Pentagon
'Cuts' Really Miss the Point
Miriam Pemberton
Topeka (KS) Capital Journal
Jan. 28, 2005
The news is leaking out that the Pentagon will be making deep cuts
in its 2006 budget for weapons. The cuts appear headed in the right
direction: toward scaling back weapons systems that were designed to
fight the cold war and have little relevance to the wars we are actually
fighting. Calling them "deep cuts," however, is a stretch.
It would be another stretch to believe that there will be anything left
over to address important deficits in U.S. security.
Let's first be clear that these are not cuts at all, at least as we
ordinary mortals understand the term. The White House isn't talking
about spending less on the military this year than last. The Bush administration
is talking about cutting the increase in spending the Pentagon said
last year it was planning for next year.
The overall defense budget will continue to rise. And spending for
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will continue to be funded with tens
of billions of dollars off the books. Known as "supplemental"
spending, these budget bills obscure the real cost of U.S. military
operations. Taking this extra money into account, the U.S. spent $460
billion on the military in 2004.
Still, these so-called "cuts" do represent a milestone of
sorts. The Pentagon is finally recognizing the need to make choices.
Until this year, with few exceptions, the United States has simply tacked
money for new weapons on to budget for the Cold War systems already
in the pipeline. The 9-11 attacks simply accelerated this practice.
The United States currently spends almost 25 percent more on the military
than it did before the attacks, not including funds for on the wars
the United States is actually fighting.
The combination of the Iraq War, which the United States should never
have begun, and tax cuts the nation can't afford, has forced the administration
to slow this surge in the military largesse.
The Pentagon's choices for cuts are mostly wise. A year ago, I co-directed
a task force of security experts that produced "A
Unified Security Budget for the United States" identifying
seven weapons systems that could be canceled or reduced without hurting
U.S. security. The administration plans reductions in all of them.
The problem is that the government's military number crunchers are
shaving where they should shear. Our task force explained why the FA-22
fighter jet and the DD(X) destroyer programs are unnecessary and could
safely be canceled. The Bush administration merely plans to scale them
back slightly.
Most of the "cuts" won't even happen for several more years.
Besides, about a month's operations in Iraq will eat up the entire proposed
savings on military spending in Bush's budget for next year, about $6
billion.
Meanwhile, critical investments in our security are in danger once
again of going begging. In the "Unified Security Budget" report,
we argued for rebalancing our security spending priorities to invest
more in such non-military tools as diplomacy, economic development aid
and international cooperation to curb the spread of dangerous weapons.
This case is gaining broad-based support. One of the 9-11 Commission's
major recommendations called for combating terrorism by increasing investment
in the full range of diplomatic, development and humanitarian tools
at our disposal.
"Terrorism is not caused by poverty," the commission's report
said. "Yet when people lose hope, when societies break down, when
countries fragment, the breeding grounds for terrorism are created."
The budget for International Affairs, which funds most of these non-military
security tools, represents only about 1 percent of the total U.S. budget.
Yet the budget Congress passed at the end of 2004 covering fiscal 2005
failed to fund these programs even at the modest level of the president's
request.
This is no time for such shortsightedness. The extreme human, economic
and diplomatic costs of nation-building by military force are on display
in Iraq. The benefits of this policy are missing in action. While the
administration and Congress begin to reduce unnecessary weapons programs,
they must pay equal attention to investing in the non-military tools
that are critical to our security.
Miriam Pemberton is peace and security editor for "Foreign Policy
In Focus" at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, D.C.
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