What happens when most of your military infrastructure is suddenly obsolete?
The emperor was the last to realize he was naked. This is not unusual, emperors are the last to find out anything. Who has the fortitude to tell them the truth, especially an upsetting truth? And so it is with the US’s empire, the existence of which most of its citizens, media organs, and officials are unaware or won’t acknowledge. The truth is, the American empire, acknowledged or not, is over. It will be years before that’s accepted by the governing class. They’ll never officially inform their subjects, who are stuck with the tab for its immensely wasteful spending.
Empires are built on military strength. The American empire was no exception. Many Americans still think the US military enjoys the dominance it had back in 1946, a notion Vladimir Putin buried March 1. On that date he announced new weaponry which will render our naval surface fleet, ground forces, worldwide bases, and antiballistic systems obsolete (see here, here, and here). The US military leadership has grudgingly acknowledged many of Putin’s claims.
The unmistakable conclusion: most US military spending is the welfare state with epaulets. It pays for weapons, bases, and personnel whose uselessness would be revealed within half an hour after a non-nuclear war with Russia began. We have no conventional defenses against Russia’s new weaponry.
It’s cold comfort that US land installation, submarine, and airborne nuclear deterrents are still relevant. If Russia or anyone else launched a conventional or nuclear attack against us, we can annihilate the aggressor. The destruction we bore would be matched in kind, but the planet might be rendered uninhabitable.
Fortunately, it can be said with 99 percent certainty that Russia has no desire to launch a war, nuclear or conventional, against the US. That nation wants what many nations and US citizens want: for the US government to leave it alone. Although spending only 10 percent of what the US does on its military and intelligence, Russia now has the muscle to back it up. The Chinese are right behind.
The story doesn’t say what happened to the emperor and his courtiers after the lad revealed his nudity, but we can assume the emperor’s smarter toadies started heading for the exits. Why stay on a vessel that can’t navigate the shoals of reality?
Welfare states—giving money to people who haven’t earned it—so inevitably lead to corruption that they might as well be synonyms. For years the US has bought compliance with its dictates within its confederated empire, picking up the lion’s share of the defense tab. Nations hosting US military bases welcome the jobs and spending just like congressional districts back home.
Even before Putin’s March 1 announcement, asking how non-nuclear bases, domestic and abroad, actually made anyone in the US safer occasioned awkward silence. Russia’s military spending and economy are dwarfed by the US’s and its EU protectorate’s; a Russian invasion of Europe, even with its new weapons, would be suicidal. The chances of Russia or any other nation invading the US are even more remote. Russia has been invaded far more often than it has invaded, and other than securing its own neighborhood, exhibits no desire to launch offensive warfare. Putin stressed the new weapons’ role defensive role.
After the announcement, US bases will be targets, the personnel they house hostages. That includes the mobile bases known as the US surface fleet, from aircraft carriers on down. They have no defense against the Kinzhal (Dagger) hypersonic missile, aircraft-launched with a range of 2000 kilometers, capable of reaching Mach 10.
Defending on sea or land against the Russians’ new nuclear powered cruise missiles—which have essentially unlimited range—is possible but problematic, especially if they’re launched in a swarm. Location has become irrelevant. It doesn’t matter if the US outpost is in Germany, Texas, or floating in the middle of the Pacific, they’re all vulnerable.
Poland’s recent proposal for the US to establish a military base there, at Poland’s expense, possibly to be named Fort Trump, is a strong contender for the year’s, perhaps the decade’s, most insane idea. Fort Courage, from the zany F Troop TV show, would be a more appropriate name. It’s one thing to hop on the US military spending gravy train, that’s just venal and corrupt. To install a useless military base and pay for it as well is incalculably stupid. The goal of politics is to get someone else to pay for your stupid ideas, but perhaps they do politics differently in Poland.
