In just 24 hours in October 2014, the US military fired
$65.8m worth of Tomahawk missiles at Syria.
Robert Fisk 21 October 2014. Posted in News
Last month US
warships fired $65.8m worth of Tomahawk missiles within just 24 hours: if we
spent as promiscuously on Ebola cures, there would be no more Ebola.
SO WHO is
winning the war? Isis? Us? The Kurds (remember them?) The Syrians? The Iraqis?
Do we even remember the war? Not at all. We must tell the truth. So let us now
praise famous weapons and the manufacturers that begat them.
Share prices
are soaring in America for those who produce the coalition bombs and missiles
and drones and aircraft participating in this latest war which – for all who
are involved (except for the recipients of the bombs and missiles and those
they are fighting) – is Hollywood from start to finish.
Shares in
Lockheed Martin – maker of the “All for One and One for All” Hellfire missiles
– are up 9.3 per cent in the past three months. Raytheon – which has a big
Israeli arm – has gone up 3.8 per cent. Northrop Grumman shares swooped up the
same 3.8 per cent. And General Dynamics shares have risen 4.3 per cent.
Lockheed Martin – which really does steal Alexandre Dumas’ Three Musketeers
quotation on its publicity material – makes the rockets carried by the Reaper
drones, famous for destroying wedding parties over Afghanistan and Pakistan,
and by Iraqi aircraft.
And don’t be
downhearted. The profits go on soaring. When the Americans decided to extend
their bombing into Syria in September – to attack President Assad’s enemies
scarcely a year after they first proposed to bomb President Assad himself –
Raytheon was awarded a $251m (£156m) contract to supply the US navy with more
Tomahawk cruise missiles. Agence France-Presse, which does the job that Reuters
used to do when it was a real news agency, informed us that on 23 September,
American warships fired 47 Tomahawk missiles. Each one costs about $1.4m. And
if we spent as promiscuously on Ebola cures, believe me, there would be no more
Ebola.
Let us leave
out here the political cost of this conflict. After all, the war against Isis
is breeding Isis. For every dead Isis member, we are creating three of four
more. And if Isis really is the “apocalyptic”, “evil”, “end-of-the-world”
institution we have been told it is – my words come from the Pentagon and our
politicians, of course – then every increase in profits for Lockheed Martin,
Raytheon, Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics is creating yet more Isis
fighters. So every drone or F/A-18 fighter-bomber we send is the carrier of a
virus, every missile an Ebola germ for the future of the world. Think about
that.
Let me give
you a real-time quotation from reporter Dan De Luce’s dispatch on arms sales
for the French news agency. “The war promises to generate more business not
just from US government contracts but other countries in a growing coalition,
including European and Arab states… Apart from fighter jets, the air campaign
[sic] is expected to boost the appetite for aerial refuelling tankers,
surveillance aircraft such as the U-2 and P-8 spy planes, and robotic [sic
again, folks] drones… Private security contractors, which profited heavily from
the US presence in Iraq and Afghanistan, also are optimistic the conflict will
produce new contracts to advise Iraqi troops.”
This is
obviously outrageous. The same murderous bunch of gunmen we sent to Iraq are
going to be let loose to teach our “allies” in Syria – “moderate” secular
militias, of course – the same vicious tactics they used against civilians in
Iraq. And the same missiles are going to be used – at huge profit, naturally –
on the peoples of the Middle East, Isis
or not. Which is why De Luce’s report is perhaps the most important of the
whole war in the region.
I’ve always
argued that the civilian victims of these weapons manufacturers should sue
these conglomerate giants every time their niece or grandfather is killed. In
Gaza and the West Bank, the Palestinians used to keep the bits and fragments of
US-made missiles that killed their innocent relatives, with the idea that one
day they might be able to take the companies to court.
Lebanese
civilians did the same. But they were given “compensation” – with whose
blessing, I wonder? – and persuaded not to pursue the idea, and so the
armaments manufacturers, made so palpable in George Bernard Shaw’s Major
Barbara, got away with it. There are many lawyers in New York ready to take up
these cases – I’ve met a few of them in the US – on a pay-if-you-win basis. But
so far, no takers. It’s time there were. Why should the merchants of death get
away with it?
In the
meanwhile, the Pentagon can keep pushing the bills through. “It’s awfully hard
to say no when you’re at war,” a guy with “links” to the weapons industry said
last week. You bet it is. He says, by the way, that BAE Systems is doing pretty
well out of the current crisis. Think about that. And pray, of course, for the
200,000 dead in the Syrian war.
http://stopwar.org.uk/news/who-s-winning-the-war-against-isis-no-contest-it-s-american-arms-manufacturers
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