By Robert Reich, cross-posted from his website
We can best honor those who have given their lives for this nation in
combat by making sure our military might is proportional to what
America needs.
The United States spends more on our military than do China, Russia, Britain, France, Japan, and Germany put together.
With the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan, the cost of fighting wars is projected to drop – but the “base” defense budget (the annual cost of paying troops and buying planes, ships, and tanks – not including the costs of actually fighting wars) is scheduled to rise. The base budget is already about 25 percent higher than it was a decade ago, adjusted for inflation.
One big reason: It’s almost impossible to terminate large defense
contracts. Defense contractors have cultivated sponsors on Capitol Hill
and located their plants and facilities in politically important
congressional districts. Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and others have made
spending on national defense into America’s biggest jobs program.
So we keep spending billions on Cold War weapons systems like nuclear
attack submarines, aircraft carriers, and manned combat fighters that
pump up the bottom lines of defense contractors but have nothing to do
with 21st-century combat.
For example, the Pentagon says it
wants to buy fewer F-35 joint strike fighter planes than had been
planned – the single-engine fighter has been plagued by cost overruns
and technical glitches – but the contractors and their friends on
Capitol Hill promise a fight.
The absence of a budget deal on
Capitol Hill is supposed to trigger an automatic across-the-board
ten-year cut in the defense budget of nearly $500 billion, starting
January.
But Republicans have vowed to restore
the cuts. The House Republican budget cuts everything else — yet brings
defense spending back up. Mitt Romney’s proposed budget does the same.
Yet even if the scheduled cuts occur, the Pentagon is still projected to spend over $2.7 trillion over the next ten years.
At the very least, hundreds of billions could be saved without
jeopardizing the nation’s security by ending weapons systems designed
for an age of conventional warfare. We should shrink the F-35 fleet of
stealth fighters. Cut the number of deployed strategic nuclear weapons,
ballistic missile submarines and intercontinental ballistic missiles.
And take a cleaver to the Navy and Air Force budgets. (Most of the
action is with the Army, Marines and Special Forces.)
At a time when Medicare, Medicaid,
and non-defense discretionary spending (including most programs for the
poor, as well as infrastructure and basic R&D) are in serious
jeopardy, Obama and the Democrats should be calling for even more
defense cuts.
A reasonable and rational defense
budget would be a fitting memorial to those who have given their lives
so we may remain free.
Sunday, May 27, 2012
Memorial Day Thoughts On National Defense
Tags
Afghanistan
,
Congress
,
Pentagon
,
politics
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Reich
,
war and peace
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