A Pre-Primer on an Upcoming Defense Budget Fight
You wouldn't have thought that the Obama team is taking a courageous stand by insisting on the same DOD funding as the Bush Administration, but it looks like that is exactly what is going on. Keep the following in mind when conservatives starting talking about Obama being weak on defense. CQ Politics:
The Obama administration has given the Pentagon a $527 billion limit, excluding war costs, for its fiscal 2010 defense budget, an official with the White House's Office of Management and Budget said Monday.
If enacted, that would be an 8 percent increase from the $487.7 billion allocated for fiscal 2009, and it would match what the Bush administration estimated last year for the Pentagon in fiscal 2010. But it sets up a potential conflict between the new administration and the Defense Department's entrenched bureaucracy, which has remained largely intact through the presidential transition.
Some Pentagon officials and congressional conservatives are already trying to portray the OMB number as a cut by comparing it to a $584 billion draft fiscal 2010 budget request compiled last fall by the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The $527 billion figure is "what the Bush people thought was the right number last February and that's the number we're going with," said the OMB official, who declined to be identified. "The Joint Chiefs did that to lay down a marker for the incoming administration that was unrealistic. It's more of a wish list than anything else."
I love this little note: "The Pentagon refused to comment publicly on why it would need the higher amount."
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Comments
Could somebody explain to me that while people are being laid off in their thousands.
Foreclosures right, left & centre.
The economy going down the pan.
Wall street ripping off main street good style.
Why the industrial military complex shouldn,t take a wage cut aswell, they should not be getting an increase but a decrease of 8%.
This isn an interview with David Cay Johnston that is well worth a watch.
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/2/2/david_cay_johnston_more_corporate_tax
How about using this to institute executive pay restrictions? Let the DoD have the big budget, but add a clause that a company is ineligible for DoD contracts if total executive compensation for any officer is greater than, say, 25x minimum wage.
President Bush signed a
President Bush signed a $417.5 billion defense appropriations bill for fiscal year 2005 on August 5, 2004. With the addition of an $82 billion supplemental for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, in real terms U.S. military spending will be at a level exceeded only by that of the waning years of World War II and the height of the Korean War. The Defense Department had requested $401.7 billion, which was a 7 percent increase. The administration argues that increased military spending is a necessary part of the war on terrorism. Now the Obama administration has given the Pentagon a $527 billion limit, excluding war costs, for its fiscal 2010 defense budget. If enacted, that would be an 8 percent increase from the $487.7 billion allocated for fiscal 2009, and it would match what the Bush administration estimated last year for the Pentagon in fiscal 2010. But it sets up a potential conflict between the new administration and the Defense Department's entrenched bureaucracy, which has remained largely intact through the presidential transition.
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