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Military Spending Belongs on the Table
The supercommittee seems unlikely to make substantial military cuts and instead quite likely to cut spending for the other agencies under the "security spending" umbrella, even though the Pentagon gets the lion's share of that category's funding.
The battle over the debt ceiling laid bare the need to cut the deficit while foreshadowing a fierce fight in Congress to make actual budget cuts.
Both the "supercommittee," a group of 12 Republicans and Democrats, and other congressional panels are working to find at least $1.2 trillion to cut from government spending over the next decade. However, neither the supercommittee in particular nor Congress in general seems to want to make real changes to government spending.
The biggest debate is over cutting military spending, which has grown 81 percent in since the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Instead of looking for opportunities to scrap wasteful military programs, some lawmakers are seeking loopholes to avoid making any defense cuts at all.
The debt ceiling fight drew attention to the burgeoning military budget, but also cushioned it from real reductions by putting it in a category called "security spending," which includes the "civilian security spending" of Homeland Security, Veterans Affairs, Intelligence, international affairs, and the National Nuclear Security Administration. According to the bill, the supercommittee must find cuts in that category, but they can split the reductions within the category as they like.
There's bipartisan support for trimming military spending to cut to help shrink the deficit. Supercommittee member Sen. Rob Portman (R-OH) supports the idea and Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) has quoted Adm. Mike Mullen's call to challenge the "permissive funding environment" that has protected the Pentagon from making any hard choices over the past 10 years. Even former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates agreed that the military budget can't pass through the fiscal crisis unscathed.
Still, the supercommittee seems unlikely to make substantial military cuts and quite likely to cut spending for the other agencies under the "security spending" umbrella, even though the Pentagon gets the lion's share of that category's funding. Supercommittee member Sen. Jon Kyl (R-AZ) demonstrated that position when he threatened to quit the committee if military cuts were even considered.
In the broader Congress, military spending seems equally safe. The Senate Appropriations Committee has recommended freezing, not reducing, that part of the budget, and the House Appropriations Committee recommended increasing it.
Even a budget freeze will keep military spending at the highest level since WWII. More troubling is that the Senate has found a loophole to protect favored programs from any cuts or caps by moving the programs into the "war-related" account, directly funds the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and is exempt. Congress should shun that kind of gimmick and find real waste to cut.
In this time of austerity, lawmakers should slash the wasteful military expenditures often identified by congressional and independent reports. For instance, former Reagan Assistant Secretary of Defense Lawrence Korb reported that the Pentagon has spent about $50 billion on weapons programs that it has had to cancel. The Pentagon requests funds to store and maintain America's fleet of 5,795 tanks, according to the Brookings Institute, and each year it spends over $50 billion on nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons-related programs, such as operations costs and missile defense, according to the Ploughshares Fund. Not all of this funding is essential or even contributes to making the country more secure.
Congress now has to make direct tradeoffs in the security category. Funding for 152 Veterans Affairs hospitals now has to compete with fighter jets orders. Valuable programs that secure U.S. troops abroad and provide grants for counterterrorism efforts could be eviscerated because Congress and the supercommittee are sheltering military spending from overdue reductions. To make deep cuts in these already underfunded programs would undercut national security.
Over the years, treating military spending as a sacred cow has turned budget debates into a question of how to balance providing for the Pentagon with finding money for other priorities, rather than demanding to know if every defense dollar is worth it. The supercommittee and Congress have an opportunity to rein in military spending, and they owe it to American taxpayers to negotiate realistic and fair cuts. What about the $31- $60 billion spent on contractors that's unaccounted for in Iraq and Afghanistan? Start there.
