The US military is the worst offender bar none when it comes to the environment. And yet, the federal government continues to lecture businesses and people all around the world on their energy consumption.
This story on the Pentagon’s environmental costs won a Project Censored award:
“In evaluating the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen — with more than 15,000 participants from 192 countries, including more than 100 heads of state, as well as 100,000 demonstrators in the streets — it is important to ask: How is it possible that the worst polluter of carbon dioxide and other toxic emissions on the planet is not a focus of any conference discussion or proposed restrictions?
By every measure, the Pentagon is the largest institutional user of petroleum products and energy in general. Yet the Pentagon has a blanket exemption in all international climate agreements.
The Pentagon wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; its secret operations in Pakistan; its equipment on more than 1,000 U.S. bases around the world; its 6,000 facilities in the U.S.; all NATO operations; its aircraft carriers, jet aircraft, weapons testing, training and sales will not be counted against U.S. greenhouse gas limits or included in any count.
The Feb. 17, 2007, Energy Bulletin detailed the oil consumption just for the Pentagon’s aircraft, ships, ground vehicles and facilities that made it the single-largest oil consumer in the world. At the time, the U.S. Navy had 285 combat and support ships and around 4,000 operational aircraft. The U.S. Army had 28,000 armored vehicles, 140,000 High-Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles, more than 4,000 combat helicopters, several hundred fixed-wing aircraft and 187,493 fleet vehicles. Except for 80 nuclear submarines and aircraft carriers, which spread radioactive pollution, all their other vehicles run on oil.
Even according to rankings in the 2006 CIA World Factbook, only 35 countries (out of 210 in the world) consume more oil per day than the Pentagon.
The U.S. military officially uses 320,000 barrels of oil a day. However, this total does not include fuel consumed by contractors or fuel consumed in leased and privatized facilities. Nor does it include the enormous energy and resources used to produce and maintain their death-dealing equipment or the bombs, grenades or missiles they fire.
Steve Kretzmann, director of Oil Change International, reports: “The Iraq war was responsible for at least 141 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (MMTCO2e) from March 2003 through December 2007. … The war emits more than 60 percent of all countries. … This information is not readily available … because military emissions abroad are exempt from national reporting requirements under U.S. law and the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change.” (www.naomiklein.org, Dec. 10) Most scientists blame carbon dioxide emissions for greenhouse gases and climate change.Bryan Farrell in his new book, “The Green Zone: The Environmental Costs of Militarism,” says that “the greatest single assault on the environment, on all of us around the globe, comes from one agency … the Armed Forces of the United States.”
Just how did the Pentagon come to be exempt from climate agreements? At the time of the Kyoto Accords negotiations, the U.S. demanded as a provision of signing that all of its military operations worldwide and all operations it participates in with the U.N. and/or NATO be completely exempted from measurement or reductions.
After securing this gigantic concession, the Bush administration then refused to sign the accords.
In a May 18, 1998, article entitled “National security and military policy issues involved in the Kyoto treaty,” Dr. Jeffrey Salmon described the Pentagon’s position. He quotes then-Secretary of Defense William Cohen’s 1997 annual report to Congress: “DoD strongly recommends that the United States insist on a national security provision in the climate change Protocol now being negotiated.http://www.marshall.org
According to Salmon, this national security provision was put forth in a draft calling for “complete military exemption from greenhouse gas emissions limits. The draft includes multilateral operations such as NATO- and U.N.-sanctioned activities, but it also includes actions related very broadly to national security, which would appear to comprehend all forms of unilateral military actions and training for such actions.”
Salmon also quoted Undersecretary of State Stuart Eizenstat, who headed the U.S. delegation in Kyoto. Eizenstat reported that “every requirement the Defense Department and uniformed military who were at Kyoto by my side said they wanted, they got. This is self-defense, peacekeeping, humanitarian relief.”
Although the U.S. had already received these assurances in the negotiations, the U.S. Congress passed an explicit provision guaranteeing U.S. military exemption. Inter Press Service reported on May 21, 1998: “U.S. law makers, in the latest blow to international efforts to halt global warming, today exempted U.S. military operations from the Kyoto agreement which lays out binding commitments to reduce ‘greenhouse gas’ emissions. The House of Representatives passed an amendment to next year’s military authorization bill that ‘prohibits the restriction of armed forces under the Kyoto Protocol.'”
Today in Copenhagen the same agreements and guidelines on greenhouse gases still hold. Yet it is extremely difficult to find even a mention of this glaring omission.
According to environmental journalist Johanna Peace, military activities will continue to be exempt from an executive order signed by President Barack Obama that calls for federal agencies to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 2020. Peace states, “The military accounts for a full 80 percent of the federal government’s energy demand.” http://solveclimate.com, Sept. 1)
The blanket exclusion of the Pentagon’s global operations makes U.S. carbon dioxide emissions appear far less than they in fact are. Yet even without counting the Pentagon, the U.S. still has the world’s largest carbon dioxide emissions.
More than emissions
Besides emitting carbon dioxide, U.S. military operations release other highly toxic and radioactive materials into the air, water and soil.
U.S. weapons made with depleted uranium have spread tens of thousands of pounds of microparticles of radioactive and highly toxic waste throughout the Middle East, Central Asia and the Balkans.
The U.S. sells land mines and cluster bombs that are a major cause of delayed explosives, maiming and disabling especially peasant farmers and rural peoples in Africa, Asia and Latin America. For example, Israel dropped more than 1 million U.S.-provided cluster bombs on Lebanon during its 2006 invasion.
