SMRs and AMRs

Thursday, January 06, 2011

Pentagon Seeks Biggest Military Cuts Since Before 9/11

By THOM SHANKER and CHRISTOPHER DREW
NYT

WASHINGTON — The White House has ordered the Pentagon to squeeze almost all growth from its spending over the next five years, which will require eventually shrinking the Army and Marine Corps and seeking controversial increases in the fees paid by for retired, working-age veterans for their health insurance, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Thursday.

The reductions of up to 47,000 troops from the Army and Marine Corps forces — roughly 6 percent shrinkage — would be the first since the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, reversing the trend ever since. They will be made easier by the withdrawal under way from Iraq, and will only begin in 2015 — just as Afghan forces are to take over the security mission there according to agreements with NATO.

But Mr. Gates said the cuts in Pentagon spending were hardly a peace dividend, and were forced by a global economic recession and domestic pressures to find ways to throttle back federal spending. Indeed, the announcement of his proposal, which Congress would have to approve, came on the same day as word that he would be adding about 1,400 Marines in coming months to the forces fighting in Afghanistan.Mr. Gates said the budget proposals reflect the “extreme fiscal duress” felt by the United States Government, and he acknowledged that protecting American global interests and sustaining the entire gamut of American power required the military to take a tough look at its spending practices.

The Pentagon’s proposed operating budget for 2012 is expected to be about $553 billion, which will still reflect real growth, even though it is $13 billion less than expected. But then the Pentagon budget will begin a decline in the rate of growth for two years, and then will stay flat — even with inflation — for fiscal years 2015 and 2016. Over five years the reductions would amount to $78 billion. (The Pentagon operating budget is separate from a contingency fund that pays for the military’s combat and stability efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq.)

(More here.)

1 Comments:

Blogger Minnesota Central said...

The headline writer could have done a better job here ...
KEY PARAGRAPH :
The Army’s ranks number 569,600, and the Marine Corps has just over 202,000 members; both would remain larger than when Mr. Gates became defense secretary four years ago.

During the news conference, I believe Gates said that the Army would be up 20,000 and the Marines up 7,000.

The headline should have been that troop levels will be higher than 9/11 while unproven equipment programs will be cut ... as well as some overhead.

Gates has talked before about increasing the Tricare program co-pays which haven't changed since 1995 ... it's a fair point, but remember that Congress must enact the rate increase and Congress has not significantly raised its own payment ... it was set in 1992 and is under $525 per year now.

10:22 AM  

Post a Comment

<< Home