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18 Comments so far
Show AllYou are correct Patricia but it will not happen soon if ever under this President. Consider this. Former Secretary of Defense Gates recommended that military spending should not only "be on the table" but should be reduced significantly (I seem to remember that his number was 100 billion dollar). Then he suddenly retired before Mr. Obama's first term had ended. He was replaced by Mr. Panetta who has yelled repeatedly that military spending must "not be on the table" but, in fact, must be increased. Of course neither Mr. Gates not Mr. Panetta are the source of what appears to have been a typical 180 degree turn by Mr. Obama and Mr. Panetta who is the textbook example of a political brown-noser is only voicing what he has been told by his boss Obama. It is my opinion that Mr. Gates saw it coming and had no desire to participate. The cause of Mr. Obama's zig-zag? Elections in 2012. Nevertheless Obama et al. are scared shitless because the super-Congress might cut military spending and if Congress approves (though unlikely) Mr. Obama must veto the bill hence no deficit reduction. It is astonishing to notice how good this guy is at digging his own political grave time-and-again. It began with the spurt in Afghanistan, then health care, then with refusing to let the Bush tax cuts expire, then the debt-ceiling surrender, the Libya, and now the surrender on military spending. Shakespeare's grave-digger was infinitely wiser.
Obama's super catfood commission's sole mission is to cut Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid to provide more funds for the military industrial complex and to offset the $16 trillion that Dubya and Obama committed to bankster bailouts.
Obama will continue his "bipartsan" strategy whereby he panders to those who would never vote for him in a million years. "Bipartisan" in Obamaspeak means collaborating with GOP the way France's Vichy Government collaborated with Hitler.
Good article - but it is a little too mild. What about the Black Budget, the CIA budget, the State Dept Budget. The CIA has secret wars going on all over the globe. Even if the entrie U$A military was eliminated, we would still be killing innocent people all around the globe.
The USA will stop spending too much money on the military eventually. The question is the 'how' it will give up spending that money. I think it most likely that they'll keep on funding the warpig until the state cannot continue any longer - like the former USSR.
Of course, I don't think the USA will go as peacefully as the USSR did. I can't see the rightwing thugs accepting the loss of their nation easily, or phlegmatically. I can see them launching a nuclear war just because they're not willing to go gently into the night. They are full of rage, not always sure of where to direct the rage except they know not to rage against each other.
The US will bleed 99% of its citizens dry before it alters the taxpayer funded revenue stream of the military industrial complex. That's right, 99% of Americans will have zero net worth. 100% of the nation's wealth will be in the hands of the 1%. That is why it is so critical that Occupy Wall Street succeeeds.
Next week then. (god, I wish that was more of a joke...)
It matters little what this "Super Committee" does or for that matter what this President does in the short time remaining to him in office.
The military budget will be cut and bases will be closed. The spending indulged in by Bush and Obama that resulted in nothing but debt and no positive effects by either unless you happened to be a bank, insurance company our crony of the President or big donors to his party.
We should begin by ending our three-and-a-half wars, terminating treaties to go to war for nations having nothing to do with U.S. vital interests, closing bases abroad, bringing troops home and staying out of unnecessary wars.
Why are we still committed to defending two dozen nations in Europe when the threat that took us there 60 years ago went home 20 years ago? What is the argument for maintaining U.S. Air Force, Army and naval bases and thousands of U.S. troops in Europe?
Why are thousands of U.S. troops on the Korean DMZ when South Korea has twice the population and 40 times the economy of the North? South Korea has 40 times the economy and twice the population of North Korea. Japan’s economy is almost as large as China’s. Now that Mao is dead and gone and China is capitalist, Seoul and Tokyo trade more with Beijing than they do with us. What are we doing there?
Why are Marines still in Okinawa, two-thirds of a century after their grandfathers invaded the island? Bring them home. Close the bases, and bring the troops home.
The question is no longer "cut military spending" but where do we start the cutting?
Alugilac
Very well stated.
Thank you.
".. where do we start the cutting?"
That's easy enough to answer: At the throat.
Shut down the pentagon. Encircle Them. Hold Them hostage. Give 'em a taste of their own Rx. They need a good dose of themselves.
"We should begin by ending our three-and-a-half wars, terminating treaties to go to war for nations having nothing to do with U.S. vital interests, closing bases abroad, bringing troops home and staying out of unnecessary wars."
U.S. "vital interests"? Do you mean America has a right to attack if there are threats to its "vital interests"? You agree with Obama and the rest in this case, and in fact, you are mistaken if you think that the "U.S." (but not its people) has no vital interests in the Middle East.