The U.S. war in Vietnam left large areas so contaminated with the Agent Orange herbicide that today, more than 35 years later, dioxin contamination is 300 to 400 times higher than “safe” levels. Severe birth defects and high rates of cancer resulting from environmental contamination are continuing into a third generation.
The 1991 U.S. war in Iraq, followed by 13 years of starvation sanctions, the 2003 U.S. invasion and continuing occupation, has transformed the region — which has a 5,000-year history as a Middle East breadbasket — into an environmental catastrophe. Iraq’s arable and fertile land has become a desert wasteland where the slightest wind whips up a dust storm. A former food exporter, Iraq now imports 80 percent of its food. The Iraqi Agriculture Ministry estimates that 90 percent of the land has severe desertification.
Environmental war at home
Moreover, the Defense Department has routinely resisted orders from the Environmental Protection Agency to clean up contaminated U.S. bases. (Washington Post, June 30, 2008) Pentagon military bases top the Superfund list of the most polluted places, as contaminants seep into drinking water aquifers and soil.
The Pentagon has also fought EPA efforts to set new pollution standards on two toxic chemicals widely found on military sites: perchlorate, found in propellant for rockets and missiles; and trichloroethylene, a degreaser for metal parts.
Trichloroethylene is the most widespread water contaminant in the country, seeping into aquifers across California, New York, Texas, Florida and elsewhere. More than 1,000 military sites in the U.S. are contaminated with the chemical. The poorest communities, especially communities of color, are the most severely impacted by this poisoning.
U.S. testing of nuclear weapons in the U.S. Southwest and on South Pacific islands has contaminated millions of areas of land and water with radiation. Mountains of radioactive and toxic uranium tailings have been left on Indigenous land in the Southwest. More than 1,000 uranium mines have been abandoned on Navajo reservations in Arizona and New Mexico.
Around the world, on past and still operating bases in Puerto Rico, the Philippines, South Korea, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Japan, Nicaragua, Panama and the former Yugoslavia, rusting barrels of chemicals and solvents and millions of rounds of ammunition are criminally abandoned by the Pentagon.
The best way to dramatically clean up the environment is to shut down the Pentagon. What is needed to combat climate change is a thoroughgoing system change.”
Earth to blogger! The military defends the United States and your freedom to express yourself. Perhaps you would prefer that soldiers and sailors walk and throw rocks but we’ve moved beyond that.Come back to the real world.
That’s a myth for all wars except defensive ones.
How does wasting all this money in bases all over the world protect my right to speak?
In fact, once the state goes to war, the right to speak becomes more limited.
We can have state militias and a volunteer army like Switzerland.
And we can stop making enemies at the drop of a hat.
We’re broke. We have to fix that before anything else.
Earth to Jonathan. Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Somalia, Afghanistan, etc. pose no threat to the United States therefore our operations there can hardly be called ‘defense’. Neither can our billeting of troops in Germany, Italy, Japan, South Korea, etc.
I’m all for the military defending our country. I’m not for them maintaining an empire and being the world’s policeman. Of all the money spent on ‘defense’ world-wide, the US spends half. In other words, as much as every other country in the world combined. I’d hardly classify that as necessary for the defense of American territory.
But Lila, don’t you realize that the global actions of the US Military are what allows you the freedom to speak? wink wink….
Imagine an alternate universe where the US pulled all military personnel and equipment home, posturing itself as a reserve based entity for defensive purposes only. What would be done with all that money? How would foreign relations be impacted? Would the US remain under attack for its alleged ‘way of life’, or would hostilities towards America become almost non-existent?
I’d argue for all volunteer and state militia, but that is yet another alternate universe…
There’s a way to do this.
First. Nukes. Scale them back aggressively, transparently and unilaterally, while acting in concert with other nations to pressure UK, Israel, Russia, China, India and everyone else to cut back. But since the US is the big boy in that area, the move has to begin here.
Cut back on the air force and surveillance all over the world.
Shut down the bases.
Vets out of work? Bring them home and let them compete in the job market.
Get rid of the CIA. Dismantle the space program.
Just there we can solve most the of the financial problems. If businesses want research, let them pay for it themselves.
If states want universities, let them fund it themselves.
We have more than enough pure science research..we have technology. What we need is the right economic environment where they will bear productive fruit. For that you need to reduce the regulatory burden on start ups and on venture financing and the tax burden.
Keep the borders open to all comers, but take away the financial incentives. You come to the US to work and that’s it. No hand outs. That goes for the native born population too.
The competition brings down the cost of manual labor and forces people to become more skilled or lose out. It forces people to start businesses as there are not enough jobs to go round.
Reduce professional licensing requirements. Allow people from anywhere in the world to come and start businesses and own homes.
Professions with too many people in them which don’t produce enough to sustain themselves (journalist, academia, education) will cut back..
others will grow.
Our CEOs and professional classes will get a run for their money.
You will see ceo compensation drop, everything will fall back to realistic prices, the housing market will stay propped up by the immigration.
For open borders to work, we need several things
1. get rid of subsidies to immigrants
2. have criteria, not quotas, for immigration (English, skills, no crime history)
3. removal of quotas for hiring so if people don’t want to hire immigrants they don’t have to
4. reduction of taxes on all income for immigrants and citizens
5. elimination of paper work for immigration
6. Remove all state incentives and penalties from the system
You will see a boom the likes of which have never been seen before.