Whose Buck Is It Anyway?

2018 Tom Tidbit Button smallGreetings,

As the Afghan government crumbled and bloody catastrophe swept the country, a somber Joe Biden stepped to the podium.  “I am president of the United States of America,” he said, “and the buck stops with me.”  That was a refreshing change from a President slinking away from “any responsibility at all”, but it didn’t seem to faze the Taliban and Monday-morning quarterbacking will probably be the only sanction.  If the buck stops with Biden, what does that even mean? Does it imply responsibility, blame, or accountability?  If the buck isn’t his, whose should it be instead?

I honestly thought “The buck stops here” had something to do with money (bucks) until I did some research.   Harry Truman didn’t coin the phrase, but a reporter saw a plaque with it on Truman’s desk and made it famous.  It’s a callback to frontier poker games where players passed a ‘buck’ (a marker like a buckhorn knife) to indicate the dealer, a beautiful metaphor for passing responsibility among people who would rather avoid it.  (Interesting that there’s no term like ‘passing the buck’ for good things!)  Biden now sits in the lonely place where bucks stop so in some ways he deserves the blame he’ll get for ending the war.  Is he responsible?

Joe Biden’s fingerprints are on Afghanistan from the beginning when he helped create and voted for the flawed AUMF authorizing force in Afghanistan and Iraq, but every member of Congress has fingerprints on it as well.  (Except for Barbara Lee, the sole vote against the AUMF and the only person in government who can say ‘I told you so’ 20 years later).  The Afghan invasion was George W. Bush’s answer to the Taliban so it’s rightly his responsibility, but if it’s easy to see his responsibility for starting things it’s harder to meaningfully blame him for the situation 20 years later.  Obama and Trump both had opportunities to find workable solutions or bring our people home, but both abdicated their responsibilities and passed the problem to their successors.  Which brings us full-circle to Biden, who ended the bloodshed for OUR people while the death and misery unleashed on Afghans is only getting started.  On his watch.

FAUX News and their allies will gleefully blame Biden the every misstep and blunder, and every politician who sees any benefit at all will join in piling on.  Biden should obviously be held accountable for real failures, but blame isn’t responsibility and Biden isn’t responsible for everything he’ll be stained with.  If he’s not, though, who is?

Maybe I was right thinking “the buck stops here” is about money.  To use another political maxim, maybe we should “follow the money” to where the bucks start instead of where they stop.  We’ll find they all lead back to Eisenhower’s Military-Industrial Complex, which has chugged along happily through every Afghani up and down.  10 years ago, the Commission on Wartime Contracting reported the federal government had already lost $31 to $60 billion to contractor fraud and waste since the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq started.  Stocks for the top 5 defense contractors rose between 331% and 1,236% during the war.  The US dumped about $2 TRILLION into Afghanistan, $100 billion every year for 20 years, and most of this money went into a pig trough lined with defense contractors and politicians.  Only a small part went to the Afghan people.  The defense industry spends roughly $200 million per year in lobbying for their seats at the trough.  The Afghanistan war was a disaster in blood and treasure for the US, but for our patriotic defense contractors it was a 20-year Christmas.  They benefit from every conflict the US is involved in, as well as the ones to come

We blame presidents, we blame politicians, but ‘We’, the United States, are responsible for Afghanistan’s latest 20 years of hell.  Now both sides have the opportunity to rebuild but the Taliban there and the Military-Industrial Complex here make it very unlikely, at least for now.  When we wonder who’s responsible for this tragedy I hope don’t get distracted by the blame of where the buck stops and concentrate instead on where it started.  By avoiding blame and properly fixing responsibility, perhaps one day… one day… we can move on to accountability as well.

