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The Push to Downsize Defense

by: Maya Schenwar, t r u t h o u t | Report

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US President Barack Obama in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on February 26, 2009, announces his administration's fiscal year 2009 federal budget. (Photo: Getty Images)

    As President Obama released his budget outline for fiscal year 2010 on Thursday, recommending about $664 billion in defense funding, a determined group of progressive Congress members and activists pushed for a marked change in the way the US spends those dollars. Led by Rep. Barney Frank, the group advocates a 25 percent cut in military spending, to be accomplished by eliminating wasteful and obsolete programs, reducing active nuclear warheads and withdrawing from Iraq in an efficient and timely manner.

    The Obama administration's budget allocates $534 billion in general defense funds for fiscal year (FY) 2010: an inflation-adjusted increase of about 2.1 percent over the amount appropriated by Congress last year, according to an analysis by Travis Sharp at the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation. It's a smaller increase than previous years have seen, according to Sharp, but nevertheless continues the trend of a swelling defense budget. An additional $130 billion is requested for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    Obama's budget outline excludes funding for nuclear weapons and non-Defense Department military costs which, according to Sharp's analysis, totaled around $23 billion for FY 2009.

    Military spending has more than doubled in the past eight years; it now tops $700 billion and sucks up about 40 percent of US tax dollars. According to Frank, bloated defense funding is crowding out domestic priorities.

    "The logic is irrefutable," Frank said at a forum on Wednesday, where he discussed his proposal to chop off a quarter of the defense budget. "If we are not able to get military spending under control, if we are not able to break the trend that's now there, we will not be able to respond to important domestic needs."

    Frank was joined by Congress members Barbara Lee, Keith Ellison, Dennis Kucinich and Lynn Woolsey at Wednesday's meeting. Lee emphasized the benefits of reducing military spending, including more money for education, health care and homeland security. She also pointed to some obvious targets to slash: stale Cold War-era programs that somehow never made it to the chopping block.

    "It has been eighteen years since the collapse of the Soviet Union," Lee said in a statement. "I find it mind-boggling and inexcusable that nearly two decades later, the Pentagon continues to waste tens of billions of dollars buying outdated, Cold War-era weaponry for a national security threat that no longer exists."

    The flood of dollars toward obsolete systems is the tip of the iceberg when it comes to cutting weapons purchases, according to Craig Jennings, federal fiscal policy analyst with the nonprofit OMB Watch. Substantially reducing the Pentagon budget will necessitate a meaty cost-benefit analysis, discarding appropriations that just aren't worth it.

    "Congress needs to ask the critical question, 'Are defense expenditures meeting the needs of the nation?'" Jennings told Truthout. "In other words, does the F-22 make us so much safer from present-day threats like al-Qaeda that it's worth expending tens of billions of dollars on? Do we really need $4 billion stealth naval destroyers? What is more ultimately harmful to the health of the nation: 46 million people without health insurance or the threat of intercontinental ballistic missile launches from North Korea? These are questions that Congress - Democratic and Republican - have consistently failed to pose. While Frank's specific plan may not be the right solution, the very fact that he's broaching the taboo subject of substantial cuts to military spending is very encouraging."

    Just trimming the fat - cutting obsolete programs, reducing nuclear arsenals and eliminating wasteful spending - would save more than $60 billion, according to Erik Leaver, policy outreach director for Foreign Policy in Focus.

    Also, withdrawing from Iraq could substantially reduce the defense budget. Obama has said that the withdrawal will help to curb the deficit, and despite a troop build-up in Afghanistan, he's probably right, according to Jennings, who estimates that the number of troops in Afghanistan will be about one third of the number currently in Iraq.

    However, withdrawal has its costs, too. Procurement and maintenance costs for equipment will continue as long as some troops remain in Iraq, and transporting soldiers and equipment home will add to the tab, according to Leaver. He also notes that the transportation of supplies is more expensive in Afghanistan than in Iraq.

