The Art of
War
The US Bipartisan rearmament
against Russia
Manlio Dinucci
Every day the
Democrats attack the Republican Trump for his war-mongering statements. Yet
they have got together with the Republicans in the Senate and voted to increase
the Pentagon’s budget to 700 billion dollars in 2018. This is 60 billion more
than what Trump had actually requested. If you add the 186 billion per year for
veterans and other heads, the US’s total military expenditure jumps to around 1,000
billion. This is a quarter of the federal budget.
The unanimous vote
of the Senate Armed Services Committee (“the Committee”) formed of 14 Republican Senators and 13
Democrats is decisive. The Committee emphasises that “the United States must strengthen its deterrence against Russian
aggression. Russia continues to
occupy Crimea, destabilize Ukraine, threaten our NATO allies, violate the 1987
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, and bolster the Assad regime in
Syria.”
Furthermore, the
Committee accuses Russia of leading “an unparalleled attack on our core interests
and values”, in particular
through “an active, purposeful campaign to undermine the integrity of
American democracy.”
A true and proper
declaration of war, by which the bipartisan alliance motivates empowering the
entire war machine. These are some of the heads of expenditure in fiscal year
2018 (which started on 1 October 2017):
·
10.6 billion dollars to purchase 94
F-35 bomber fighters; 24 more F-35s than the Trump Administration requested;
·
17 billion for an “anti-missile shield” and military
activities in space; 1.5 billion more than the figure requested by the Administration;
·
25 billion to build another 13 war
ships - 5 billion more than what the Administration requested.
The Budget for
2018 is 700 billion. 640 billion is principally to buy new arms and to maintain
military personnel (now 141 billion per annum following an increase in their pay).
The remaining 60 billion then goes towards military operations in Syria, Iraq,
Afghanistan and elsewhere. Furthermore, 1.8 billion is allocated to training
and fitting out armed formations under US command in Syria and Iraq, and 4.9 billion
for the “Afghanistan Security Forces Fund”. For the “Initiative for European Reassurance”, that
the Obama Administration launched in 2014 following “resurging Russian aggression in Ukraine”, 4.6 billion is allocated
in 2018: this serves to grow the presence of US armoured forces and the
“strategic advanced positioning” of US arms in Europe.
Furthermore, 500 million
dollars has been earmarked to provide “lethal assistance” (i.e. arms) to
Ukraine. The increase in the Pentagon’s budget tracks that of other
members of the US-led NATO. One of these NATO members is Italy whose military
expenditure will have to increase from 70 million euro per day (the current expenditure)
to 100 million euro per day. At the same time, the Pentagon’s budget presents what
is being prepared for Italy.
Among the heads of minor expenses, but not for
this reason less important, is 27 million dollars for the Aviano base; more
evidence that it continues its empowering in light of the installation of the new
B61-12 nuclear bombs, and 65 million for a research and development programme for
“a new missile with land base of
intermediate range to begin to reduce the capacity threshold triggered by Russian
violation of the INF treaty”. In other words, the United States’ agenda
includes lining up in Europe nuclear missiles like the Pershing 2 and the
Cruise missiles of the eighties. At that time, the latter also stationed in Comiso,
Italy.
So this is what the US Senate is announcing, speaking through the unanimous
bipartisan vote of its Armed Services Committee.
Il manifesto, 16-17 October 2017
Translated by
Anoosha Boralessa
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