Mr President,
End this War
Published in The Catalyst
A bipartisan panel
created by Congress in 2008, best known as the Commission on Wartime
Contracting, recently reported to D.C that approximately 60 Billion Dollars,
only a small amount of Bush’s and an even smaller amount of the Obama’s
administration’s record-setting military budget, has been wasted in the Wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, with nearly half of the waste coming in the last 3 years.
According to their findings, this waste includes, but is not limited to
“corruption” and “lax oversight of contractors”.
In other words,
taxpayer dollars are being used to fill the pockets of corrupt military
contractors. To be more specific, the panel found that up to 30 percent of the
hundreds of billions of dollars spent on contracts and grants to support U.S
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan goes towards fraud and waste. Since no
inspector general monitors contracting and government agencies have long
refused to overhaul the way they award and manage contracts in war zones, the
waste is likely to grow beyond the panel’s conservative estimate of $207
billion by the end of 2011.
The U.S is spending
more money on contractor’s salaries, oil digging, corruption and fraud than it
is on the long-term maintenance of Afghanistan’s schools, medical clinics,
barracks, roads and power plants already built with American money. The panel
expressed its concern that if nothing is done to shift spending, the
responsibility will be put on the terribly ineffective and deeply corrupt
governments of Iraq and Afghanistan to manage and bear the long-term costs of
operating these public services.
So, as we approach
the 10 year anniversary of a war that has left more innocent civilians dead
than the 9/11 attacks that supposedly inspired it, one cannot help but wonder,
why exactly we are still there, fighting a losing battle against the Taliban.
Experts like Senior Frontline Director and Correspondent, Martin Smith, who has
been to Afghanistan both imbedded with the troops and with the people of
Afghanistan dozens of times over the last 20 years, says “the Obama
administration’s central objective is to leave behind a safe and stable
Afghanistan”. Although a pullout of all combat troops was set during his
campaign for president in 2011, the Obama administration determined that this
goal could not be met until 2014, meaning that if a Republican is elected
president, a pullout date would vanish and we could be in the region for
another decade.
What we know is
this- our war in Afghanistan is the longest in our history. It is flirting with
being the most expensive too. Why we continue to go after the Taliban while
Al-Qaeda, perhaps stronger now than under Osama bin Laden, roams free in
Pakistan beats me. Our government survived September 11th, 2001, the
deadliest day in our history, only to become distracted with foreign enemies
who pose little threat to our national security and the national security of
our closest allies. Since 9/11, Al-Qaeda has attempted terrorist attacks in New
York City 13 times. And those are just the ones New York Senator Kirsten
Gillibrand knows about. According to the Democratic senator “al-Qaeda’s deep
and abiding interest in attacking US rail and transit systems” comes from the
remaining members of al-Qaeda and its allied groups “surely looking to avenge
bin Laden’s death”.
If you underestimate
the “allied groups” Gillibrand is talking about, just look at southeast Africa,
where a close ally of al-Qaeda is quarantining a population of millions and
letting this group, mostly women and children starve to death under their
control.
Letting al-Queda extend it’s interests
worldwide while we lose thousands of lives and billions of taxpayer dollars on
the War in Afghanistan is despicable to say the least and suspicious to many.
If the Obama
administration truly prioritized the safety of America and it’s allies above long term
economic interests, than military contracting would not be this expensive.
According to BBC findings, “given the increasing importance of finding and
exploiting new sources of fossil fuel, governments like those of the US and the
UK are enormously keen to gain influence in the Central Asian region in order
to secure those supplies for the WestIn order to achieve that, and get those
energy supplies moving out of Central Asia, they need to set up a pro-western
government in Afghanistan.” So, if this is truly a war for oil, the more
important question becomes- can we trust our president?
Thus far, Obama’s
policies of tax cuts for the rich, bailouts for the corporations, cuts to
education and entitlement programs and record levels of pork-barrel spending
mirror, in large part, those of his predecessor. If his interests in
Afghanistan are also like that of his predecessors interest in Iraq, we have
another situation were taxpayer money and American lives are being wasted away
on a situation that has little, even nothing to do with the safety of the
American public.
Like many, I have
reached a point beyond frustration with the Obama administration. Sending them
a letter telling them to end this war so reporters like my father don’t have to
risk their lives informing an increasingly disinterested public on the horrors
of warfare, is beyond useless. They have their interests. Unfortunately, so
does the American public. Professionals expect youth turnout, largely a liberal
constituency, will be historically low in 2012. Why vote if both sides are
corrupt and in bed with the wealthy. Well, the GOP is having sex with the
wealthy while the Dems are just taking them out to dinner. So, I say, vote for
the lesser of two evils, like they do in third world nations. My biggest
concern is, with a rapidly increasing total of Americans giving up looking for
work, a shrinking middle class, more and more people unable to afford college,
a growing debt and a continuation of our status as the only developed nation on
earth with no national curriculum in education and no universal health care
system, I wonder how much longer we can get away with not calling ourselves a
third world nation.
Still, as
meaningless as it is to say this, I will- The least we can do is end this war,
Mr. President.
No comments:
Post a Comment