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'Republic or Empire
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By Chalmers Johnson
A National Intelligence Estimate on the United States
Posted on Wednesday, February 7, 2007. Originally from January 2007.
From Harper's Magazine
KEY JUDGMENTS
The United States remains, for the moment, the most powerful nation in history, but it faces a violent contradiction
between its long republican tradition and its more recent imperial ambitions.
The fate of previous democratic empires suggests that such a conflict is unsustainable and will be resolved in one of
two ways. Rome attempted to keep its empire and lost its democracy. Britain chose to remain democratic and in the process
let go its empire. Intentionally or not, the people of the United States already are well embarked upon the course of non-democratic empire.
Several factors, however, indicate that this course will be a brief one, which most likely will end in economic and political
collapse.
Military Keynesianism: The imperial project is expensive. The flow of the nation's wealth—from taxpayers and (increasingly)
foreign lenders through the government to military contractors and (decreasingly) back to the taxpayers—has created a form
of “military Keynesianism,” in which the domestic economy requires sustained military ambition in order to
avoid recession or collapse.
The Unitary Presidency: Sustained military ambition is inherently anti-republican, in that it tends to concentrate power in
the executive branch. In the United States, President George W. Bush subscribes to an esoteric interpretation of the Constitution
called the theory of the unitary executive, which holds, in effect, that the president has the authority to ignore the separation
of powers written into the Constitution, creating a feedback loop in which permanent war and the unitary presidency are mutually reinforcing.
Failed Checks on Executive Ambition: The U.S. legislature and judiciary appear to be incapable of restraining the president
and therefore restraining imperial ambition. Direct opposition from the people, in the form of democratic action or violent
uprising, is unlikely because the television and print media have by and large found it unprofitable to inform the public about
the actions of the country's leaders. Nor is it likely that the military will attempt to take over
the executive branch by way of a coup.
Bankruptcy and Collapse: Confronted by the limits of its own vast but nonetheless finite financial resources and lacking
the political check on spending provided by a functioning democracy, the United States will within a very short time face
financial or even political collapse at home and a significantly diminished ability to project force abroad.
DISCUSSION
Military Keynesianism
The ongoing U.S. militarization of its foreign affairs has spiked precipitously in recent years, with increasingly expensive
commitments in Afghanistan and Iraq. These commitments grew from many specific political factors, including the ideological
predilections of the current regime, the growing need for material access to the oil-rich regions of the Middle East, and a
long-term bipartisan emphasis on hegemony as a basis for national security. The domestic economic basis for these commitments,
however, is consistently overlooked. Indeed, America's hegemonic policy is in many ways most accurately understood as the
inevitable result of its decades-long policy of military Keynesianism.
During the Depression that preceded World War II, the English economist John Maynard Keynes, a liberal capitalist, proposed a
form of governance that would mitigate the boom-and-bust cycles inherent in capitalist economies. To prevent the economy from
contracting, a development typically accompanied by social unrest, Keynes thought the government should take on debt in order
to put people back to work. Some of these deficit-financed government jobs might be socially useful, but Keynes was not averse
to creating make-work tasks if necessary. During periods of prosperity, the government would cut spending and rebuild the treasury.
Such countercyclical planning was called “pump-priming.”
Upon taking office in 1933, U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, with the assistance of Congress, put several Keynesian measures
into effect, including socialized retirement plans, minimum wages for all workers, and government-financed jobs on massive
projects, including the Triborough Bridge in New York City, the Grand Coulee Dam in Washington, and the Tennessee Valley
Authority, a flood-control and electric-power-generation complex covering seven states. Conservative capitalists feared that
this degree of government intervention would delegitimate capitalism—which they understood as an economic system of quasi-natural
laws—and shift the balance of power from the capitalist class to the working class and its unions. For these reasons,
establishment figures tried to hold back countercyclical spending.
The onset of World War II, however, made possible a significantly modified form of state socialism. The exiled Polish economist
Michal Kalecki attributed Germany's success in overcoming the global Depression to a phenomenon that has come to be known as
“military Keynesianism.” Government spending on arms increased manufacturing and also had a multiplier effect on general
consumer spending by raising worker incomes. Both of these points are in accordance with general Keynesian doctrine. In
addition, the enlargement of standing armies absorbed many workers, often young males with few skills and less education.
The military thus becomes an employer of last resort, like Roosevelt's Civilian Conservation
Corps, but on a much larger scale.