"Why are we still committed to defending two dozen nations in Europe when the threat that took us there 60 years ago went home 20 years ago? What is the argument for maintaining U.S. Air Force, Army and naval bases and thousands of U.S. troops in Europe?"
Sorry but there mostly was no threat, except what America provoked for itself. And America is not exactly defending Europe either. What are you thinking? You are right of course about the actions, but you are, errrr, misunderstanding the motivations.
If you believe that the Sovit Union was no threat, I'll refer you to the people that lived under it, the kids that came over here from Hungary in 56 after we let them down, the people of Berlin, etc. It may be popular to make believe that there was no threat during those years and directly to us, but it is a fantasy of the first degree.
They proved themselves not to have been a threat, man. If they were as beastly as the US propaganda had said they were, don't you think they'd have launched a nuclear war rather than letting their empire die?
I see very little difference between the USA and the USSR. Both nations were/are totalitarian states that practice/d torture, pre-emptive war (the usa more than the ussr), the death penalty, incarceration for political crimes happened/s in both empires. The only major difference is that the Ruskies had to be (or pretend to be) drunk to speak openly about politics (kitchen talk), the States don't give a damn what you say as long as you obey your masters.
Remember that A Greek Minister reported that both France and Germany were pressuring Greece to buy arms form those nations and modernize its military even as they were pressuring Greece to enact Austerity measures so as to address their budgetary imbalance.
Indeed said Minister claimed that France and Germany were tying these demands directly to releasing to Greece more in the way of bailout funds.
Militarism and the Arms Industry are corruption incarnate.
Coincidentally, Philly's all-news AM radio station just broadcast a breathless Breaking News Special Report at the top of the hour.
I only half-listened, but it involved the "discovery" of an international assassination plot against Saudi Arabian and Israeli (?) heads of state ordered by the Iranian government.
I can't risk burning out my quotation mark key by slathering on all of the ironic quotes the above-cited report deserves.
There were additional talking points about informants tipping off the Amerikan security apparatus, etc.
Be prepared for Team Coverage, and the vast wooshing sound of slack-jawed yokels from coast to coast yodeling in renewed hysterical fear, panic, and xenophobia!
Film at Eleven!
>>Officials said that the Saudi ambassador, Al-Jubeir, who is close to King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz and has been in his post since 2007, was never in danger. President Barack Obama was briefed in June about the alleged plot and through a spokesman expressed gratitude for it being disrupted.
>>The assassination plot began to unfold in May 2011 when Arbabsiar approached an individual in Mexico to help, but that individual turned out to be an informant for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
This from the article. Odd is it not as this all was alleged to have happened In May and June some 5 months ago? Iran obviously denies any such plot and given recent history I tend to believe the Government of Iran more then that of the United States of America.
The USA is doing all it can to manufacture a war on Iran so why would Iran give the US what it wanted? It smells of a setup.
There another self proclaimed watchdog agency claiming they have proof in the way of Satellite imagery that shows Iran expands Nuclear facilities (all they really have is a picture of a warehouse being built)
This latest "scare" has all the appearances of another attempt by the US Government to manufacture a Crisis so as to deflect attention from all the fraud and corruption that is ongoing inside the United States of America.
IF Eugene Debs could be arrested and convicted for passing out pamphlets suggesting that people not volunteer to join the Army to fight the Germans is it that hard to imagine that OWS protesters would be seen as impairing "The War effort against Americas Enemies" by that same Government?
Well, if you want to shut down the #occupy movement, launching a war is a great way to do it. After all think of all of history's despots who've done exactly that. :)
Of course it's a setup. I'm still struck by the idea that it's easier for me to trust the statements of the government of Iran than the USA... It's not really surprising, but it is kinda bizarre that the fundy nutballs who run Iran are not as screwed up as the fundy nutballs who run the USA.
military spending belongs in a quaint old museum somewhere, collecting dust in the basement.
military spending is a business suit sale at a nudist colony.
military spending belongs on the toilet seat - a flatulent fat ass sorely in need of a major suppository.
military spending does not belong anywhere.