    Moreover, any plan to reduce the defense budget must take into account President Obama's plans to expand the Army and Marines by nearly 100,000 troops. Growing the military not only increases short-term spending, but it racks up long-term veteran-related costs. According to Leaver, an enlarged military creates a "hidden cost" as well.

    "With a larger-sized military, President Obama or other future presidents may be tempted to use them more liberally in combat missions," Leaver told Truthout. "As we've seen with Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan, what seems like a 'cakewalk' often turns into a military and fiscal disaster."

    Thus, Representative Frank and his colleagues are suggesting a fundamentally different direction: a reconceptualization of the Defense Department as a smaller, more limited enterprise. The transformation won't happen overnight, but it is far from doomed, according to Sharp.

    "While I think it is pretty unlikely that Frank's proposal will go anywhere this year, Frank himself has said that he wants this to be a long-term project, not a one-time effort," Sharp told Truthout.

    Changes in the defense-budgeting process may pave the way for reductions - or at least bring more scrutiny to skyrocketing military expenditures, according to Sharp. Departing from the Bush administration's general strategy of submitting supplemental spending bills throughout the year to pay for Iraq and Afghanistan, the Obama budget requests the whole year's funding up front, though it remains in supplemental form, separate from the general budget. The Bush administration tended to request war funds in partial-year segments, obscuring the full cost of the war. The Obama administration has said that in future years, it will dispense with supplementals for war funding, forcing policymakers to weigh it alongside other priorities in the general budget. Experts commend the switch, calling it a boon for transparency.

    "This may seem like a small change, but it is an enormous improvement over the Bush administration, which insisted until the bitter end that it could not present its war budget at the beginning of the year even though it was required by law," Sharp told Truthout. "If war supplementals are submitted at the beginning of the year and eventually phased out, it will improve congressional oversight and allow policymakers to perform better long-term planning. It also will present a clearer picture to the American public of what the country spends in Iraq and Afghanistan."

    Revealing the true cost of Iraq and Afghanistan would not only bring home the amount of money the "war on terror" is costing taxpayers. Squeezing defense money through the same funnel as comparably meager domestic allocations could potentially force a reassessment of America's priorities. However, even that hard comparison might not have enough oomph to knock Congress out of defense-budget overdrive.

    "When it comes to military spending, Congress tends to treat those expenditures as 'free money,' in that they are not in direct competition with other, non-defense program spending," Jennings said.

    Thus, according to Rep. Frank, the cost-benefit analysis needs to be spelled out not only for Congress but for the American people.

    "If we do not make reductions approximating 25 percent of the military budget starting fairly soon, it will be impossible to continue to fund an adequate level of domestic activity even with a repeal of Bush's tax cuts for the very wealthy," Frank wrote in an op-ed in The Nation earlier this month. "I do not think it will be hard to make it clear to Americans that their well-being is far more endangered by a proposal for substantial reductions in Medicare, Social Security or other important domestic areas than it would be by canceling weapons systems that have no justification from any threat we are likely to face."

    Signs may bode well for a serious consideration of Frank's proposal. The fact that the American people elected a president who objected to the invasion of Iraq, coupled with an economic crisis that sheds disapproving light on any wasteful spending, could fuel a new push to reexamine military excess. The Obama administration's moves toward defense-budget transparency could open new eyes to that budget's immensity. Plus, the very presence of an open discussion of the military budget's size is a positive signal, according to Sharp.

    "One notable thing about Frank's plan is that it represents a return to public debate about recalibrating and reducing defense spending," Sharp said. "It was politically taboo to discuss reducing or rearranging Pentagon spending requests in the years after September 11. Any member of Congress who dared to publicly question larger defense budgets risked being called unpatriotic, 'soft' on terrorism, or worse. Now, seven years later, it seems things slowly are returning to normal."

  

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Maya Schenwar is Executive Director of Truthout.