If you’re running one of the US’s protectorates, why should you accept the empire’s dictates when it can no longer defend your country? The question has added piquancy in Europe. Setting aside Russia’s new weapons, how would a country that’s botched military engagements in second string nations like Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and Syria defend Europe short of nuclear war? If the answer is that it can’t, where does US leverage come from? The US demands more useless defense spending and presses Europe to curtail or cease profitable trade relations with Russia and Iran, both of which pose a minimal threat to Europe’s safety. Why should Europe comply?
President Trump has questioned the US subsidization of Europe’s defense. How much effort would the US make to defend Macedonia or Latvia? If the answer is not much, or if it can’t actually protect those or any other European country, then subsidies are the only “glue” for the American Empire, European division. It’s unclear if Trump realizes he can’t have his cake and eat it too. He may be happy to see Europe come unglued. Bankruptcy looms; the US has to start cutting spending somewhere.
It should come as no surprise that some countries aren’t toeing the US line, faithfully parroted by the EU. Turkey, straddling Europe and Asia, is edging toward Russia and China, and the goodies promised by their Belt and Road Initiative.
Hungary’s Prime Minister Victor Orban and Italy’s Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, head of the League party that shares power there, are seeking better relations with Russia, notwithstanding the US and Europe’s long running demonization of Vladimir Putin. Those two are also challenging received wisdom on the desirability of open borders and unlimited immigration. They and other nationalist leaders are finding an increasingly receptive audience among Europe’s voters.
The two Koreas are also writing their own script, one that diverges from the one the US has written for them since the end of the Korean War in 1953. Among those who favor the status quo, the line is that impoverished albeit nuclear-armed North Korea poses an offensive threat to South Korea, Japan, and the US. Kim Jong Un is singing a beguiling song of denuclearization, rapprochement, trade, and peace, but he’s not to be trusted. Only if he agrees beforehand to the complete subjugation of his country can negotiations proceed.
South Korean President Moon Jae-in has other ideas. The people of both Koreas want reconciliation and an end to the war (there’s an armistice but no official peace). Moon appears willing to entertain the possibility that Kim would rather bring his country into the 21st century than launch nuclear strikes. The impetus for negotiations has come from these two leaders and Trump has jumped on the bandwagon, much to the consternation of a motley collection of swamp denizens who profit from current arrangements. Peace may come in spite of their efforts to prevent it.
As the US government continues to spend money for weapons, bases, and personnel our putative enemy can obliterate, defend countries that are under no threat, and intervene in conflicts that promise only interminable stalemate and lost blood and treasure, the question presents itself: are those running the empire and its satrapies stupid, rapaciously corrupt, evil, or all of the above? We’ll take the obvious: all of the above.
Those who have placed their safety in the hands of the US’s would-be emperors can no longer afford to ignore the emperors’ nudity…and insanity. The empire is fraying at the edges and it won’t be long before fraying becomes unraveling. Nobody respects a naked emperor, certainly not one who doesn’t even realize he’s naked.
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – Olduvai.ca
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect « Financial Survival Network
Pingback: SLL: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect | Western Rifle Shooters Association
Which makes one wonder what we are testing just north of Vegas
LikeLike
Pingback: Naked Emperors Never Get Much Respect – Viralmount
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect | peoples trust toronto
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don't Get Much Respect – students loan
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don't Get Much Respect - Novus Vero
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don't Get Much Respect - open mind news
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – The Deplorable Patriots
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don't Get Much Respect | Newzsentinel
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don't Get Much Respect | StockTalk Journal
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – Wall Street Karma
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect - aroundworld24.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect - forexdemoaccountfree.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don't Get Much Respect – The Trading Letter
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect - megaprojectfx-forex.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – forex-4you.com, الفوركس بالنسبة لك
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – Binarybrokersblog.com – binary options trade forex
There is so much wrong with this post that I just don’t have time to unpack it, so I’ll just talk about “Wonder-weapons” (which pop up about as often as “peak oil”, that is approximately every decade for the last century and a half).
