The USA’s NATO Is a Racket

NATO Is a Racket

“We don’t need to spend more on military than the next 25 countries combined”

NATO. Responsible taxpayers know that it is a mighty defensive alliance that protects us from tyranny and faraway brown people, but what does it actually do?

Now that the Red Menace has been taken care of, NATO has struggled over the last twenty-odd years to redefine itself. Maybe NATO could study the Kabbalah with Madonna, who also apparently suffers from a serious lack of purpose? No, unfortunately that wouldn’t sell nearly enough American fighter jets to countries that don’t need them.

Here is how a think tank described the expansion of NATO into central and eastern Europe in 1999:

On the surface, central and eastern Europe presented a dream market for arms manufacturers…[but] a Pentagon official interviewed for this article said that weapons were not at the top of the new members’ priorities—yet.

Without an improvement in Russia-NATO relations, a military build-up in the new NATO countries would amount to pouring oil on the fires burning between Moscow and the West.

Just to reiterate, this analysis was published by the Centre for World Dialogue in 1999. Could anything be more prophetic?

Recently, the center-left Danish newspaper Politiken ran an article which focused on how the U.S. has conjured up threats of Russian world conquest as a means to boost arms sales to its NATO “allies” in central and eastern Europe. According to top Pentagon officials who will soon retire and work as consults for Lockheed Martin, Russia could invade Baltics literally any minute now. What does this mean? Simple: Weapons are now at the top of NATO members’ priorities. Finally!

Of course, it’s purely coincidental that last year the Obama administration launched an ambitious arms dealing initiative which specifically targets NATO members:

The U.S. government on Wednesday announced a two-year project aimed at making it easier for NATO and member countries to share costs and buy weapons as a group as they struggle to stretch scarce defense budgets.

The program aims to keep U.S. foreign military sales competitive by adapting to changing business practices and being more flexible about purchaser requirements, statement said.

So to return to our initial question, what exactly is it that NATO “does”? Simple: It creates imaginary threats to world stability and then peddles weapons to defend against aforementioned boogeyman threats.

As Major General Smedley Butler once said, “war is a racket.” And you can bet NATO is plays a leading role in this blood-soaked scam. (It’s likely you’ve never even heard of General Butler, or his terrific pamphlet, arguably the most concise, authoritative document on the ways and means of the American war machine, which of course is why it is never taught in schools.)

Here’s Butler reminiscing about the War to End All Wars:

It would have been far cheaper (not to say safer) for the average American who pays the bills to stay out of foreign entanglements. For a very few this racket, like bootlegging and other underworld rackets, brings fancy profits, but the cost of operations is always transferred to the people — who do not profit.

We don’t need to spend more on military than the next 25 countries combined, and we don’t need an outdated “defensive” alliance that bombs defenseless nations and peddles American-made weapons to countries that have no use for them. NATO is a racket.

Source Article from https://uprootedpalestinians.wordpress.com/2016/06/23/the-usas-nato-is-a-racket/

You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply

Powered by WordPress | Designed by: Premium WordPress Themes | Thanks to Themes Gallery, Bromoney and Wordpress Themes