Rather than make bridges and dams, however, workers would make bullets, tanks, and fighter planes. This made all the
difference. Although Adolf Hitler did not undertake rearmament for purely economic reasons, the fact that he advocated
governmental support for arms production made him acceptable not only to the German industrialists, who might otherwise
have opposed his destabilizing expansionist policies, but also to many around the world who celebrated his achievement of
a “German economic miracle.”
In the United States, Keynesian policies continued to benefit workers, but, as in Germany, they also increasingly benefited
wealthy manufacturers and other capitalists. By the end of the war, the United States had seen a massive shift. Dwight
Eisenhower, who helped win that war and later became president, described this shift
in his 1961 presidential farewell address:
"Our military organization today bears little relation to that known by any of my predecessors in peacetime, or indeed by
the fighting men of World War II or Korea.
Until the latest of our world conflicts, the United States had no armaments industry. American makers of plowshares could,
with time and as required, make swords as well. But we can no longer risk emergency improvisation of national defense;
we have been compelled to create a permanent armaments industry of vast proportions. Added to this, three and a half million
men and women are directly engaged in the defense establishment. We annually spend on military security alone more than the
net income of all United States corporations.
This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms industry is new in the American experience. The total
influence—economic, political, even spiritual—is felt in every city, every statehouse, every office of the federal government.
We recognize the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to comprehend its grave implications. Our toil,
resources and livelihood are all involved; so is the very structure of our society."
Eisenhower went on to suggest that such an arrangement, which he called the “military-industrial complex,” could be perilous
to American ideals. The short-term economic benefits were clear, but the very nature of those benefits—which were all too
carefully distributed among workers and owners in “every city, every statehouse, every office of the federal government”—tended
to short-circuit Keynes's insistence that government spending be cut back in good times. The prosperity of the United States
came increasingly to depend upon the construction and continual maintenance of a vast war machine, and so military supremacy
and economic security became increasingly intertwined in the minds of voters. No one wanted to turn off the pump.
Between 1940 and 1996, for instance, the United States spent nearly $4.5 trillion on the development, testing, and
construction of nuclear weapons alone. By 1967, the peak year of its nuclear stockpile, the United States possessed
some 32,000 deliverable bombs. None of them was ever used, which illustrates perfectly Keynes's observation that, in
order to create jobs, the government might as well decide to bury money in old mines and “leave them to private enterprise
on the well-tried principles of laissez faire to dig them up again.” Nuclear bombs were not just America's secret weapon;
they were also a secret economic weapon.
Such spending helped create economic growth that lasted until the 1973 oil crisis. In the 1980s, President Ronald Reagan
once again brought the tools of military Keynesianism to bear, with a policy of significant tax cuts and massive deficit
spending on military projects, allegedly to combat a new threat from Communism. Reagan's military expenditures accounted
for 5.9 percent of the gross domestic product in 1984, which in turn fueled a 7 percent growth rate for the economy as a
whole and helped reelect Reagan by a landslide.
During the Clinton years military spending fell to about 3 percent of GDP, but the economy rallied strongly in Clinton's
second term due to the boom in information technologies, weakness in the previously competitive Japanese economy,
and—paradoxically—serious efforts to reduce the national debt.[3] With the coming to power of George W. Bush, however,
military Keynesianism returned once again. Indeed, after he began his war with Iraq, the once-erratic relationship between
defense spending and economic growth became nearly parallel. A spike in defense spending in one quarter would see a spike
in GDP, and a drop in defense spending would likewise see a drop in GDP.
To understand the real weight of military Keynesianism in the American economy today, however, one must approach official
defense statistics with great care. The “defense” budget of the United States—that is, the reported budget of the Department
of Defense—does not include: the Department of Energy's spending on nuclear weapons ($16.4 billion slated for fiscal 2006),
the Department of Homeland Security's outlays for the actual “defense” of the United States ($41 billion), or the Department
of Veterans Affairs' responsibilities for the lifetime care of the seriously wounded ($68 billion). Nor does it include the
billions of dollars the Department of State spends each year to finance foreign arms sales and militarily related development
or the Treasury Department's payments of pensions to military retirees and widows and their families (an amount not fully
disclosed by official statistics). Still to be added are interest payments by the Treasury to cover past debt-financed defense
outlays. The economist Robert Higgs estimates that in 2002 such interest payments amounted to $138.7 billion.
