Vicenza is a beautitul northern Italian town that is a United Nation Heritage Site and home to Palladio's Villa Rotundo. Next door to them we store mountains of explosives. Your tax dollars at work.
Picking Up a
$170 Billion Tab
How U.S. Taxpayers Are Paying the Pentagon to Occupy the Planet
By David Vine
How U.S. Taxpayers Are Paying the Pentagon to Occupy the Planet
By David Vine
“Are you
monitoring the construction?” asked the middle-aged man on a bike accompanied by
his dog.
“Ah, sì,”
I replied in my barely passable Italian.
“Bene,”
he answered. Good.
In front of us,
a backhoe’s guttural engine whined into action and empty dump trucks rattled
along a dirt track. The shouts of men vied for attention with the metallic
whirring of drills and saws ringing in the distance. Nineteen immense cranes
spread across the landscape, with the foothills of Italy’s Southern Alps in the
background. More than 100 pieces of earthmoving equipment, 250 workers, and
grids of scaffolding wrapped around what soon would be 34 new
buildings.
We were standing
in front of a massive 145-acre construction site for a “little America” rising
in Vicenza, an
architecturally renowned Italian city and UNESCO world heritage site near
Venice. This was Dal Molin, the new
military base the U.S. Army has been readying for the relocation of as many as
2,000 soldiers from Germany in 2013.
Since 1955,
Vicenza has also been home to another major U.S. base, Camp Ederle. They’re
among the more than 1,000 bases
the United States uses to ring the globe (with about 4,000 more in the 50
states and Washington, D.C.). This complex of military installations,
unprecedented in history, has been a major, if little noticed, aspect of U.S.
power since World War II.
During the Cold War, such
bases became the foundation for a “forward strategy” meant to surround the
Soviet Union and push U.S. military power as close to its borders as possible.
These days, despite the absence of a superpower rival, the Pentagon has been
intent on dotting the globe with scores of relatively small “lily pad”
bases, while continuing to build and maintain some large bases like
Dal Molin.
Americans rarely think
about these bases, let alone how much of their tax money -- and debt -- is going
to build and maintain them. For Dal Molin and related construction nearby,
including a brigade headquarters, two sets of barracks, a natural-gas-powered
energy plant, a hospital, two schools, a fitness center, dining facilities, and
a mini-mall, taxpayers are likely to shell out at least half a billion dollars.
(All the while, a majority of
locals passionately and vocally oppose the new base.)
How much does the United
States spend each year occupying the planet with its bases and troops? How much
does it spend on its global presence? Forced by Congress to account for its
spending overseas, the Pentagon has put that figure at $22.1 billion a year. It
turns out that even a conservative estimate of the true costs of garrisoning the
globe comes to an annual total of about $170 billion. In fact, it may be
considerably higher. Since the onset of “the Global War on Terror” in 2001, the
total cost for our garrisoning policies, for our presence
abroad, has probably reached $1.8 trillion to $2.1
trillion.
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