Buy war industry’s political theater?

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Hurry, hurry. There’s no time for thinking; it’s time to act. Washington’s permanent war lobby has worked itself into a veritable lather. The proper Pentagon press leaks have been made, op-eds written, talk show commandoes deployed.

No less influential a military mind than the Washington Post’s David Broder declares that even a bad decision about Afghanistan would be better than a postponed decision. Conceding that “a flood of leaks” has shown that “the perfect course of action does not exist,” Broder nevertheless counsels haste. “[T]he urgent necessity,” he writes “is to make a decision — whether or not it is right.”

Read that again. Better to do something stupid, the man says, than for President Obama to ask too many tough questions.

Not even about such seemingly consequential matters, according to White House counter-leaks, as the Afghan government’s epic corruption, whether or not Gen. Stanley McChrystal’s counterinsurgency plan includes an exit strategy, and how the United States can sustain a troop “surge” in Afghanistan estimated to cost $1 million, per soldier, per year.

There’s another sentence to read twice. One million tax dollars to support each American soldier in Afghanistan, every year. A substantial proportion, alas, spent flying coffins home to Dover AFB.

Almost every time you turn on the television, somebody’s carrying on about the projected trillion-dollar cost of Democratic health-insurance reforms — derived by multiplying the $100 billion yearly cost by 10, and often by ignoring the projected $11 billion yearly savings to the U.S. budget deficit.

Pentagon spending this year alone, however, columnist David Sirota points out, is projected at $673 billion, for a 10-year total of $6.73 trillion. That’s assuming costs don’t rise. (Fat chance.) Giving McChrystal the soldiers he wants, along with training and equipping an Afghan army of dubious loyalty, is projected to cost an additional $40 to $50 billion each year. Yet nobody’s supposed to ask how anything that happens in that remote land could possibly justify the costs.

Time was when Republican politicians sneered at “nation-building” — particularly in remote places like Afghanistan that aren’t nations to begin with. Today, however, to think is to “dither.” Virtually every pundit in Washington appears to have accepted former vice president Dick Cheney’s formulation. Never mind Cheney’s own eight-year record in Afghanistan: The time for action is now.

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