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	<title>Cubadebate (English) &#187; military bases</title>
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		<title>Empire of bases</title>
<link>http://en.cubadebate.cu/opinions/2011/06/20/empire-bases/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Jun 2011 15:20:12 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Opinions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[military bases]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://en.cubadebate.cu/?p=1756</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Before reading this article, try to answer this question: How many military bases does the United States have in other countries: a) 100; b) 300; c) 700; or d) 1,000. According to the Pentagon's own list PDF, the answer is around 865, but if you include the new bases in Iraq and Afghanistan it is over a thousand. These thousand bases constitute 95 percent of all the military bases any country in the world maintains on any other country's territory. In other words, the United States is to military bases as Heinz is to ketchup.]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>By Hugh Gusterson</strong></p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-1757" src="/files/2011/06/military-bases.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="250" />Before reading this article, try to answer this question: How many military bases does the United States have in <em>other</em> countries: a) 100; b) 300; c) 700; or d) 1,000.</p>
<p>According to the <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.defenselink.mil/pubs/BSR_2007_Baseline.pdf"  target="_blank">Pentagon&#8217;s own list</a> PDF,  the answer is around 865, but if you include the new bases in Iraq and  Afghanistan it is over a thousand. These thousand bases constitute 95  percent of all the military bases any country in the world maintains on  any other country&#8217;s territory. In other words, the United States is to  military bases as Heinz is to ketchup.</p>
<p>The old way of doing colonialism, practiced by the Europeans, was to  take over entire countries and administer them. But this was clumsy. The  United States has pioneered a leaner approach to global empire. As  historian Chalmers Johnson says, &#8220;America&#8217;s version of the colony is the  military base.&#8221; The United States, <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/1181/chalmers_johnson_on_garrisoning_the_planet"  target="_blank">says Johnson</a>, has an &#8220;empire of bases.&#8221;</p>
<p>These bases do not come cheap. Excluding U.S. bases in Afghanistan  and Iraq, the United States spends about $102 billion a year to run its  overseas bases, according to Miriam Pemberton of the Institute for  Policy Studies. And in many cases you have to ask what purpose they  serve. For example, the United States has 227 bases in Germany. Maybe  this made sense during the Cold War, when Germany was split in two by  the iron curtain and U.S. policy makers sought to persuade the Soviets  that the American people would see an attack on Europe as an attack on  itself. But in a new era when Germany is reunited and the United States  is concerned about flashpoints of conflict in Asia, Africa, and the  Middle East, it makes as much sense for the Pentagon to hold onto 227  military bases in Germany as it would for the post office to maintain a  fleet of horses and buggies.</p>
<p>Drowning in red ink, the White House is desperate to cut unnecessary  costs in the federal budget, and Massachusetts Cong. Barney Frank, a  Democrat, has suggested that the Pentagon budget could be cut by 25  percent. Whether or not one thinks Frank&#8217;s number is politically  realistic, foreign bases are surely a lucrative target for the budget  cutter&#8217;s axe. In 2004 Donald Rumsfeld estimated that the United States  could save $12 billion by closing 200 or so foreign bases. This would  also be relatively cost-free politically since the locals who may have  become economically dependent upon the bases are foreigners and cannot  vote retribution in U.S. elections.</p>
<p>Yet those foreign bases seem invisible as budget cutters squint at  the Pentagon&#8217;s $664 billion proposed budget. Take the March 1st  editorial in the <em>New York Times</em>, &#8220;<a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/01/opinion/01sun2.html"  target="_blank">The Pentagon Meets the Real World.</a>&#8221; The <em>Times</em>&#8216;s  editorialists called for &#8220;political courage&#8221; from the White House in  cutting the defense budget. Their suggestions? Cut the air force&#8217;s F-22  fighter and the navy&#8217;s DDG-1000 destroyer and scale back missile defense  and the army&#8217;s Future Combat System to save $10 billion plus a year.  All good suggestions, but what about those foreign bases?</p>
