Below is another interesting article on President Dwight D. Eisenhower's 
Farewell address to the Nation:

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Excerpt:

Op-Ed Contributor
What Ike Got Right
By JAMES LEDBETTER
Published: December 13, 2010

LAST week the National Archives released a trove of drafts and notes 
that shed new light on President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s farewell 
address, in which he warned America about the “military-industrial complex.”
Related

The release comes just in time for the speech’s 50th anniversary next 
month. And so while scholars and historians use these documents to 
scrutinize the evolution of the speech’s famous phrase, it’s worth 
asking a broader question: does America still have a military-industrial 
complex, and should we be as worried about it as Eisenhower was?

By one measure, the answer to the first question is yes. Over the past 
50 years there have been very few years in which the United States has 
spent less on the military than it did the year before.

This has remained true whether the country is actively fighting a war, 
whether it has an obvious and well-armed enemy or whether Democrats or 
Republicans run the White House and Congress. Despite regular 
expectations that the United States will enjoy a peace dividend, we 
continue to spend more on the military than the countries with the next 
15 largest military budgets combined.

Such perpetual growth seems to confirm Eisenhower’s concern about the 
size and influence of the military. It used to be, he said, that armies 
should grow and shrink as needed; in the Biblical metaphor of the 
speech, he observed that “American makers of plowshares could, with time 
and as required, make swords as well.”

But World War II and the early cold war changed that dynamic, creating 
what Eisenhower called “a permanent armaments industry of vast 
proportions.” It is not a stretch to believe that this armaments 
industry — which profits not only from domestic sales but also from tens 
of billions of dollars in annual exports — manipulates public policy to 
perpetuate itself.

But Eisenhower was concerned about more than just the military’s size; 
he also worried about its relationship to the American economy and 
society, and that the economy risked becoming a subsidiary of the 
military. His alarm was understandable: at the time the military 
represented over half of all government spending and more than 10 
percent of America’s gross domestic product.

Today those figures are not quite as troubling. While military spending 
as a percentage of gross domestic product has been going up as a result 
of 9/11 and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the overall trend since 
1961 is substantially down, thanks to the tremendous growth in America’s 
nonmilitary economy and the shift in government spending to nonmilitary 
expenditures.

Yet spending numbers do not tell the whole story. Eisenhower warned that 
the influence of the military-industrial complex was “economic, 
political, even spiritual” and that it was “felt in every city, every 
statehouse, every office of the federal government.” He exhorted 
Americans to break away from our reliance on military might as a 
guarantor of liberty and “use our power in the interests of world peace 
and human betterment.”

On this score, Eisenhower may well have seen today’s America as losing 
the battle against the darker aspects of the military-industrial 
complex. He was no pacifist, but he was a lifelong opponent of what he 
called a “garrison state,” in which policy and rights are defined by the 
shadowy needs of an all-powerful military elite.

The United States isn’t quite a garrison state today. But Eisenhower 
would likely have been deeply troubled, in the past decade, by the 
torture at Abu Ghraib, the use of martial authority to wiretap Americans 
without warrants and the multiyear detention of suspects at Guantánamo 
Bay without due process.

Finally, even if the economy can bear the immediate costs of the 
military, Eisenhower would be shocked at its mounting long-term costs. 
Most of the Iraq war expenses were paid for by borrowing, and Americans 
will shoulder those costs, plus interest, for many years to come.

A strong believer in a balanced budget, Eisenhower in his farewell 
address also told Americans to “avoid the impulse to live only for 
today, plundering for our own ease and convenience the precious 
resources of tomorrow.” Too many of today’s so-called fiscal 
conservatives conveniently overlook the budgetary consequences of 
military spending.

Eisenhower’s worst fears have not yet come to pass. But his warning 
against the “unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the 
military-industrial complex” is as urgent today as ever.

James Ledbetter is the author of the forthcoming “Unwarranted Influence: 
Dwight D. Eisenhower and the Military-Industrial Complex.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/14/opinion/14ledbetter.html?_r=1&nl=todaysheadlines&emc=a212

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Regards,

LelandJ



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