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View Full Version : “We are the death merchant of the world”: Ex-Bush official Lawrence Wilkerson condemns MIC




timosman
03-29-2016, 02:42 PM
http://www.salon.com/2016/03/29/we_are_the_death_merchant_of_the_world_ex_bush_off icial_lawrence_wilkerson_condemns_military_industr ial_complex/



Col. Lawrence Wilkerson is tired of “the corporate interests that we go abroad to slay monsters for.”

As the former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell, Wilkerson played an important role in the George W. Bush administration. In the years since, however, the former Bush official has established himself as a prominent critic of U.S. foreign policy.

“I think Smedley Butler was onto something,” explained Lawrence Wilkerson, in an extended interview with Salon.

In his day, in the early 20th century, Butler was the highest ranked and most honored official in the history of the U.S. Marine Corps. He helped lead wars throughout the world over a series of decades, before later becoming a vociferous opponent of American imperialism, declaring “war is a racket.”

Wilkerson spoke highly of Butler, referencing the late general’s famous quote: “Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents.”

“I think the problem that Smedley identified, quite eloquently actually,” Wilkerson said, “especially for a Marine — I had to say that as a soldier,” the retired Army colonel added with a laugh; “I think the problem is much deeper and more profound today, and much more subtle and sophisticated.”

Today, the military-industrial complex “is much more pernicious than Eisenhower ever thought it would be,” Wilkerson warned.

In his farewell address in 1961, former President Dwight D. Eisenhower famously cautioned Americans that the military and corporate interests were increasingly working together, contrary to the best interests of the citizenry. He called this phenomenon the military-industrial complex.

As a case study of how the contemporary military-industrial complex works, Wilkerson pointed to leading weapons corporations like Lockheed Martin, and their work with draconian, repressive Western-allied regimes in the Gulf, or in inflaming tensions in Korea.

“Was Bill Clinton’s expansion of NATO — after George H. W. Bush and [his Secretary of State] James Baker had assured Gorbachev and then Yeltsin that we wouldn’t go an inch further east — was this for Lockheed Martin, and Raytheon, and Boeing, and others, to increase their network of potential weapon sales?” Wilkerson asked.

“You bet it was,” he answered.

“Is there a penchant on behalf of the Congress to bless the use of force more often than not because of the constituencies they have and the money they get from the defense contractors?” Wilkerson continued.

Again, he answered his own question: “You bet.”

“It’s not like Dick Cheney or someone like that went and said let’s have a war because we want to make money for Halliburton, but it is a pernicious on decision-making,” the former Bush official explained. “And the fact that they donate so much money to congressional elections and to PACs and so forth is another pernicious influence.”

“Those who deny this are just being utterly naive, or they are complicit too,” Wilkerson added.

“And some of my best friends work for Lockheed Martin,” along with Raytheon, Boeing and Halliburton, he quipped.

Wilkerson — who in the same interview with Salon defended Edward Snowden, saying the whistle-blower performed an important service and did not endanger U.S. national security — was also intensely critical of the growing movement to “privatize public functions, like prisons.”

“I fault us Republicans for this majorly,” he confessed — although a good many prominent Democrats have also jumped on the neoliberal bandwagon. In a 2011 speech, for instance, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton declared, “It’s time for the United States to start thinking of Iraq as a business opportunity” for U.S. corporations.

Wilkerson lamented, “We’ve privatized the ultimate public function: war.”

“In many respects it is now private interests that benefit most from our use of military force,” he continued. “Whether it’s private security contractors, that are still all over Iraq or Afghanistan, or it’s the bigger-known defense contractors, like the number one in the world, Lockheed Martin.”

Journalist Antony Loewenstein detailed how the U.S. privatized its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in another interview with Salon. There are an estimated 30,000 military contractors working for the Pentagon in Afghanistan today; they outnumber U.S. troops three-to-one. Thousands more are in Iraq.

Lockheed Martin simply “plans to sell every aspect of missile defense that it can,” regardless of whether it is needed, Wilkerson said. And what is best to maximize corporate interest is by no means necessarily the same as what is best for average citizens.

“We dwarf the Russians or anyone else who sells weapons in the world,” the retired Army colonel continued.

“We are the death merchant of the world.”

Ben Norton is a politics staff writer at Salon. You can find him on Twitter at @BenjaminNorton.

Marenco
03-29-2016, 11:32 PM
Nice article. It's good to see an insider like Wilkerson speaking out.

ghengis86
03-30-2016, 04:53 AM
So NOW this guy grows a spine, when's he's retired? I'm so sick of these people who wait until after they're no longer in harms way to start speaking truth to power. So gutless.

juleswin
03-30-2016, 05:05 AM
So NOW this guy grows a spine, when's he's retired? I'm so sick of these people who wait until after they're no longer in harms way to start speaking truth to power. So gutless.

True and even now he is still not speaking the truth, just mostly criticizing republicans when democrats in reality, democrats are just as bad. This is a man that still believes Assad is a bad guy that needs to be removed (transitioned like he likes to call it) from leadership even though the Syrian people voted for him.

At this point, I really don't want to hear from people who failed when they were still in positions to make a difference. Now he is just a partisan who pretends to be impartial telling us something we all already know.

jmdrake
03-30-2016, 05:17 AM
So NOW this guy grows a spine, when's he's retired? I'm so sick of these people who wait until after they're no longer in harms way to start speaking truth to power. So gutless.

