Is the US going the way of the Soviet Union?

Slowly, seemingly inexorably, the U.S. is becoming more like the former Soviet Union. Just to begin the list of similarities: too many resources are being devoted to the military and the national security state; too many over-decorated generals are being given too much authority in government; bleeding-ulcer wars continue unstanched in Afghanistan, Iraq, and elsewhere; the infrastructure (roads, bridges, pipelines, dams, and so on) continues to crumble; restless “republics” grumble about separating from the union (Calexit!); rampant drug abuse and declining life expectancy are now American facts of life. Meanwhile, the latest U.S. president is, in temperament, authoritarian, even as government “services” take on an increasingly nepotistic flavor at the top.

Given the list of symptoms, here’s one obvious 10-step approach to the de-sovietization of America:
1. Decrease “defense” spending by 10% annually for the next five years. In the Soviet spirit, think of it as a five-year plan to restore our revolution (as in the American Revolution), which was, after all, directed against imperial policies exercised by a “bigly” king.
2. Cut the number of generals and admirals in the military by half, and get rid of all the meaningless ribbons, badges, and medals they wear. In other words, don’t just cut down on the high command but on their tendency to look (and increasingly to act) like Soviet generals of old. And don’t allow them to serve in high governmental positions until they’ve been retired for at least 10 years.
3. Get our military out of Afghanistan, Iraq, and other war-torn countries in the Greater Middle East and Africa. Reduce that imperial footprint overseas by closing costly military bases.
4. Work to eliminate nuclear weapons globally by, as a first step, cutting the vast U.S. arsenal in half and forgetting about that trillion-dollar “modernization” program. Eliminate land-based ICBMs first; they are no longer needed for any meaningful deterrent purposes.
5. Take the money saved on “modernizing” nukes and invest it in updating America’s infrastructure.
6. Curtail state surveillance. Freedom needs privacy to flourish. As a nation, we need to remember that security is not the bedrock of democracy — the U.S. Constitution is.
7. Work to curb drug abuse by cutting back on criminalization. Focus instead on providing better treatment programs for addicts. Set a goal of cutting America’s prison population in half over the next decade.
8. Life expectancy will increase with better health care. Provide health care coverage for all using a single-payer system. Every American should have the same coverage as a member of Congress. People shouldn’t be suffering and dying because they can’t afford to see a doctor or pay for their prescriptions.
9. Nothing is more fundamental to “national security” than clean air and water. It’s folly to risk poisoning the environment in the name of either economic productivity or building up the military. The citizens of the former Soviet Republics still struggle with the fallout from the poisonous environmental policies of Soviet days.
10. Congress needs to assert its constitutional authority over war and the budget, and begin to act like the “check and balance” it’s supposed to be when it comes to executive power.

(William J. Astore, a retired lieutenant colonel (USAF) and history professor, published in TomDispatch regular. His personal blog is Bracing Views)

What can one add to this positively Epicurean set of answers to the American dilemma? Living in the nation’s capital the problems Col. Astore outlines are painfully evident, even if some people will have near-apoplexy reading them.  It sometimes takes an outsider to clear-headedly analyse the problems.

 

 

One Comment

  1. This is an absolutely fantastic post. Just for a bit of context, here is a map of every country the US has a military presence in, and to what degree. http://uk.businessinsider.com/us-military-personnel-deployments-by-country-2017-3?r=US&IR=T. Many of these countries, like Japan and Germany, are very wealthy, and so ought to pay for their own defence instead of it being subsidised by the US.
    It’s always struck me that these so-called fiscal conservatives like nothing more than wasting billions of dollars on military spending that for the most part, does nothing to make America safer. Military spending should be cut, and the money spent more intelligently- fighting cyber crime and gathering intelligence. There’s nothing conservative about bankrupting future generations to fund other countries’ military budgets. America should reduce its presence in the world, and Europe should finally take some responsibility for maintaining world security instead of expecting America to always foot the bill.

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