1. Do they actually exist? If they do, why give away an edge by announcing them?
2. Do they actually work (reliably)?
3. Can you produce, and deploy, them in sufficient numbers?
4. Are they truly immune to counter-measures? An affirmative answer becomes more dubious with each tick of the clock (literally). (see #1)
I was in Japan when Major Belenko defected with a MIG-25 Foxbat to Japan. A Wonder-weapon that aviation pundits insisted (prior to defection) rendered all air-superiority fighters of the West obsolete. Game over. F-15 and F-14 not even in the running, much less a match. Analysis of the aircraft was enlightening, pro and con, but more so was the description Belenko gave in a book, authored not long after, concerning how a front line Russian air-superiority fighter squadron functioned (or didn’t) day-to-day. I also had acquaintances involved with the SALT verification process. Their observations were also very informative. Militaries are not institutions that change radically, generally speaking, by mere change of management, and the more sophisticated the weapon the more dedicated the support/maintenance requirement. I do not doubt that Russians can, or will, fight; but how effectively on any given day/location/unit is a different matter.
Trump and Putin have a couple of things in common. They both are not politicians by craft. They both fully appreciate the power of perception better than most politicians.
Anyone who gets sweaty palms over Putin’s Wonder-weapon announcement I probably want to play poker with, and hope they bring lots of cash.
LikeLike
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – top10brokersbinaryoptions.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – fastforexprofit.com, الفوركس بالنسبة لك
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – forex analytics forexpic.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect - forex analytics Forex Factory provides information to professional forex traders; lightning-fast forex news; bottomless forex forum; famously-reliable forex calendar; aggregate ...
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – Forex news forex trade
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – stocksoptionsandforex.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – comparforex.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect - entertainment-ask.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – customchakra.com
Pingback: Nu Empereurs N’Obtenez pas Beaucoup de Respect – forex-enligne-fr.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – forexreadymax.info
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – secretsforex.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – mudahnyaforex.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – 4-forex.info
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don't Get Much Respect | AlltopCash.com
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – myforexx.info
Maybe Mr. Putin does not want war with Amerika. Who could blame him? Where is the profit in that? He can just sit back, accumulate more specie, sell more natural gas to Europistan, and watch this syphilitic country continue to self-destruct. And, if his military is so invincible and state-of-the art, why has he not put an end to this comic opera in the Ukraine? Those annoying NATO lickspittles are right on his border.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Pingback: Backlash! U.S. dollar as ammunition in financial war could blow up in America’s face | downtherabbithole972
Pingback: Daily Reading #30F | thinkpatriot
How quickly (and conveniently) Americans forgot the Cuban Missile Crisis.
LikeLike
Pingback: Naked Emperors Don’t Get Much Respect – Astute News
Pingback: Nothing New Under The Sun 2016
Pingback: Naked Emperors, and Empires With Outdated Militaries Don’t Get Much Respect – Emma Olive
Pingback: Les empereurs nus et les empires dont les forces militaires sont dépassées n’obtiennent pas beaucoup de respect – DE LA GRANDE VADROUILLE A LA LONGUE MARGE
Pingback: Donald Trump, świat się śmieje! – Mandaryn
Re your ‘welfare states’ gibe, Robert: Do you consider that you’ve actually done enough to ‘earn’ the opulent comfort in which you live? You know: that old statistic of USAmericans, comprising 5% of the Earth’s people, but consuming 25% of its resources – always acquired by rapacious gangster capitalism, backed-up at all times by military gangster thuggery, of course, General Smedley Butler style. Doesn’t that arrangement strike you as the entire US – or its richest 20% anyway – being a welfare state…? Enforced on the world by a mafia-style global protection racket?
I take it that you’re one of those USAmericans who immediately go berserk on hearing the noble word ‘socialism’. :O)
Reading your CV – that of a typically privileged USAmerican bourgeois, – I can understand your illusion that you’ve ‘earned’ all that you have. But do you think that – oh, I dunno, the average Bangladeshi, let’s say – would look at the amount of grinding work s/he has to do just to earn a crust, and consider that – yes indeedy – USAmerican Robert really has ‘earned’ all the huge stack of wealth and privilege that he enjoys? Somehow I doubt that.
