(cross-posted with permission from FredDrumlevitch.blogspot.com)
With that title, I’m referring not to the color of soldiers’ uniforms or St. Patrick’s Day attire, but rather, to modern attempts by the armaments makers to greenwash their operations, and to the taxpayer greenbacks that pay for American militarism instead of genuine environmental preservation and other beneficial programs.
Of course, “Raytheon Celebrates  Earth Day”. From their corporate  website:
http://www.kvoa.com/news/raytheon-innovates-new-ways-of-going-green/
(The above link provides access  to both the video and a slightly-inaccurate transcript). 
Though not usually associated  with armaments suppliers, greenwashing of corporate activity is nothing new, and  I presume that the above local “news” segment was supposed to make viewers feel  all warm and fuzzy about the merchants of death at Raytheon. (How, though, is  beyond my comprehension, unless the viewers are regarded as complete morons by  both Raytheon and KVOA — which may well be the case).
Depending on one’s point of  view, the military-industrial complex may or may not be a giant sinkhole  swallowing desperately-needed national resources and perverting national  priorities, but none of that is even an issue, all’s right with the world, for  they recycle their soft-drink cans and office supplies! While high-efficiency  lighting or solar panels might be of benefit for logistical reasons within a  combat zone, can anyone in their right mind believe that recycling — or even the  grandest of environmental initiatives — by a defense contractor stateside makes  a laudable difference, in the context of the overall waste of national resources  by the military and its suppliers? “Inane” doesn’t even begin to describe this  gushing television segment. The presentation by KVOA of this greenwashing tripe  as newsworthy, with no reference to broader concerns and not even a trace of  irony, must rate as one of the clearest indicators I’ve ever seen of the  journalistic bankruptcy of local television “news” reporting.
One needn’t be a pacifist to  recognize that the American military-industrial complex now plays a pathological  role in the course of contemporary human events. And in fact I am not a  pacifist; I understand that in our present world, some military capability is  necessary. But the true problems of our nation receive, at best, token  attention, while unnecessary and futile wars drag on year after year, taking an  incalculable toll. All but the blind can see America's basic military readiness  harmed, soldiers demoralized, or worse, made physical or psychological  casualties of our insane interminable wars. All but those suffering from  terminal American exceptionalism or denial should be able to understand the  immorality of foreign civilians injured and killed — and the new enemies thereby  created. Technology will not provide a magic solution; our high-tech  semi-robotic instruments of war may reduce U.S. casualties, but they cannot mask  the destruction and hatred created on the receiving end of our actions. And used  or unused, the costs of our war machines, and indeed, of our entire military,  are bankrupting the nation, and have a massive “opportunity cost” of  better things not done.
Perhaps the most  under-appreciated damage involves what has been done to our national ideals and  the political process. For decades, both officeholders and candidates have been  afraid to take rational positions with regard to our military spending, our  worldwide military presence, and our military actions. For politicians, mustn’t  be seen as weak or hesitant; for the human cogs of the war machine tasked with  keeping the pipeline of cannon fodder full, mustn’t be seen as in any way  reducing the flow. Washington, D.C., or Joint Base Lewis-McChord in Washington  State, the result is the same. Even the term “Defense Department”, for what used  to be called, more honestly, the “Department of War”, hints at the disconnect  between our perceptions/actions and reality. Nearly every military action, even  an unjustified, massive invasion and occupation of a sovereign foreign country,  such as the United States led in Iraq, has been rebranded as “defense” — and  since, in the popular mind, one can never have enough defense, an unending  string of wars is rationalized. Should our present ones show signs of winding  down, well, the chicken-hawks of American politics, the CEOs of our military  manufacturers and mercenary armies, and the visiting foreign heads of state, all  are highly skilled at an improvisational syncopation that will promote new  conflict.
In this time of impending  sequestration and other budgetary pressures, the “dog-and-pony” shows of the  weapons manufacturers and the armed services have only just begun. They will  cycle through multiple themes. Most will revolve around fears that will  reference past attacks on the United States — but conveniently ignore that many  of the weapons systems being purchased at extravagant cost are of little  relevance to defense against any attacks we are likely to face, and that  bountiful weapons combined with an American psychology of overreach have played  a significant role in creating many of our international problems. Some will  pander to concerns about the jobs that will be lost if we reduce military  spending. (Attention/Achtung! My fellow 19th century American Southerners/20th  century Germans, we must continue slavery/the concentration camps, lest  unemployment rise!). The Pentagon and its contractors, having over the course of  decades masterfully distributed military bases and manufacturing across so many  Congressional districts, are now able to exploit economic-based fears of  cutbacks to enlist the support of Congress against necessary military cuts.  Together they will also leverage the complex blend of patriotism and justified  pride at the historical role of the U.S. in fighting tyranny during WWII, now  exploiting such feelings to imply that a never-ending worldwide projection of  U.S. force in the service of supposed liberation is desirable — never mind that  our actions in Vietnam and Iraq and Afghanistan did not go according to plan,  and future ones may not either. Given the diversity of themes used to influence  political opinion in favor of irrationally high levels of military spending,  perhaps it ultimately is not surprising that they have thrown in a bit of  greenwashing too.
For those with an interest in  the ecological opportunity costs of U.S. militarism, consider this: In an  article published in Science magazine in 2001, Stuart Pimm and colleagues  examined the costs of preserving a significant fraction of the world’s  biodiversity. They estimated then that the preservation of twenty-five  biodiversity “hotspots” plus the acquisition of tropical wilderness preserves  could be achieved for a one-time cost of approximately $25 billion for  terrestrial ones, and an additional $2.5 billion for marine reserves. While  species numbers have significant correlations to area (see here,  and here),  and therefore preservation would ideally include more land than the Pimm et al.  proposal, implementation of their proposal would be a good starting point  towards the preservation of biodiversity. Assuming that costs have quadrupled in  the intervening years, such preservation could be achieved at a ONE-TIME current  cost of $110 billion. Current U.S. “defense”  spending, stripped of its creative accounting, is well over six times that  figure PER YEAR.
Recommended reading on the  topic of military spending and related politics: anything by Andrew  Bacevich.
He can be reached at: FredDrumlevitch12345 (at) gmail.com
Text Copyright Fred Drumlevitch  

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