There Will Be No Peace Dividend After Afghanistan
The price we pay for Wall Street's imperialism...
There Will Be No Peace Dividend After Afghanistan
Financial Times
January 24, 2013
Pg. 11
By Joseph Stiglitz and Linda Bilmes
Nearly 12 years after the US-led invasion of Afghanistan began, a
war-weary America is getting ready to leave. But there will be little in
the way of a peace dividend for the US economy once the fighting stops.
The direct costs of the war are already $700bn. The original mission
was to root out al-Qaeda and the Taliban. But in 2003, the US shifted
nearly all of its attention and resources to Iraq. The Taliban regrouped
and strengthened in Afghanistan, making the conflict far more
expensive. Meanwhile, al-Qaeda shifted operations into Pakistan, Yemen
and Mali, where France this month sent troops.
US forces have
struggled in Afghanistan’s mountainous terrain, where getting supplies
and munitions has been a complex logistical exercise. Then came the
ill-fated “surge” strategy, which put 30,000 more US troops on the
ground with little if any military gain. There were 3,000 attacks on US
and allied forces in 2012 – a figure little changed from 2009, when
President Barack Obama’s administration decided on the change in
strategy.
The surge itself was expensive. But the way we
conducted the war unnecessarily increased its costs. For instance, the
closure of the land route through Pakistan for eight months in reprisal
for a US drone attack in November 2011 that inadvertently killed 24
Pakistani soldiers added billions to the transport bill. Another $90bn
has been devoted to “reconstruction” aid in Afghanistan – the largest
amount spent by the US since the Marshall plan, with little to show for
it. Endemic corruption among local contractors and officials has drained
money from the budget.
Much of this red ink will dry up once
Nato troops withdraw. But the true cost of the war is only just
beginning. Indeed, the costs after withdrawal may exceed those during
the war. Choices made in the past decade mean high costs for years to
come – and will constrain other national security spending.
In
2008, when we wrote The Three Trillion Dollar War, our book on the costs
of the Iraq war, we predicted that costs of disability and healthcare
benefits for recent war veterans would grow enormously. With nearly one
in two returning troops suffering some form of disability – ranging from
depression to multiple amputation – the reality far exceeds our
estimates. The number of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans receiving
government medical care has grown to more than 800,000, and most have
applied for permanent disability benefits. Yielding to political
pressure, the White House and Congress have boosted veteran’s benefits,
invested in additional staff and technology, expanded mental health
treatments and made it easier to qualify for disability pay. But the
number of claims keeps climbing. The Department of Veterans’ Affairs
struggles to cope with its backlog.
The VA’s budget is likely
to hit $140bn this year from $50bn in 2001. In previous wars, the bill
for benefits came due decades later – the peak year for paying second
world war benefits was 1969. Now, with much higher survival rates, more
generous benefits, and new, expensive treatments, the eventual costs of
caring for veterans of the Afghanistan war will exceed $1tn. To put
these numbers into perspective, the debate surrounding the fiscal cliff
has centred on expenditure cuts over 10 years of $1tn-$2tn.
There are other costly legacies. To recruit volunteers to fight in
highly unpopular wars, the military adopted higher pay scales and
enhanced healthcare benefits both for those serving and their families
and for those who retired. Even though the Pentagon – watching its
personnel costs soar – is asking Congress to roll back some of these
benefits, they are politically untouchable. The result is that total
personnel costs will soon reach one-third of the total defence budget.
Spending on Tricare, the healthcare programme for the US military and
their families, is likely to reach $56bn this year. Tricare is growing
even faster than Medicare or Medicaid, and will soon consume 10 per cent
of the defence budget.
Meanwhile, there is a huge price tag
for replacing ordinary equipment that has been consumed during the wars –
not least because of our policy of outsourcing maintenance to sometimes
dodgy local contractors. There is also the US pledge to help prop up
the Afghan police and army for the next decade – expected to run to
$5bn-$8bn a year. The legacy of expensive commitments will force the
Pentagon to make difficult choices – for example, reducing the size of
the army and investing in more unmanned robotic weapons.
The US
has already borrowed $2tn to finance the Afghanistan and Iraq wars – a
major component of the $9tn debt accrued since 2001, along with those
arising from the financial crisis and the tax cuts implemented by
President George W. Bush. Today, as the country considers how to improve
its balance sheet, it could have been hoped that the ending of the wars
would provide a large peace dividend, such as the one resulting from
the end of the cold war that helped us to invest more in butter and less
in guns. Instead, the legacy of poor decision-making from the expensive
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq will live on in a continued drain on our
economy – long after the last troop returns to American soil.
The writers are respectively a recipient of the 2001 Nobel Prize in economics, and a professor at the Harvard Kennedy School.