The $59 Million-a-Day War
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from Wish List failed.
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
Disclaimer: Side effects may include laughter and/or anger. Read or watch at your own risk.
So let’s talk about the grand spectacle currently being sold to you like a late-night miracle tonic—the majestic, patriotic, absolutely bullet-proof idea of a war with Iran. A masterpiece in lipstick and a borrowed tuxedo. The sort of visionary policy that only a Really Stable Genius and the courtiers surrounding Our Leadership could dream up while polishing their medals and adjusting their bolo neckties in the mirror.
You’ve gotta admire the elegance of it. Wars used to be messy affairs—mud, blood, public debate, that kind of nuisance. But now? Now it’s streamlined. Digitized. Monetized. A sleek modern product where missiles fly, defense contractors grin like lottery winners, and the bill slides quietly across the table to you like the check after a long, boozy dinner.
According to the bean-counters over at the Institute for Policy Studies—who apparently had the audacity to add numbers instead of waving flags—just running aircraft and ships in the region costs about $59 million every single day.
Every day.
Made Possible by People Like You—Literally.
That’s right. While you’re trying to decide whether eggs or gasoline will wreck your budget first, War-shington’s running a geopolitical strip club where the jets dance, the destroyers twirl, and the meter never stops ticking.
Fifty-nine million bucks a day just to keep the engines humming. Not even counting the fireworks—the bombs, the missiles, the fancy little interceptors that cost more than the average neighborhood.
Because nothing says “fiscal responsibility” quite like lighting stacks of cash on fire while simultaneously telling millions of Americans they might have to tighten their belts… preferably around an empty stomach.
See, that same pile of daily war money? It could cover Medicaid costs for millions of people. Or food assistance for nearly ten million. But instead it’s being converted into sonic booms over the Persian Gulf.
Now, the strategic sales pitch floating around the diplomatic grapevine—voiced by analysts and commentators watching this soap opera unfold—goes something like this: the real magic trick is nudging Arab countries into a direct showdown with Iran.
Let the neighbors duke it out. Let rival powers grind each other down. Meanwhile the United States supervises the whole bar fight like a bartender selling expensive drinks to both sides while sliding intelligence briefings across the counter.
Elegant, right? A geopolitical ménage à trois where everybody swings, everybody spends, and somebody else picks up the tab.
And if that leaves the region’s biggest players exhausted, while arms dealers rake in profits, Well, that’s just clever business.
But the plot thickens faster than evaporating lube in an Epstein guestroom. Critics argue the war itself isn’t just expensive—it’s illegal, wildly unpopular, and open-ended enough to stretch well into the fall… maybe even longer.
Which means the meter keeps running.
Ching.
Ching.
Ching.
Meanwhile the Pentagon—already lounging atop a trillion-dollar budget—is preparing to ask Congress for even more cash to replenish munitions. Because when you’re burning through billion-dollar toys, you’ve gotta restock the toy chest.
It’s the kind of economic strategy that would make a casino owner blush.
And that’s why today’s guest is here.
Hanna Homestead, a research analyst with the National Priorities Project at the Institute for Policy Studies, has been crunching the numbers behind the curtain—looking at what this war actually costs and what that money could do if it wasn’t being converted into airborne fireworks.
So Hanna, let’s kick the tires on this global joyride. Welcome to the cary Harrison files….
The Cary Harrison Files is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
Copyright Audiences United, LLC – all rights reserved.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit caryharrison.substack.com/subscribe