Published on Wednesday,
June 30, 2010 by TruthDig.com
by Robert
Scheer
On Tuesday, the Cold War
finally ended with a historic trade agreement between China and Taiwan that will dramatically integrate
the mainland’s economy with that of its claimed breakaway province. Peace has
descended on the most contentious point of conflict between East and West for
the past six decades—but don’t expect the folks at the Pentagon or their
military contractors to celebrate. The remaining raison d’être for much of
their $700 billion budget has suddenly collapsed, and with it the claim on huge
profits and high-flying careers.
The bulk of that money, higher
in constant dollars than at any other time since World War II, is spent on
weapons systems to fight a sophisticated Cold War enemy that went out of
business with the breakdown of the Soviet Union. And the so-called “war on terror”
does not cut it as a substitute excuse for feeding the immense maw of the
military-industrial complex. It is laughable to suggest that the ever more
complex and costly high-tech weaponry we continue to build is needed to defeat
an opponent armed with the box cutters used by the 9/11 hijackers or a
primitive roadside bomb set off by an Iraqi insurgent.
When Sen.
Joe Lieberman makes his annual case for those $2.5 billion submarines produced
in his home state of Connecticut, his central argument has been that
the Chinese are building equally sophisticated weapons that threaten us. “If we
do not move to produce two submarines a year as soon
as possible, we are in serious danger of falling behind China,” he thundered during one Senate
debate. Obviously, it’s harder to make the case that submarines are needed to
capture al-Qaida terrorists holed up in some
landlocked nation’s mountain caves. So too with the ever more advanced arsenal
designed to penetrate enemy defenses not even built
when those Cold War adversaries still operated.
“The Chinese are coming”
became the last refuge of war-profiteering scoundrels once the Russians started
cutting back dramatically, but this alarm was never plausible. The
authoritative quadrennial Defense Department reports
have always made clear that China has at most threatened to become a
regional power with Taiwan as its focus. Yet that pathetic
excuse for the U.S. spending as much on its military as
do the rest of the world nations combined seemed plausible to most in Congress
who voted for massive military appropriations even as our government had to
borrow money from the Chinese to cover our deficits.
Then those treacherous
Chinese, both the mainland Communists and their feuding Taiwan-based cousins,
had to go and ruin a good thing by going way beyond kissing and making up. Even
when they were verbally warring they were still doing business together during
this past decade. Trade between the two is already a hefty $110 billion, 41
percent of Taiwan’s exports, but the new agreement
will much expand that by ending tariffs on key products while opening up the
financial services industry to investors from what was once an impenetrable
cross-strait divide. Taiwanese business investment on the mainland is already
massive, but now it will enter the realm of the mainland’s high finance with
the world economy as its playground.
The prospect of war between
the two, already vastly diminished from Cold War highs, will soon not be
possible without hitting their own investment assets on the other side. Which
is exactly the peace of the new world order that some U.S. leaders, most prominently the first
President Bush, had once welcomed. The question is whether Americans truly
believe they can be winners in a world built on expanding trade rather than on
military tension.
One has to wonder about our
priorities when Congress cannot find the $34 billion needed to continue
unemployment payments for six months to 1.7 million workers thrown out of jobs
but never questions that sort of spending on military hardware with no logical
purpose. The proud promise of American capitalism, often in conflict with a
drearier reality, was that our economy did not need military conquest to
succeed. Now it is the Chinese, of varying ideological disposition, the heirs
of Mao Zedong and Chiang Kai-shek, who will test our commitment to that
principle. Clearly those former enemies have concluded that power, in the
modern world economy, does not grow out of the barrel of a gun, even from a
very big and enormously expensive one.
The China-Taiwan agreement
and its implications also raise some questions for Americans: How does a modern
nation obtain national security? Are we more secure with our permanent war
economy, or is the pursuit of peace through trade and diplomacy, as the
formerly most bitter of Chinese enemies are demonstrating, a better way?
Copyright ©
2010 Truthdig, L.L.C.
Robert Scheer
is editor of Truthdig.com and a regular columnist for The San
Francisco Chronicle.