Comments

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lets hope so

lets hope so

Clearly, military spending

Clearly, military spending is for the most part wasteful. Not only because it produces nothing useful but because procurement has never been controlled prudently. To the contrary, the military spends as much as possible, dumps billions of dollars worth of equipment and supplies, in order to justify each new "budget" a misnomer if there ever were one. The military is the most destructive organization we have as the the environment. In fact, nearly everything about the military is a dead waste.

This is just about the most

This is just about the most hopeful thing I have read all year. Finally someone is actually addressing the biggest elephant in the room, the 40% of US taxes going to the military. I can't see how the US can possibly continue to fund the military at such levels, even if it made any sort of sense on any level.

This article has information

This article has information that's new to me,so thanks. Nobody is talking about the bases in Iraq:14? The pubic has been short changed on information for years, so debate may be driven by things like: members of Congress wanting to keep defense manufacturing in their states. (I think I heard recently that almost every state has something involved in military weaponry or parts manufacturing.) Right wing radio/tv, and other arenas will push the patriotism button in re military. I'd like a followup by Chalmers Johnson, with update, if possible, to his outline of military bases, and related "holdings" of the US around the world, as done in his "Sorrows of Empire" book (the middle of his good trilogy).

I absolutely agree that

I absolutely agree that downsizing "Defense" (to use the current misnomer) is an essential consideration when one speaks of serious budget reform. In fact, were it up to me I'd split the Department of Defense into twin Departments: War, and Defense; then I'd work diligently to reduce the War Department's budget to somewhere in the vicinity of zero. With reasonable diligence, it should be possible to save perhaps as much as a half-trillion dollars per year and NOT sacrifice the safety and security of the homeland in the process. Consider that since World War II, every military excursion on the US's part has been an ill-thought aggression, a non-declared "war" in name only, and of huge expense in both treasure and in blood. From Korea, to Vietnam, to Grenada, Panama, the Persian Gulf, Afghanistan, and Iraq, the ONLY legitimate actionable excursion was Afghanistan in the aftermath of 9-11. And one can only wonder: had the destruction of al Qaeda been our only goal, would we not have been out of the fray years ago? It's time for a new global policy: wage peace, not war. Defense, yes; aggression, never again.

It is not "defense" but

It is not "defense" but offensive spending that needs to be cut. This military spending has very little relationship to defending the country and more to do with exerting coercive control over countries abroad with over 1 million solders and spies operating in over 130 countries and manning over 720 military bases (with more permanent bases being built in Afghanistan and Iraq to be used for the next 50 years like our bases in Japan and Germany). Buying billion dollar planes to drop $100,000 smart bombs on dirt huts in the Middle East or using $15 million dollar predator drones to attack wedding parties in Afghanistan in the hopes of killing a possible freedom fighter is wasteful as well as shameful. This is really just throwing money at a problem and even if the problem remains the people building this weapons are reaping huge profits and could care less that their "products" are being used to target civilian populations and killing far more women and children than soldiers.

This is REAL change!! But

This is REAL change!! But watch the demonic warmongers come to attack Frank and the rest of the true American patriots at that meeting. All the devils will come together against them: the DIA killers, the CIA killers, the "defense"killers, the vampire corporations, the arms dealing genocidaires, pseudo-Christian right, the filthy rich and the rest are all going to combine their venom against these few courageous congresspeople to make sure they bite the dust. Their only hope lies with us and with our chorus voices supporting the slashing of the "defense"budget by 25% - AT LEAST!! This should be the new agenda item for all future elections - slice their budget EVERY YEAR BY 25 PERCENT UNTIL WE HAVE BROUGHT THE MONSTER UNDER CONTROL!!