<p>Even if politicians and media pundits seem oblivious to these bases,  treating the stationing of U.S. troops all over the world as a natural  fact, the U.S. empire of bases is attracting increasing attention from  academics and <a rel="nofollow" href="http://fsrn.org/audio/activists-urge-end-us-foreign-military-bases/4294"  target="_blank">activists</a>&#8211;as evidenced by a <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.afsc.org/cambridge/ht/d/sp/i/72158/pid/72158"  target="_blank">conference</a> on U.S. foreign bases at American University in late February. NYU Press just published Catherine Lutz&#8217;s <a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.tni.org/detail_pub.phtml?know_id=281&amp;menu="  target="_blank"><em>Bases of Empire</em></a>,  a book that brings together academics who study U.S. military bases and  activists against the bases. Rutgers University Press has published  Kate McCaffrey&#8217;s <a rel="nofollow" href="http://rutgerspress.rutgers.edu/acatalog/__Military_Power_and_Popular_Protest_821.html"  target="_blank"><em>Military Power and Popular Protest</em></a>,  a study of the U.S. base at Vieques, Puerto Rico, which was closed in  the face of massive protests from the local population. And Princeton  University Press is about to publish David Vine&#8217;s <a rel="nofollow" href="http://press.princeton.edu/titles/8885.html"  target="_blank"><em>Island of Shame</em></a>&#8211;a  book that tells the story of how the United States and Britain secretly  agreed to deport the Chagossian inhabitants of Diego Garcia to  Mauritius and the Seychelles so their island could be turned into a  military base. The Americans were so thorough that they even gassed all  the Chagossian dogs. The Chagossians have been denied their day in court  in the United States but won their case against the British government  in three trials, only to have the judgment overturned by the highest  court in the land, the House of Lords. They are now appealing to the  European Court of Human Rights.</p>
<p>American leaders speak of foreign bases as cementing alliances with  foreign nations, largely through the trade and aid agreements that often  accompany base leases. Yet, U.S. soldiers live in a sort of cocooned  simulacrum of America in their bases, watching American TV, listening to  American rap and heavy metal, and eating American fast food, so that  the transplanted farm boys and street kids have little exposure to  another way of life. Meanwhile, on the other side of the barbed-wire  fence, local residents and businesses often become economically  dependent on the soldiers and have a stake in their staying.</p>
<p>These bases can become flashpoints for conflict. Military bases  invariably discharge toxic waste into local ecosystems, as in Guam where  military bases have led to no fewer than 19 superfund sites. Such  contamination generates resentment and sometimes, as in Vieques in the  1990s, full-blown social movements against the bases. The United States  used Vieques for live-bombing practice 180 days a year, and by the time  the United States withdrew in 2003, the landscape was littered with  exploded and unexploded ordinance, depleted uranium rounds, heavy  metals, oil, lubricants, solvents, and acids. According to local  activists, the cancer rate on Vieques was 30 percent higher than on the  rest of Puerto Rico.</p>
<p>It is also inevitable that, from time to time, U.S. soldiers&#8211;often  drunk&#8211;commit crimes. The resentment these crimes cause is only  exacerbated by the U.S. government&#8217;s frequent insistence that such  crimes not be prosecuted in local courts. In 2002, two U.S. soldiers  killed two teenage girls in Korea as they walked to a birthday party.  Korean campaigners claim this was one of 52,000 crimes committed by U.S.  soldiers in Korea between 1967 and 2002. The two U.S. soldiers were  immediately repatriated to the United States so they could escape  prosecution in Korea. In 1998, a marine pilot sliced through the cable  of a ski gondola in Italy, killing 20 people, but U.S. officials slapped  him on the wrist and refused to allow Italian authorities to try him.  These and other similar incidents injured U.S. relations with important  allies.</p>
<p>The 9/11 attacks are arguably the most spectacular example of the  kind of blowback that can be generated from local resentment against  U.S. bases. In the 1990s, the presence of U.S. military bases near the  holiest sites of Sunni Islam in Saudi Arabia angered Osama bin Laden and  provided Al Qaeda with a potent recruitment tool. The United States  wisely closed its largest bases in Saudi Arabia, but it opened  additional bases in Iraq and Afghanistan that are rapidly becoming new  sources of friction in the relationship between the United States and  the peoples of the Middle East.</p>
<p>Its &#8220;empire of bases&#8221; gives the United States global reach, but the  shape of this empire, insofar as it tilts toward Europe, is a bloated  and anachronistic holdover from the Cold War. Many of these bases are a  luxury the United States can no longer afford at a time of record budget  deficits. Moreover, U.S. foreign bases have a double edge: they project  American power across the globe, but they also inflame U.S. foreign  relations, generating resentment against the prostitution, environmental  damage, petty crime, and everyday ethnocentrism that are their  inevitable corollaries. Such resentments have recently forced the  closure of U.S. bases in Ecuador, Puerto Rico, and Kyrgyzstan, and if  past is prologue, more movements against U.S. bases can be expected in  the future.  Over the next 50 years, I believe we will witness the  emergence of a new international norm according to which foreign  military bases will be as indefensible as the colonial occupation of  another country has become during the last 50 years.</p>
<p>The Declaration of Independence criticizes the British &#8220;for  quartering large bodies of armed troops among us&#8221; and &#8220;for protecting  them, by a mock trial, from punishment for any murders which they should  commit on the inhabitants of these States.&#8221; Fine words! The United  States should start taking them to heart.</p>
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