THE 4 BIGGEST PROFITEERS OF WAR
Submitted by Tyler
Durden on 10/05/2014
As GreenLeft.org's Peter
Boyle explains, it is a sadly familiar story: More death, pain and terror for the many translates into
large profits for giant weapons making corporations.
Led by Lockheed Martin, the
biggest US defense companies are trading at record prices as shareholders reap
rewards from escalating military conflicts around the world.
...
Jack Ablin, chief
investment officer at Chicago-based BMO Private Bank, told Bloomberg: “As we ramp up our
military muscle in the Mideast, there’s a sense that demand for military
equipment and weaponry will likely rise... To the extent we can shift away from
relying on troops and rely more heavily on equipment - that could present an
opportunity.”
More money for the war profiteers
- never mind the terrible human toll.
Remote "precision" airstrikes - such as the US and
its allies - including Australia, are carrying out in Iraq and Syria today,
have a record of inflicting huge civilian casualties as so-called “collateral damage”.
Marc Herold, a professor of economic development at the
University of New Hampshire, did a comparative study of civilian victims of the
West's war on Afghanistan. He said:
“From 2006 to
mid-2008, US/NATO aerial attacks killed 1,488 Afghan civilians with 1,458
tonnes of bombs, whereas between October 7 and December 10, 2001 US war planes
dropped 14,000 tonnes of bombs resulting in 2,569-2,949 dead Afghan civilians
(or 18-21 civilians killed per 100 tonnes of US bombs),” the
Guardian reported in 2008.
The relative lethality for Afghan civilians (measured by the
ratio of civilians killed per 100 tonnes of bombs) of NATO's close air support
strikes far exceeds the lethality of the US strategic bombing of Laos and
Cambodia, Herold calculated. And the lethality of US airstrikes in Afghanistan
between 2006-2008 exceeded by far that recorded in Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia,
Yugoslavia, Iraq in 2003 and Afghanistan in 2001.
For all its deathly toll, has US/NATO bombing in Afghanistan
put an end to “terrorism” in that war-devastated country? No.
But that does not concern those
who protect the wealth of the super-rich. War is good for profits.
The Bloomberg's share index for the four largest Pentagon
contractors rose 19% this year, outstripping the 2.2% gain for the Standard
& Poor’s 500 Industrials Index. See
graph: copy image location:
Bloomberg's Richard Clough reported that shares for Lockheed, the world’s biggest weapons maker, “reached an
all-time high of $180.74 on September 19, when Northrop, Raytheon and General Dynamics also set records”. Those four companies and the
Chicago-based Boeing
accounted for about US$105 billion in US military contract orders last year,
according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
War generates big corporate
profits and 21st century capitalism now wages a permanent war in the Third
World. There is no peace in sight while this toxic system remains in place.
* * *
It appears the transition from Fed-sponsored
economic-support back to Military-Industrial Complex-support is almost
complete...
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