Bravo to President Obama,

Bravo to President Obama, Barney Frank, Barbara Lee, Keith Ellison, Dennis Kucinich and Lynn Woolsey. They have shown courage many times in the past, and now in this important proposal as well. While there is an increasing terrorist threat, and an increasing threat from states such as North Korea, and Pakistan, and Russia, the nearly trillion dollar military budget will never eliminate it. Only diplomacy and cooperation, in combination with our already potent deterrant can do that. And the threat is overstated by fearmongers such as those in the weapons industry, and the previous occupants of the White House, and others whose constituents rely on the military-industrial complex for jobs, and profits. Reality check: ever notice how the more our nation talks of war, the more war we get? Those military dollars are better spent on education, and healthcare for all Americans, and a clean energy economy. A clean energy economy alone would mostly eliminate the need for competition for dwindling fossil fuel resources. Of course we can't eliminate our military, but we sure can cut it's bloated budget. And that will be a good thing.

For starters, how about

For starters, how about eliminating ALL no-bid contracts? How about forbidding, EVER AGAIN, any military contracts with the companies that have been reported to have criminally overcharged? How about discontinuing ALL contracts with mercenaries like Blackwater (or whatever new name it is currently using)? How about requiring all branches of the Armed Services to begin zero-based budgeting, and making ANY member of Congress who argues for military spending in his/her constituency to defend and assure absolute honesty and oversight? And how about saving use of the term "patriotism" for appropriate occasions?

At last! Some intelligent

At last! Some intelligent discussion that might get us out of frantic mode, and enable an essential change in direction. The military industrial complex, misused media, and energy profiteers are very big systems to alter -- like treating stage 3 cancer. Thanks to Maya for the well-written article, and to bloggers for thoughtful comments.

May I suggest that Maya and

May I suggest that Maya and other authors of such articles start rethinking their article headings? This is how right wingers turn positive article content into a fear warning. This article heading, "The Push to Downsize Defense" implies, to those who only read the heading, there is a push to make us American's less safe. When one reads the article in full, one realizes the more accurate heading would be, "The Push to Improve Defense" since the push will be to eliminate wasteful spending, no-bid contracts, improve veteran care and update our weapons systems. This plan can only sound bad to those who made obscene profits from the Bush Wars. I completely agree we must convert our current Department of Offense, Waste, and Lobbyist/Contractor Enrichment back into an ACTUAL Department of Defense that is the envy of the world.

What really drives defense

What really drives defense spending has nothing to do with defense. It has to do with the defense industry, political donations, and lobbying by the defense contractors. Follow the money, and you will see why we can have something like the $40 billion Osprey project but will send Marines into Iraq with Viet Nam era body armor that would not stop an military grade AK 47 round.

MIComplex will start crying

MIComplex will start crying the same old crap that they have always done. The Dems are weak on defense. Hopefully the american people have finally opened their eyes and realized that this is a new world with a new paradigm. Saving our planet from complete destruction. It is probably a good thing that the old economic system is dying. Maybe then we can rebuild a new system that works for the masses and not for just a few.

One question to pose to

One question to pose to those who think that an enormous military brings national security: "What benefit, preventive or otherwise, was the military on that September 11, 2001?"

We already have a great

We already have a great defense, it's called foreign policy. Also, this means a reduction of grease for those sweaty palms. I hear the humidity can get very high in Washington. And thanks to the war dogs, Mr. Obama enjoys ultimate powers! At least he puts them to good use. And I hope he seals them away before he leaves office.

Well I'll keep working for

Well I'll keep working for the day we beat our swords into plowshares and never train for war again. No supermen are going to come flying out of the sky to tell us to do it. It is going to come about from peace loving people. We can build a Peaceful economy by switching at least 50% of our GUNS AND BOMBS spending over to the electric car we can plug into our solar powered roofs. Which would put generations to work on something useful.

The renaming of the War

The renaming of the War Department shortly after WWII did a great disservice to the common sense & understanding of the American public. Our military excursions since WWII have *all* been offensive, not defensive. If we went back to calling the DOD the "War Department" maybe we would see that it needs to be downsized by about 60% immediately with further retrenchments to come later, as the economy recovers enough to absorb the freed-up personnel. There is no shortage of programs of actual domestic value that could usefully take the big bucks made available by starving the pentagon, and create a great deal of employment beneficial to both the workers involved and the community at large.