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http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-oped0114chapmanjan14,0,32500.column


Chicago Tribune
January 14, 2010


Obama: A hawk?
Steve Chapman 


-As it is, the United States spends more on defense than all the other 
countries on Earth combined. Yet we persist in thinking of ourselves as 
endangered by foreign countries that are military pipsqueaks. 
Obama shares this view. He thinks the only problem with the American military 
is there isn't enough of it. He's expanding the size of both the Army and the 
Marine Corps. That's right: After we begin leaving Iraq, the biggest military 
undertaking in two decades, we won't need a smaller force. We'll need a bigger 
one. 


Anyone who was hoping the current administration would bring a modest 
downsizing of the nation's defense establishment and global military role has 
to be feeling like Bernard Madoff's investors. Escalation is under way in 
Afghanistan, the Army is expanding, and the Pentagon is on the all-you-can-eat 
diet. 

The American political system is set up to persuade citizens that they must 
choose between starkly different policies. In reality, campaigns are mostly a 
showy exercise in what Sigmund Freud called the "narcissism of small 
differences." 

When it comes to defense, history suggests that the two major parties offer a 
choice on the order of McDonald's and Burger King. Anyone looking back 50 years 
from now at objective indicators would have trouble identifying a meaningful 
difference between the current president and the last one. 

For that matter, it's easy to assume that when President Barack Obama began 
addressing national security policy, he accidentally picked up John McCain's 
platform instead of his own. Critics suspect Obama is a closet Muslim. But 
maybe his real secret is that he's a closet Republican. 

The administration and its opponents both make much of its plan to withdraw all 
U.S. combat forces from Iraq by this summer and to pull the rest out by 2012. 
What both prefer to forget is that the previous president agreed to the same 
timetable. Obama's policy on the war he once opposed is not similar to Bush's: 
It is identical. 

Afghanistan? Dick Cheney faults the president for allegedly failing to "talk 
about how we win," as if Obama were doing far less than the Bush 
administration. In fact, Obama has agreed to more than triple the U.S. troop 
presence in a war that his predecessor only talked about winning. McCain called 
for a "surge" in Afghanistan like the one in Iraq. Obama has given it to him. 

Republicans nonetheless entertain the fantasy that at heart, Obama is a 
pacifist, bent on gutting our military might and naively trusting the good 
faith of our adversaries. Bush White House adviser Karl Rove recently 
complained that under this administration, "defense spending is being 
flattened: Between 2009 and 2010, military outlays will rise 3.6 percent while 
nondefense discretionary spending climbs 12 percent."

Read that again: Rove believes that when defense spending rises 3.6 percent, 
it's not really rising. Why? Because the rest of the budget is growing faster. 
By that logic, if I gained 10 pounds over the holidays but Rove gained 20, I'd 
need to have my pants taken in. 

As it is, the United States spends more on defense than all the other countries 
on Earth combined. Yet we persist in thinking of ourselves as endangered by 
foreign countries that are military pipsqueaks. 

Obama shares this view. He thinks the only problem with the American military 
is there isn't enough of it. He's expanding the size of both the Army and the 
Marine Corps. That's right: After we begin leaving Iraq, the biggest military 
undertaking in two decades, we won't need a smaller force. We'll need a bigger 
one. 

Conservative talk-show host Sean Hannity accuses the president of "cutting back 
on defense," but he must be holding his chart upside down. The basic Pentagon 
budget (excluding money for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars) is scheduled to go 
up every year.

Over the next five years, defense spending, adjusted for inflation, would be 
higher than it was in the last five years, when Fox News commentators did not 
complain about inadequate funding. That's not counting the increases requested 
by Defense Secretary Robert Gates to provide an additional boost of nearly $60 
billion over those five years.

What all this suggests is that Iraq and Afghanistan have taught us nothing 
about the folly of invading other countries and trying to turn them into modern 
democracies. The essential theme of the administration's national security 
policy is reflexive continuity. Why else would we need a bigger military except 
to do more of the same? 

So we are stuck with the consensus that has ruled Washington for decades - the 
expensive, aggressive policy that has inflated the federal budget and bogged us 
down in two unsuccessful wars while furnishing an endless, priceless recruiting 
message for Islamic terrorists. 

Too bad. None of this would have happened if Barack Obama had been elected.
===========================
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