Even when all these things are included, Enron-style accounting makes it hard to obtain an accurate understanding of U.S.
dependency on military spending. In 2005, the Government Accountability Office reported to Congress that “neither DOD nor
Congress can reliably know how much the war is costing” or “details on how the appropriated funds are being spent.” Indeed,
the GAO found that, lacking a reliable method for tracking military costs, the Army had taken to simply inserting into its
accounts figures that matched the available budget. Such actions seem absurd in terms of military logic. But they are perfectly
logical responses to the requirements of military Keynesianism, which places its emphasis not on the demand for defense but
rather on the available supply of money.
The Unitary Presidency
Military Keynesianism may be economic development by other means, but it does very often lead to real war, or, if not real war,
then a significantly warlike political environment. This creates a feedback loop: American presidents know that military
Keynesianism tends to concentrate power in the executive branch, and so presidents who seek greater power have a natural
inducement to encourage further growth of the military-industrial complex. As the phenomena feed on each other, the usual
outcome is a real war, based not on the needs of national defense but rather on the domestic political logic of military
Keynesianism. As U.S. Senator Robert La Follette Sr. observed, “In times of peace, the war party insists on making preparation
for war. As soon as prepared for war, it insists on making war.”
George W. Bush has taken this natural political phenomenon to an extreme never before experienced by the American
electorate. Every president has sought greater authority, but Bush—whose father lost his position as forty-first president
in a fair and open election—appears to believe that increasing presidential authority is both a birthright and a central
component of his historical legacy. He is supported in this belief by his vice president and chief adviser,
Dick Cheney.
In pursuit of more power, Bush and Cheney have unilaterally authorized preventive war against nations they designate as
needing “regime change,” directed American soldiers to torture persons they have seized and imprisoned in various countries,
ordered the National Security Agency to carry out illegal “data mining” surveillance of the American people, and done
everything they could to prevent Congress from outlawing “cruel, inhumane, or degrading” treatment of people detained by
the United States. Each of these actions has been undertaken for specific ideological, tactical, or practical rea-sons,
but also as part of a general campaign of power concentration.
Cheney complained in 2002 that, since he had served as Gerald Ford's chief of staff, he had seen a significant erosion in
executive power as post-Watergate presidents were forced to “cough up and compromise on important principles.” He was
referring to such reforms as the War Powers Act of 1973, which requires that the president obtain congressional approval
within ninety days of ordering troops into combat; the Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974, which was designed to
stop Nixon from impounding funds for programs he did not like; the Freedom of Information Act of 1966, which Congress
strengthened in 1974; President Ford's Executive Order 11905 of 1976, which outlawed political assassination; and the
Intelligence Oversight Act of 1980, which gave more power to the House and Senate select committees on intelligence.
Cheney said that these reforms were “unwise” because they “weaken the presidency and the vice presidency,” and added that
he and the president felt an obligation “to pass on our offices in better shape than we found them.”
No president, however, has ever acknowledged the legitimacy of the War Powers Act, and most of these so-called
limitations on presidential power had been gutted, ignored, or violated long before Cheney became vice president.
Republican Senator John Sununu of New Hampshire said, “The vice president may be the only person I know of that
believes the executive has somehow lost power over the last thirty years.”
Bush and Cheney have made it a primary goal of their terms in office, nonetheless, to carve executive power into the
law, and the war has been the primary vehicle for such actions. John Yoo, Bush's deputy assistant attorney general
from 2001 to 2003, writes in his book War By Other Means, “We are used to a peacetime system in which Congress enacts
laws, the President enforces them, and the courts interpret them. In wartime, the gravity shifts to the executive branch.”
Bush has claimed that he is “the commander” and “the decider” and that therefore he does not “owe anybody an explanation”
for anything.[4]
Similarly, in a September 2006 press conference, White House spokesman Tony Snow engaged in this dialogue:
Q: Isn't it the Supreme Court that's supposed to decide whether laws are unconstitutional or not?
A: No, as a matter of fact the president has an obligation to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution of
the United States. That is an obligation that presidents have enacted through signing statements going back to
Jefferson. So, while the Supreme Court can be an arbiter of the Constitution, the fact is the president is the one,
the only person who, by the Constitution, is given the responsibility to preserve, protect, and defend that document,
so it is perfectly consistent with presidential authority under the Constitution itself.
Snow was referring to the president's habit of signing bills into law accompanied by “statements” that, according
to the American Bar Association, “assert President Bush's authority to disregard or decline to enforce laws adopted
by Congress.” All forty-two previous U.S. presidents combined have signed statements exempting themselves from the
provisions of 568 new laws, whereas Bush has, to date, exempted himself from more than 1,000.
