Will they bomb the pandemic
to death? Even with the Covid-19 crisis, the US war machine ALWAYS wants more
money
Darius
Shahtahmasebi
is a New Zealand-based legal
and political analyst who focuses on US foreign policy in the Middle East, Asia
and Pacific region. He is fully qualified as a lawyer in two international
jurisdictions.
10 Apr, 2020 16:40 /
Updated 16 hours ago
USS Theodore Roosevelt
aircraft carrier in the South China Sea, April 8, 2018 © US Navy via
Reuters
Despite the impact Covid-19
has had on the global economy, the US is seeking more funding to counter and
confront China in the Pacific, as well as enhancing its military preparedness
for scenarios involving nuclear warfare.
The coronavirus outbreak has
impacted the global economy in a unique and unprecedented fashion unseen since
World War II. Around 63
percent of
Japanese businesses have projected a negative impact on their business
performance due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Since the start of the outbreak, stock markets have seen drops of over 20 percent, Chinese car
sales have decreased by 86 percent and global interest rates have been slashed.
Over 16 million Americans have filed jobless claims recently as unemployment
runs rampant across the country. The travel industry has all but completely
collapsed.
What should we make then of
the recent $20
billion wishlist which
was submitted to Congress by US Indo-Pacific Command head Adm. Phil Davidson?
According to Defense News, this wishlist was specifically requested by members
of Congress who are looking for a Pacific-focused supply of money to deter
China in the Indo-Pacific region.
Think of it as a Pacific
version of the European Deterrence Initiative, the Department of Defense fund
which covers projects deterring Russian “aggression” in
Europe. Until US President Donald Trump announced a cut to this program earlier
this year, it’s worth pointing out that for a while Trump had quietly done one
hell of a job boosting this anti-Russian initiative.
The current wishlist is
timely, and one could even argue that it is necessary because of Covid-19, not
that the US is requesting it in spite of Covid-19. For example, we have already
seen the many allegations that China is seeking to exploit the pandemic to
expand its mounting influence. As the Lowy
Institute pointed
out, analysts are concerned that Beijing “will emerge from the pandemic
with its global influence enhanced, while America’s will be diminished.” The
Australian think tank contains a number of
commentators who
share this concern.
As typical, the US approach
is a ‘not-on-our-watch’ type of mentality which makes clear to the rest of the
world that, global recession or not, the US military will continue on its path
unabated.
I’m not saying that this
money could be better spent, but seeing that all of this military spending
concerns China and what the US believes to be China’s inherently evil actions
in the Pacific anyway, I can’t ignore the fact that China
recently set up
a US$1.9 million China-Pacific Island Countries Anti-COVID-19 Cooperation fund.
Beijing also sent medical equipment to French Polynesia when France was caught
dragging its feet; as well as providing assistance to the Solomon Islands,
Tonga, and Vanuatu.
Covid-19 or not, nukes are
ready
The $20 billion plan submitted to Congress is more than just an
isolated incident of the Pentagon continuing its mission of empire without
making any concessions in the face of the global pandemic. Just last week, the
US Air Force put in place a
service-wide “reset” with the intention of isolating the most
essential missions from the Covid-19 crisis. One of these ‘essential’ missions
is the Global Strike Command, which has confirmed that American nukes are ready
to fly as and when required.
Hardly surprising, when the
commander of the Air Force Global Strike Command genuinely believes that
Washington’s nukes remain “the foundation of [the] security structure
of the free world.” I wonder if that includes the nukes the US houses
and stores
in Turkey, which in
all honesty don’t seem to contribute too much
to global security.
As it stands, ICBM crews are
constantly rotating to ensure there is always a ‘clean team’ that
can take over as other personnel become sick. No laughing matter as it turns
out, with at least one active military member already dying due to coronavirus.
The US is also allegedly
seeking to upgrade and modernize its nuclear
weapons supply in
Germany, a move so expensive that it “would be cheaper to build the
bomb in solid gold,” according to Hans Kristensen, director of the
Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists.
If the coronavirus pandemic
can’t put a halt to Washington’s plans of modernizing its apocalyptic weapons,
I’m not sure anything can.
US-Iran war still on the
horizon
While the aforementioned
points relate to US preparedness for war, there is still an inkling that the
Trump administration is using the cover of Covid-19 to push forward ever closer
to a hot war with Tehran. This is despite the mounting number of calls from
British officials, former world
officials, diplomats
and European leaders, Human
Rights Watch (HRW),
and even Joe
Biden to
ease its maximum pressure sanctions regime on Iran.
Not one to buckle to
international pressure, the US deployed its Patriot air defense system to Iraq
at around the beginning of April. Iran immediately slammed the move, claiming
that the US did not have approval from the Iraqi government to do so. At the
same time, the US has also been warning that Iran has been planning attacks on
US forces in the region, a claim Iran has also categorically denied.
Just this week, another rocket
attack allegedly
struck an American oil field service company in southern Iraq, though it is
unclear who was responsible. Whether or not Iranian-backed forces are
responsible for the attack, I don’t expect Washington’s rhetoric to change that
much in respect of Iran, nor do I expect a waning in its thirst for blood.
Meanwhile, over 16,000
Americans have died as a result of Covid-19. As of writing, the US has the
highest number of coronavirus cases in the world, surpassing Iran, Italy, and
China. I can’t help but feel that instead of declaring war on Iran, upgrading
and preparing its nukes and requesting more money to go to war with China in
the Pacific, perhaps the US could turn its eye to a problem that the US
government could conceivably and justifiably exert some influence and control
over.
Unless the Trump
administration is planning on nuking the pandemic to death, it’s time the US
actually focused on something other than war for a while.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.