Make a great day,

aaazTomSignature

 

 

Digging Deeper…

The Afghanistan Papers- A Secret History Of The War, Whitlock, Shapiro, and Emamdjomeh in the Washington Post, Dec 2019

    The All-Time 10 Worst Military Contracting Boondoggles, Adam Weinstein in Mothor Jones, Sep 2011

The military signed contracts for Afghanistan well into 2023. That’s their problem.  According a new report private companies could sue if the U.S. pulled troops out May 1., Kelley Beaucar Vlahos in Responsible Statecraft, Mar 2021

If Liz Cheney’s Assigning Blame for an “Epic Failure” in Afghanistan, She Can Start With Her Father, John Nichols in The Nation, Aug 2021

Afghanistan War Went Wrong For These 7 Reasons, U.S. Watchdog Says, Joe Walsh in Forbes, Aug 2021

Why no American president followed through on promises to end the Afghanistan war — until now, Amber Phillips in Washington Post, Aug 2021

Capitalizing on conflict: How defense contractors and foreign nations lobby for arms sales, Dan Auble on OpenSecrets, Feb 2021

Joe Biden’s Vote for War, Katie Glueck and Thomas Kaplan in NY Times, Jan 2020

“The Buck Stops Here”, US National Archives

Congresswoman Barbara Lee Observes the 18 Years Since Her No Vote on Blank Check for War Authorization, Office of Congresswoman Barbara Lee, Sep 2019

Biden Tried to Absolve Himself for Afghanistan Aftermath — But He Voted for War, William Rivers Pitt in TruthOut, July 2021

The Taliban Surrendered in 2001, Richard Behan in Common Dreams, Aug 2021

These 6 Words Explain Everything You Need to Know About Why President Trump Is a Toxic Leader, Jason Aten in Inc., Jan 2021

Afghanistan’s Rare Earth Element Bonanza, Alan Dowd at Fraser Institute, Aug 2021

Cashing In on the Decision to Keep U.S. Troops in Afghanistan- Why Obama dropping his promise to end America’s longest war is going to give contractors billions of dollars. Kate Brannen in ForeighPolicy, Oct 2015

We Can’t Let Pro-War Generals Who Lied About the Afghanistan War Define Its Legacy, Sarah Lazare in Common Dreams, Aug 2021

Afghanistan’s military collapse: Illicit deals and mass desertions, Susannah George in Washington Post, Aug 2021

The Military-Industrial Complex Will Be Just Fine Without Afghanistan, Fred Kaplan in Slate, Aug 2021

Consumed By Corruption, Craig Whitlock in Washington Post, Dec 2019

Afghanistan: It’s About Oil, Gar Smith in Earth Island Journal, Spring 2002

The All-Time 10 Worst Military Contracting Boondoggles, Adam Weinstein in Mother Jones, Sep 2011

Biden says the ‘buck stops with me’ — while pinning blame on Trump and many Afghans, Aaron Blake in Washington Post, Aug 2021

Afghanistan’s military collapse: Illicit deals and mass desertions, Susannah George in Washington Post, Aug 2021

“Nobody Is Above the Law”—Except the Biggest Corporate and Goverment Criminals, Ralph Nader on Common Dreams, Aug 2021

Halliburton’s Iraq, Afghanistan Contracts at $600 Million and Growing, AP on FOX News, May 2003, updated Jan 2015

Windfalls of war- Which American companies won the biggest contracts in postwar Iraq and Afghanistan? ICIJ investigation, Sep 2012

Halliburton contracts balloon- Despite being under an investigative cloud, company gets $4.3 billion in 2003., Verloy et al in International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, Mar 2012

Who Won The War In Afghanistan? The Taliban And Defense Contractors, Jaisal Noor on TheRealNews.com, Aug 2021

When Will We Stop Letting Our Presidents Lie America Into Wars? Thom Hartmann in Common Dreams, Aug 2021

It’s Time to Cut the Bloated Pentagon Budget to Fund People, Not Military Contractors, Public Citizen, July 2020

RNC quietly deletes webpage touting Trump’s call for U.S. troops to withdraw from Afghanistan, Zachary Petrizzo in Salon, Aug 2021

Vietnam and Afghanistan: Different wars, similar endings?  Jon Greenberg and Louis Jacobson on Politifact, Aug 2021

$10,000 Invested In Defense Stocks When Afghanistan War Began Now Worth Almost $100,000. Was the Afghanistan War a failure? Not for the top five defense contractors and their shareholders.  Jon Schwarz in The Intercept, Aug 2021

How much did the US spend in Afghanistan? William Gittins on AS, Aug 2021

Military contractors and the profits of war, Nancy Marshall-Genzer on Marketplace, Aug 2021

Billions spent on Afghan army ultimately benefited Taliban, Robert Burns on AP, Aug 2021

Here Are the 5 Companies Making a Killing Off Wars Around the World, Vince Calio and Alexander Hess in Time, Mar 2014

 

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