Failed Checks on Executive Ambition
The current administration's perspective on political power is far from unique. Few, if any, presidents have
refused the increased executive authority that is the natural byproduct of military Keynesianism. Moreover, the
division of power between the president, the Congress, and the judiciary—often described as the bedrock of American
democracy—has eroded significantly in recent years. The people, the press, and the military, too, seem anxious to cede
power to a “wartime” president, leaving Bush, or those who follow him, almost entirely unobstructed in pursuing the
imperial project.
Congress: Corrupt and indifferent, Congress, which the Founders believed would be the leading branch of government,
has already entirely forfeited the power to declare war. More recently, it gave the president the legal right to detain
anyone, even American citizens, without warrant, and to detain non-citizens without recourse to habeas corpus, as well
as to use a variety of interrogation methods that he could define, at his sole discretion, to be or not be torture.
The Courts: The judicial branch is hardly more effective in restraining presidential ambition. The Supreme Court was
active in the installation of the current president, and the lower courts increasingly are packed with judges who believe
they should defer to his wishes. In 2006, for instance, U.S. District Judge David Trager dismissed a suit by a
thirty-five-year-old Canadian citizen, Maher Arar, who in 2002 was seized by U.S. government agents at John F. Kennedy
Airport and delivered to Syria, where he was tortured for ten months before being released. No charges were filed against
Arar, and his torturers eventually admitted he had no links to any crime. In explaining his dismissal, Trager noted with
approval an earlier Supreme Court finding that such judgment would “threaten ‘our customary policy of deference to the
President in matters of foreign affairs.’”
The Military: It is possible that the U.S. military could take over the government and declare a dictatorship.[5] That is
how the Roman republic ended. For the military voluntarily to move toward direct rule, however, its leaders would have
to ignore their ties to civilian society, where the symbolic importance of constitutional legitimacy remains potent.
Rebellious officers may well worry about how the American people would react to such a move. Moreover, prosecutions of
low-level military torturers from Abu Ghraib prison and killers of civilians in Iraq have demonstrated to enlisted ranks
that obedience to illegal orders can result in their being punished, whereas officers go free. No one knows whether
ordinary American soldiers would obey clearly illegal orders to oust an elected government or whether the officer corps
has sufficient confidence to issue such orders. In addition, the present system already offers the military high command
so much—in funds, prestige, and future employment via the military-industrial revolving door—that a perilous transition
to anything resembling direct military rule would make little sense under reasonably normal conditions.
The People: Could the people themselves restore constitutional government? A grassroots movement to break the hold of
the military-industrial complex and establish public financing of elections is conceivable. But, given the conglomerate
control of the mass media and the difficulties of mobilizing the United States' large and diffuse population, it is unlikely.
Moreover, the people themselves have enjoyed the Keynesian benefits of the U.S. imperial project and—in all but a few
cases—have not yet suffered any of its consequences.[6]
Bankruptcy and Collapse
The more likely check on presidential power, and on U.S. military ambition, will be the economic failure that is the
inevitable consequence of military Keynesianism. Traditional Keynesianism is a stable two-part system composed of deficit
spending in bad times and debt payment in good times. Military Keynesianism is an unstable one-part system. With no
political check, debt accrues until it reaches a crisis point.
In the fiscal 2006 budget, the Congressional Research Service estimates that Pentagon spending on Operation Enduring
Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom will be about $10 billion per month, or an extra $120.3 billion for the year. As
of mid-2006, the overall cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan since their inception stood at more than $400 billion.
Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize?winning economist, and his colleague, Linda Bilmes, have tried to put together an
estimate of the real costs of the Iraq war. They calculate that it will cost about $2 trillion by 2015. The conservative
American Enterprise Institute suggests a figure at the opposite end of the spectrum—$1 trillion. Both figures are an order
of magnitude larger than what the Bush Administration publicly acknowledges.
At the same time, the U.S. trade deficit, the largest component of the current account deficit, soared to an all-time
high in 2005 of $782.7 billion, the fourth consecutive year that America's trade debts set records. The trade deficit
with China alone rose to $201.5 billion, the highest imbalance ever recorded with any country. Meanwhile, since mid-2000,
the country has lost nearly 3 million manufacturing jobs. To try to cope with these imbalances, on March 16, 2006, Congress
raised the national debt limit from $8.2 trillion to $9 trillion. This was the fourth time since George W. Bush took
office that the limit had to be raised. Had Congress not raised it, the U.S. government would not have been able to borrow
more money and would have had to default on its massive debts.
