Showing posts with label war spending peaks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label war spending peaks. Show all posts

Friday, September 24, 2021

NSA's Bulk Collection Failing, and the Price of War

 I. NSA's Bulk Collection Failing

194M - Average number of text messages the NSA collected per day in April 2011.

O - Number of terrorist attacks the government could prove were prevented by the NSA's bulk collection of phone records, according to a recent court ruling.

18k - Minimum number of Facebook users whose private data was given to law enforcement in the last half of 2012.

100 - Radius in miles from New York City within which every mosque experienced government  surveillance after 9/11.

$100k - Amount government informants can earn per job excluding "performance" bonuses.

357% - Percentage by which terrorist attacks committed by Muslims receive more media coverage from attacks by non-Muslims.

$3.8b - Budget for the FBI's counterterrorism and counterintelligence units. (Source: Jarod Facundo, "By the Numbers," The Nation, September 2021.)

II. The Price of War

Post-9/11 war-related spending, 2001-2022, plus the projected cost of future veterans' care in current dollars. Homeland Security/Domestic Counterterrorism, $1,117b --- Estimated Future Obligations for Veterans' Care, Through FY2050, $2,200b --- Veterans' Care Through FY2022, $465b --- DOD Overseas Contingency Operations, $2,101b --- State Department, $189b --- Interest Payments on War Spending Through FY2022, $1,087b --- Increases to the Pentagon Base Budget, $884b. (Source: The Nation, 9 . 20 - 27. 2021.)

III. The War Chest

The base budget of the Department of Defense, plus the cost of Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO), or actions in war zones, in current dollars. The Emergency/OCO spending increased by at least $170b in the years 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011. Ever since then, except for 2006, the Emergency/OCO spending has increased by less then $100b. War spending jumped in 2018 and 2019 by about $680b, after reaching $600b only once in the preceding five years. (Source: Same as II.)

IV. The Peaks of War Spending

War spending on Iraq & Syria peaked in 2008  at slightly over $140b. War spending on Afghanistan peaked in 2011 at $120b. War spending on the three countries is projected to decline to $20b in 2022. (Source: Same as II.)

V. The Total Cost of America's Post-9/11 Wars

"The United States reacted to the 9/11 attacks with a military mobilization of unprecedented cost. Over the past 20 years, the US military has spent or requested about $5.8 trillion in today's dollars. Add in future medical expenses and disability payments for veterans, which according to research by Harvard's Linda Bilmes will likely exceed $2.2 trillion by 2050, and the total cost of two decades of war is more than $8 trillion."

Direct war deaths in the major war zones of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, Syria/ISIS, Yemen, and a category designated as "Other," will reach a range of  897,150-928,558 since 9/11. (Source: Neta Crawford, "The Numbers," The Nation, 9 . 20 - 27 . 2021.)