Based on Presidential decisions, we committed to a
military intervention in Vietnam that lasted from 1954 to 1973 at a cost of
what would have been trillions in today’s dollars. The troop level commitments
varied but by 1967 were estimated at 500,000. There are 58,195 names on the
Vietnam Veterans Memorial of those who lost their lives. The estimate on
wounded and disabled is upwards of 150,000. It is estimated that as many as
500,000 vets of the 3,000,000 who served over the years of engagement suffer
from post-traumatic stress. It is estimated that civilian lives lost in Vietnam
were at least 1.5 million and another 600,000 in Cambodia. This was to insure
against the “domino theory.”
We invaded Grenada, an island (surrounded by water).
We supposedly needed to rescue 800 American students. We sent in about 10,000
troops and spent approximately 150 million dollars to subdue a population of
91,000. We subsequently spent another 85 million dollars to repair the damage
we did once they had a government we considered appropriate.
We went to war with Iraq (never declared a war by
Congress) believing there were weapons of mass destruction. In 2007 there was a
study done by Nobel Prize winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz and Harvard
public finance lecturer Linda J. Bilmes that this war was costing 720 million
dollars a day. The initial invasion involved 248,000 troops and was supported
by another 120,000 troops of U.S. allies, most notably British. According to
iraqbodycount.org there have been 268,000 lives lost directly related to our
presence since 2003.
We are now being told (not asked) that we will be
upgrading our force in Afghanistan. We have been fighting this war since 2001.
The financial cost for the post 9/11 wars is estimated to be about 4.8 trillion
dollars with the death count to civilians and servicemen in the millions. According to recent reporting by Vice News, things are
worse for everyone involved in both Iraq and Afghanistan than they were before
9/11.
The point that this all hopes to make is that we do
not hesitate to place troops in harm’s way and devote almost unlimited
resources bought with borrowed money to effectively kill people. According to
Google, the pentagon related budget of $598 billion was about 54% of the fiscal
year 2015 U.S. discretionary budget. Whether you believe these efforts justified or not and
whether you agree with increasing the military budget, it seems that everyone
would agree the image of the American military, when focused properly, can
accomplish anything man can envision and that it could benefit from a marketing
program that portrayed it as a rebuilding force as well as an effective killer.
As President Obama said in 2010 when he committed the American military to the
Haitian earthquake catastrophe, “Our nation has a
unique capacity to reach out quickly and broadly and to deliver assistance that
can save lives. That
responsibility obviously is magnified when the devastation that's been suffered
is so near to us." Time magazine
described this response as a “Compassionate Invasion.”
With this as a mantra, the proposal could be to bring
the entire resource of the U.S. Armed Forces to rebuilding Puerto Rico where a
third of the population have no clean water. The empathy optics that would come
with this type of restoration would be good image for the administration that
put it in play. The nationalist maxim that none should be left behind would be
reinforced. A bi-partisan, joint resolution by the executive and legislative
branches to bring this to bear would be the type of leadership all Americans
are desperately looking for.
The other dynamic with this catastrophe is that this
is the only solution to this catastrophe that has any chance of being
meaningful, yet this doesn’t seem to be on the table.
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