He retired early so that he could speak out. Not everybody is an Edward Snowden. Wilkerson is the one who spilled the beans in 2005 about the farce that was Colin Powell's 2003 WMD U.N. speech.

http://www.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/meast/08/19/powell.un/

jmdrake
03-30-2016, 05:19 AM
True and even now he is still not speaking the truth, just mostly criticizing republicans when democrats in reality, democrats are just as bad. This is a man that still believes Assad is a bad guy that needs to be removed (transitioned like he likes to call it) from leadership even though the Syrian people voted for him.

At this point, I really don't want to hear from people who failed when they were still in positions to make a difference. Now he is just a partisan who pretends to be impartial telling us something we all already know.

That's simply not true. Wilkerson compared the Syrian intelligence to the fake Iraq war intelligence.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/29/lawrence-wilkerson-syria-intelligence_n_3838896.html

juleswin
03-30-2016, 06:09 AM
That's simply not true. Wilkerson compared the Syrian intelligence to the fake Iraq war intelligence.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/29/lawrence-wilkerson-syria-intelligence_n_3838896.html

Au contraire, that is not what I got from reading the article. He just thinks that the 2 seems like its the same thing. This essentially saying that even after having a first hand seat to the Iraq war deception, listening to Wesley Clark expose the 7 wars in 5 years goal of the pentagon and seeing what they did in Libya with atrocity lies, he is still not sure about what is going on in Syria.

Again, I am talking about Wilkerson buying the narrative that one of the ways to end the Syrian conflict is to have a transitional govt to replace the Assad presidency even though the majority of Syrians want him. Actually it is true the same way a person fending off a rape would be free from harassment if they just allowed the rapist to have their way with them. Not because something is true means that you should support it, I call that truth immoral and should be rejected in place of a moral way of ending the conflict. If you think I am making it all up about Wilkerson calling for a transitional govt in Syria, just listen to the interview he gave to The real news network just this last week.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vje1PjTbCw

These people pretend to be exposing the truth when in reality all they do is give lip service to the desires of the non interventionist crowd. I mean, when these people are not talking about kicking Assad out, they are openly talking about carving Syria up like they have any right to do such a thing. Sadly, the latter includes Rand who has truly disappointed me when it comes to the Syrian crisis. Not total disappointment but disappointment enough to make me wanna stop listening when he starts talking about Syria.

jmdrake
03-30-2016, 11:59 AM
Au contraire, that is not what I got from reading the article. He just thinks that the 2 seems like its the same thing. This essentially saying that even after having a first hand seat to the Iraq war deception, listening to Wesley Clark expose the 7 wars in 5 years goal of the pentagon and seeing what they did in Libya with atrocity lies, he is still not sure about what is going on in Syria.

Ummmm.....how on earth did you not? Read it again. He stated in that article:

1) Democrats should be criticized for warmongering as much as republicans.

2) He didn't believe that Assad gassed his own people and even doubted if chemical weapons were used at all.


Again, I am talking about Wilkerson buying the narrative that one of the ways to end the Syrian conflict is to have a transitional govt to replace the Assad presidency even though the majority of Syrians want him.

Okay. That's not in the article that I posted nor is in the the OP. That said, even a Russian general has recently suggested that Assad should go.


Actually it is true the same way a person fending off a rape would be free from harassment if they just allowed the rapist to have their way with them. Not because something is true means that you should support it, I call that truth immoral and should be rejected in place of a moral way of ending the conflict. If you think I am making it all up about Wilkerson calling for a transitional govt in Syria, just listen to the interview he gave to The real news network just this last week.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vje1PjTbCw


I'll watch the tube later when I have a good connection. But either way, that's a far cry from your earlier claim that Wilkerson was being partisan and only criticizing Republicans and not criticizing Democrats. That claim simply isn't true.


These people pretend to be exposing the truth when in reality all they do is give lip service to the desires of the non interventionist crowd. I mean, when these people are not talking about kicking Assad out, they are openly talking about carving Syria up like they have any right to do such a thing. Sadly, the latter includes Rand who has truly disappointed me when it comes to the Syrian crisis. Not total disappointment but disappointment enough to make me wanna stop listening when he starts talking about Syria.

Well with this much I agree. It irks me that Rand Paul (and Ted Cruz) accept the claim that Assad gassed his own people as being true when there is no solid evidence that that is true. (Cruz stated that the other night but he did again go on to say that we shouldn't be trying to overthrow Assad.) I wish Ron had been more willing to be openly skeptical about 9/11. Wilkerson, to his credit, has questioned the "Assad gassed his own people" narrative. That said, Assad is a terrible man. He did accept CIA rendition prisoners and tortured these prisoners horribly on behalf of the U.S. One man, a Canadian citizen, turned out to be totally innocent. His saga is detailed in the book Ghost Plane by Stephen Grey. (The title of the book comes from the fact that the rendition planes were unregistered). Assad's goons torture of this man included razor blades on his genitals. Yes, Assad is a terrible man. Of course what does that say about the U.S.?

ZENemy
03-30-2016, 12:02 PM
we are the death merchants of the worrll.........oh look, someones wife is doing things!!!!!! carry on

Ronin Truth
03-30-2016, 01:16 PM
The U.N. Security Council members are world's biggest primary arms merchants. Coincidence?

timosman
03-30-2016, 01:48 PM
The U.N. Security Council members are world's biggest primary arms merchants. Coincidence?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=njCaRmpzxSo