And suppose you become one of the millions of USAmericans who have fallen off the gravy train just lately, often through no fault of their own, and who now have to live in their cars, or even just on the street under any shelter that they can knock up. Don’t you think that they too might welcome the humane and decent socialist idea of a basic safety net for all citizens, as a right, as a necessary characteristic of any >actually-honourable< human society that's worth having: solidarity and principled mutual aid, with a strict, legally-enforced limit on how much excess wealth any person or class may hold, rather than the current USAmerican obsession with insane hyper-individualism?
After all, with all the taxes that the US is currently wasting on its ineffectual and moribund military machine, if you cut the war-industries' public subsidy down to about current Russian levels of expenditure, let's say, y'all could afford a basic, decent, socialistic welfare state for all citizens easily, publicly-funded universal health service and all. As they do in resurgent, post-USSR Russia…
LikeLike
Let’s just do some math. Let’s say 1/2 the defense/intelligence budget is wasted. That’s $500 billion. The federal budget is around $4 trillion, and let’s say $2 trillion currently goes from creditors’ and taxpayers’ pockets into other people’s pockets. That includes $500 billion for debt service, and $1.5 trillion for social security, medicare, Obamacare, corporate welfare, farm subidies, other subsidies and the like.
Unfortunately, we have to pay debt service and that tab is going up. But between defense waste, which I put at $500 billion but is undoubtedly higher, and money going from from one pocket to another (with an appreciable part of that coming to rest in government, lobbyists’, lawyers’, etc pockets) we’re at $2 trillion, or half the federal budget. Let’s say there are 100 million people in this country in the dire straits you describe. Divide that $2 trillion by 100 million, and that’s $20,000 we could give to every single one of those 100 million, or $80,000 for a family of four.
In other words, if this country was truly interested in eradicating poverty and providing a basic safety net, it could have been done long ago. Just writing a check to people, however, and letting them spend their money in a market economy would dramatically reduce the power and control of the government. That control, under cover of humanitarian rhetoric and patriotic jingoism for welfare and warfare state programs respectively, is why taxpayers and creditors send $4 trillion a year to Washington. Reforming the military and our conceptions of foreign policy could be one huge source of funds for the kind of basic safety net you advocate, but that’s only 1/4 of the budget, and pretending the other 3/4 isn’t also a huge source waste that could also fund a “write-a-check” safety net is wilful ignorance..
Anyone one lives in the US is fortunate to be living off the legacy capitalism, not socialism, has bequeathed it. Now as the US moves towards socialism and ever expanding government, that legacy has been spent down and we have plunged into debt. As I said in a recent column, “Socialism Won.” Capitalism is the economics of free people, and it is freedom, not socialism’s inevitable coercion and exploitation of the productive, that builds and turns raw materials and human ingenuity into progress and wealth. I have frequently criticized US foreign policy as wasteful, immoral, and exploitive, favoring instead the foreign policy delineated in John Quincy Adams’ famous “In Search of Monsters” speech. However, to pretend that the plight of those in Bangladesh is a result of the US or other nation’s success and not rampant corruption and the almost complete absence of the rights of producers to contract and keep what they’ve earned is simply erroneous.
Anyone who lives in the US is privileged to enjoy its enormous and now mostly squandered legacy of capitalism, freedom, and human rights, including the essential rights of property and contract. I acknowledge an enormous debt to those responsible, but acknowledge no debt at all to anyone who says it’s my responsibility to support them, via either the welfare or the warfare state. I’ve already “donated” a substantial portion of my time, my life, through the taxes I’ve paid, to supporting them. Nothing stops you personally from helping those in need that you choose to help. However, I will never acknowledge the “right” of you or anybody else to brandish a gun and take mine or any other productive person’s means for your ends. That’s theft, and it will always be so, and it matters not at all that something called government is brandishing the gun.
LikeLike
Pingback: THE EARTHIAN 4 – Effective Learning Report