¶ … Iraq War on the U.S. Economy
The current U.S. War in Iraq has become the most expensive military undertaking by the United States in the last sixty years. According to a recent study, the U.S. Treasury is paying out more money each month to sustain the war in Iraq than it did during the Vietnam War. While there is little disagreement about the actual expenses involved in the Iraq War, the opponents and the supporters of the War disagree on its actual impact on the U.S. economy. While the political left and the traditional conservatives in the country are staunchly against the Iraq war and decry its detrimental effect on the U.S. economy, the right-wing neo-conservatives consider the expense of the war worthwhile and beneficial for the U.S. In the long run. This essay takes a look at the impact of the U.S. War in Iraq on the U.S. economy by examining the right and the left wing views.
Estimates and the Actual Cost of War in Iraq
Before the United States invaded Iraq in March 2003, the budget director of the Bush administration had predicted that the war would cost between $50 and $60 billion
(Bennis et al., 2005) while most independent estimates of the cost of the war suggested that the U.S. would have to spend somewhere between $50 and $150 billion on the war effort. (Surowiecki, 2003) The leading proponents of the war, namely the neoconservatives, considered the amount to be mere peanuts for the broader political gains which the United States was supposed to achieve from the invasion. The amount of 50 and 150 billion dollars were considered quite affordable for the U.S. economy since it constituted a tiny fraction (between 0.5 and 1.5%) of the country's G.D.P. Some economists even suggested that the war spending would stimulate the U.S. economy as it did during the Second World War in the 1940s and the Korean War in the 1950s. However, most wars and cost estimates do not go according to plan and the Iraq War did not end quickly as was hoped by the U.S. government. Its cost too has spiraled way beyond the original estimates.
A recent study by the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) and Foreign Policy in Focus (FPF) reveals that the total bill for the war in Iraq has already crossed 204 billion dollars
and an additional 45 billion dollars is currently pending for approval before the Congress as 'bridge finance' before the formal approval of the next tranche. The Pentagon, according to the report, is currently spending 5.6 billion dollars per month on operations in Iraq, an amount that exceeds the average cost of 5.1 billion dollars per month (in real 2004 dollars) for U.S. operations in Vietnam between 1964 and 1972. At current rates, the United States would end up spending more than 700 billion dollars over 10 years; since the entire cost of the Vietnam War was 600 billion dollars (in current dollars), the Iraq War is most likely to prove even more expensive.
How the Cost Impacts the U.S. Economy? Opposing View Points
There is no consensus on the extent to which the costs of the Iraq War impact the U.S. economy. The neoconservatives, with their foreign policy agenda of unilateralism, making the United States an imperialist power and setting up a "model of democracy" in the Middle East, consider the cost of the Iraq War a small price to pay for such "lofty" objectives. They insist that the War has achieved its major goals of liberating Iraq from tyranny, and providing an example of democracy in "America's image" in the heart of the Islamic world.
In order to justify the invasion of Iraq, the neocons and their supporters in the U.S. administration tended to low-ball the cost estimates of the Iraq War. Faced with the spiraling cost they still consider it as a long-term investment for the promotion of free-trade and a globalized...
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