2013/04/12

Tomgram: Mattea Kramer, A People's Budget for Tax Day!

Recently, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel gave a major speech at the National Defense University on cutting military aka defense spending. Hagel is considered a realist, and so when it comes to such cuts, this is undoubtedly the best we're likely to get out of Washington for a long time to come. Unfortunately, it turns out that the best is pretty poor stuff. The speech was filled with the sort of complaints we've already grown used to hearing from the Pentagon about the deep cuts imposed by sequester. These, Hagel insisted, will result in a significant reduction in military capabilities. In fact, President Obama's just released 2014 budget calls for only a miniscule 1.6% cut in the Pentagon's bloated budget. There was also the usual boilerplate stuff about the US global military stance, America's responsibilities are as enormous as they are humbling, and about the vacuum we'd create on planet Earth, if we reduced it in any way. As the Nation's Robert Dreyfuss wrote, Nature may abhor a vacuum, but it isn't the job of the United States to go stumbling into every regional conflict, humanitarian crisis, failed state, and would be terrorist nest that arises. Whatever those things are, they're not vacuum to be filled. Like Leon Panetta before him, Hagel, who took a voluntary sequester pay cut, managed to make it sound as if the US military were teetering at the edge of some financial cliff. He spoke mournfully, for instance, of the Pentagon having significantly less resources than the department had in the past. Well no, as Mark Thompson of Time magazine pointed out, it just ain't so. The facts aren't difficult to sort out, even for those of us, who aren't secretaries of defense. In a world filled with the most modest of enemies, after those sequestrations and other planned cuts in the military budget are taken into account, the country would still be spending at levels that weren't reached in the Cold War years, when there were two overarmed superpowers on the planet. As the Congressional Budget Office concluded last month, In real terms, after the reduction in 2013, DoD's base budget is about what it was in 2013, DoD's base budget is about what it was in 2007, and is still 7% above the average funding since 1980. Among Hagel's more accurate, if disheartening, comments was his praise for the way the US military had, in the post 9/11 era, grown more expeditionary.  

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