Among the creditors that finance this unprecedented sum, two of the largest are the central banks of China ($854 billion
in reserves of dollars and other foreign currencies) and Japan ($850 billion), both of which are the managers of the huge
trade surpluses these countries enjoy with the United States. This helps explain why the United States' debt burden has
not yet triggered what standard economic theory would predict, which is a steep decline in the value of the U.S. dollar
followed by a severe contraction of the American economy—the Chinese and Japanese governments continue to be willing to
be paid in dollars in order to sustain American demand for their exports. For the sake of domestic employment, both
countries lend huge amounts to the American treasury, but there is no guarantee how long they will
want or be able to do so.
CONFIDENCE IN KEY JUDGMENTS
It is difficult to predict the course of a democracy, and perhaps even more so when that democracy is as corrupt as that
of the United States. With a new opposition party in the majority in the House, the country could begin a difficult
withdrawal from military Keynesianism. Like the British after World War II, the United States could choose to keep its
democracy by giving up its empire. The British did not do a particularly brilliant job of liquidating their empire, and
there were several clear cases in which British imperialists defied their nation's commitment to democracy in order to
keep their foreign privileges—Kenya in the 1950s is a particularly savage example—but the people of the British Isles did
choose democracy over imperialism, and that nation continues to thrive as a nation, if not as an empire.
It appears for the moment, however, that the people of the United States prefer the Roman approach and so will abet their
government in maintaining a facade of constitutional democracy until the nation drifts into bankruptcy.
Of course, bankruptcy will not mean the literal end of the United States any more than it did for Germany in 1923, China
in 1948, or Argentina in 2001. It might, in fact, open the way for an unexpected restoration of the American system, or
for military rule, revolution, or simply some new development we cannot yet imagine. Certainly, such a bankruptcy would
mean a drastic lowering of the current American standard of living, a loss of control over international affairs, a
process of adjusting to the rise of other powers, including China and India, and a further discrediting of the notion
that the United States is somehow exceptional compared with other nations. The American people will be forced to learn
what it means to be a far poorer nation and the attitudes and manners that go with it.[7]
About the Author
Chalmers Johnson is the author of Blowback, The Sorrows of Empire, and, most recently, Nemesis: The Last Days of the
American Republic, to be published in February by Metropolitan Books. His last article for Harper's Magazine, “The War
Business: Squeezing a Profit from the Wreckage in Iraq,” appeared in the November 2003 issue.
Notes
1. The CIA's website defines a National Intelligence Estimate as “the most authoritative written judgment concerning a
national security issue prepared by the Director of Central Intelligence.” These forecasts of “future developments” and
“their implications for the United States” seldom are made public, but there are exceptions. One was the NIE of September
2002, “Iraq's Continuing Programs for Weapons of Mass Destruction,” which became notorious because virtually every word
in it was false. Another, an April 2006 NIE entitled “Trends in Global Terrorism: Implications for the United States,”
was partly declassified by President Bush because its main conclusion—that “activists identifying themselves as jihadists”
are “increasing in both number and geographic dispersion”—had already been leaked to the press.
2. The CIA is prohibited from writing an NIE on the United States, and so I have here attempted to do so myself, using the
standard format for such estimates. I have some personal knowledge of NIEs because from 1967 to 1973 I served as an outside
consultant to the CIA's Office of National Estimates. I was one of about a dozen so-called experts invited to read draft NIEs
in order to provide quality control and prevent bureaucratic logrolling.
3. Military Keynesianism, it turns out, is not the only way to boost an economy.
4. In a January 2006 debate, Yoo was asked if any law could stop the president, if he “deems that he's got to torture
somebody,” from, say, “crushing the testicles of the person's child.” Yoo's response: “I think it depends on why the president
thinks he needs to do that.”
5. Though they undoubtedly would find a more user-friendly name for it.
6. In 2003, when the Iraq war began, the citizens of the United States could at least claim that it was the work of an
administration that had lost the popular vote. But in 2004, Bush won that vote by more than 3 million ballots, making
his war ours.
7. National Intelligence Estimates seldom contain startling new data. To me they always read like magazine articles or
well-researched and footnoted graduate seminar papers. When my wife once asked me what was so secret about them, I
answered that perhaps it was the fact that this was the best we could do.
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