The New Nation­al Defense Report Miss­es the Point

The New National Defense Report Misses the Point

Pol­i­tics

The New Nation­al Defense Report Miss­es the Point

The main threat to Amer­i­can safe­ty comes not from abroad, but from Wash­ing­ton.

The Pen­ta­gon. (Frontpage/Shutterstock)

The Amer­i­can pub­lic must be informed, explains the Com­mis­sion on the Nation­al Defense Strat­e­gy in a new report. Despite war pro­pa­gan­da dai­ly flood­ing Wash­ing­ton, the CNDS com­plained that peo­ple “have been inad­e­quate­ly informed by gov­ern­ment lead­ers of the threats to U.S. interests—including to people’s every­day lives—and what will be required to restore Amer­i­can glob­al pow­er and lead­er­ship.” 

In the Commission’s view, the Unit­ed States is at great risk. Threats are mul­ti­ply­ing around the globe. Only great effort can save the coun­try. Amer­i­cans must turn over more of their mon­ey and sac­ri­fice more of their lib­er­ties. They must be scared into com­pli­ance.

In fact, this is non­sense. For decades the Unit­ed States has been the most secure great pow­er ever. The U.S. has dom­i­nat­ed its con­ti­nent and entire hemi­sphere since the mid-19th cen­tu­ry. Sur­round­ed by deep waters east and west and weak neigh­bors north and south, Amer­i­ca is large­ly invul­ner­a­ble to attack. 

Which enabled it to become the most dom­i­nant great pow­er ever. With mid­dling effort at home, the U.S. turned into the deci­sive pow­er abroad. World War II left Amer­i­ca as the globe’s most pow­er­ful nation, with half the world’s eco­nom­ic pro­duc­tion as a foun­da­tion for the world’s most sophis­ti­cat­ed mil­i­tary. Almost all of its allies remain depen­dent on US mon­ey and pro­duc­tion. Today’s world is becom­ing mul­ti­po­lar, but mil­i­tary threats against the con­ti­nen­tal US remain min­i­mal, oth­er than assort­ed nuclear arse­nals, most impor­tant­ly Russia’s.

With Amer­i­cans liv­ing in an extra­or­di­nary secu­ri­ty cocoon, the 9/11 attacks came as a shock. Of America’s many con­flicts, only the Civ­il War occurred at home. And it end­ed 159 years ago. Com­pare the U.S. to the oth­er major pow­ers. Rus­sia, Ger­many, Chi­na, France, Japan, Ukraine, Iran, Iraq, South and North Korea, and so many oth­er nations have been attacked, invad­ed, occupied—often repeat­ed­ly, and some­times by the U.S.

The fact that Wash­ing­ton almost always fights over­seas demon­strates that US pol­i­cy is usu­al­ly offen­sive. Most of what Amer­i­ca does mil­i­tar­i­ly has lit­tle to do with its own secu­ri­ty. Wars of choice have been con­stan …