USPG launches assessment of United States overseas military bases and plans for complete restructuring
USPG launches assessment of United States overseas military bases and plans for complete restructuring
Because of the failure of the United States to fully adopt the conditions of the United Nations Charter, we have ended up with large numbers of troops stationed abroad as part of a sprawling network of military bases. These United States overseas military bases, numbering over 800 openly recognized bases (and dozens of others that are classified as top-secret) have metastasized into an unaccountable and dangerous “dark web” of security where jackals and hyenas gather to tear chunks of the more than 200 billion dollars a year that disappears into the maintenance of these black zones. The criminality bread in the cracks of this base structure has crept back into the United States mainland to do terrible damage.
The governance of these bases falls outside of the purview of the Federal Government, and to a large extent the purview of the branches of the military. These bases are by nature unconstitutional and resemble increasingly the territories of the late British Empire that were used to squirrel away dark money.
The United States Provisional Government orders the Department of Defense, and all divisions of the armed forces and intelligence community, to prepare a complete list of all such military and intelligence bases around the world, and within United States territory. All critical information concerning these bases must be made public and the exact functions of these bases discussed in a transparent public debate by September 2, 2022.
The secrecy maintained concerning United States overseas bases is unconstitutional. The policies and protocols employed for the governance of these bases has bred a nightmare of unaccountability. The most extreme cases being the torture programs undertaken at bases like Guantanamo Bay and Diego Garcia, bases which no one in Washington D.C. is authorized to close.
A Congressional committee is hereby established for the discussion of the future for a discussion of the future of these overseas bases to be called the “Committee for US Overseas Bases.” Membership is not limited to members of Congress. The Committee for US Overseas Bases will be authorized to make binding decisions on the future of these bases and overrides all other corrupt and useless committees of the Senate and House such as the Committees on the Armed Services, Subcommittees on Military Personnel, and Defense Subcommittees of the Appropriations Committees.
The following three points will be the focus for the actions of the Committee for US Overseas Bases:
1)
The misuse of funds allocated for US overseas bases will be subject to an international investigation and those responsible will face dismissal and criminal persecution. That order stands not only for those in active service, but also for those in Congress, and in various law firms, consulting firms and military contractors who have been involved in this conspiracy over the last 20 years.
2)
The vast majority of these overseas bases do not serve a defensive purpose (and in many cases are used to provoke conflicts) and therefore they must be converted, ceasing to play a military function.
There is potential for using these bases for international cooperation on biodiversity, cultural and artistic exchanges, education and the advancement of accountable and scientific journalism. Moreover much of the budgets allocated for these bases will be employed to address the pollution and other serious social issues that have resulted from years of mismanagement.
3)
As the contracts for many of these overseas bases with the countries that support them were signed in a secretive and unconstitutional manner, most will have to be renegotiated. We do not rule out the possibility of some bases overseas playing a role in global security, but such a decision can only be made after this cancerous global system has been fully dismantled.