the administration to honor its commitment, which seems to be slipping, to leave Iraq by December 31, next year. And he asked colleagues to join the “Out of Afghanistan Caucus” and vote against new funding for the war “because $1 trillion is more than enough.”
Unfortunately, but predictably, the mainstream American press has all but ignored the significant and growing movements against the wars. Last month, 18 members of the Senate voted for Wisconsin Senator Russ Feingold’s amendment to the administration’s war spending bill calling for a timetable to redeploy American forces out of Afghanistan. Some of the supporters are among the most senior members of the Senate, including Richard Durbin of Illinois, the second highest ranking Democrat.
On the House side, 92 members have co-sponsored companion legislation to Feingold’s. Introduced by Representative Jim McGovern of Massachusetts, it would require a timetable for getting out of Afghanistan. In all, more than 100 members have voted for a scheduled withdrawal from a war that has no light at the end of the tunnel.
Representative Alan Grayson calls his legislation for withdrawal, the “War is Making Us Poor Act,” not only because it’s costing lives among innocent civilians in Afghanistan as well as allied troops. More important, these wars are making us poor in spirit. Grayson pointed out that George Orwell in 1984 noted that it seemed as if America had always been at war in Eastasia.
So far, no Republican has joined any of the efforts to end American involvement in Afghanistan. The Republicans are saying in effect, “Let you and the other guy fight” while they wait to see how to make political capital, however it turns out.
That’s a departure from a president of my generation, Ronald Reagan, who “redeployed” American forces out of Lebanon in 1983 after 241 Marines were killed by a terrorist bomb (for which Reagan took responsibility) and he saw no reason to risk more lives. I think it can be said that fewer Americans died in combat on Reagan’s watch, than under George W. Bush or Barack Obama.
Why is it that we don’t learn, even from the recent past?
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As of Monday, the U.S. "war" in Afghanistan will have dragged on for 104 months, the longest war in U.S. history, exceeding that previous exercise in futility, our bloody intervention in Vietnam's civil war (my generation's war--sadly).
I use the quotation marks to indicate that after all that time and all those deaths, no one has articulated a meaningful purpose or viable measure of what we are doing in Afghanistan. Using the world's mightiest military to chase a few terrorists in caves is not a purpose -- and absurdly costly not only in Afghanistan, but also in social costs at home as Saul has laid out.
Posted by: janinsanfran | Saturday, 05 June 2010 at 08:06 AM
It's a big bloody, oily mess. I can't understand why stopping isn't the obvious beginning to end warring and it scares me, it truly does.
Posted by: Cile | Saturday, 05 June 2010 at 10:32 AM
Sometimes it makes a person wonder about so-called human intelligence, doesn't it? We're the only species that systematically sets out to destroy others of the same species and despoil our common living space. I contemplate with utter dismay the worldwide societal benefits that could have flowed from $1 trillion, now lost and gone forever, and to what? Destruction and bloodshed.
And we call ourselves intelligent! If the human species is destined to survive at all, we need to stop the insanity and find more effective ways to resolve our differences and power our economies.
Posted by: Elizabeth Rogers | Saturday, 05 June 2010 at 12:06 PM
I agree that the war is a tragedy and waste of human life and potential and wish we were well out of it. But I must strongly disagree with your statement that it is a war with "corrupt and backward Third World nations that were and are no threat to us."
We are sadly bungling our response, but ignoring and/or appeasing the grab for power throughout history has only resulted in worse.
Posted by: Estelle | Sunday, 06 June 2010 at 02:57 AM
I live in Canada. We are the mouse in bed with the elephant, I watch what happens south of the border and know that we here will be dragged into it too. We are in Afghanistan with you, and when the Gulf oil spill moves into the Gulfstream we here will feel it too. Our migratory birds will die when they stop to rest on your Gulf shores. So it is with horror, dismay and huge compassion that I watch your country engage in these monstrous follies. We will follow you, like it or not.
Posted by: Annie | Sunday, 06 June 2010 at 05:17 AM
A provocative discussion of the relative costs of war and entitlement programs may be found in Niall Ferguson's "Colossus". Spending folly as a contributor to the potential downfall of the American empire will not be unique to America - but the relative costs of recent wars as a percentage of GDP pales in comparison with unfunded obligations for social programs.
Posted by: Robin Meigel | Sunday, 06 June 2010 at 05:56 AM
War indeed is hell. We could save a lot of money and American lives by immediately withdrawing from Iraq and Afghanistan. Muslim extremists hate us and have done things like killing thousands in an attack on the World Trade Center within our country basically because of our steadfast support of Israel. With our new pacifist approach then, we should stop supporting Israel. What would happen soon would be a wonderful result of abandoning our position of leadership in the civilized world, wouldn't it? And wouldn't it be nice to have the Taliban again in charge in Afghanistan so they could once again keep women in ignorance and bondage?
America didn't ask to be the leader of the civilized world. It just happened that way. We can deliberately abandon that responsibility in our own interests. Would that help create a wonderful world?
Posted by: Gabby Geezer | Sunday, 06 June 2010 at 07:11 AM
Saul, as usual you speak so eloquently and strike so directly to the heart of the problems of our society and humans in general. I can only hope that you are here and writing to be heard for many years to come.
Posted by: Miki Davis | Sunday, 06 June 2010 at 09:14 AM
Thank you for expressing my thinking (which happens to coincide with yours) so eloquently.
Posted by: Cop Car | Wednesday, 09 June 2010 at 12:00 PM