By William D. Hartung
It's been a good decade for the Pentagon. The most
recent numbers from Capitol Hill indicate that Pentagon spending
(counting Iraq and Afghanistan) will reach over $630 billion in 2010.
And that doesn’t even include the billions set aside for building new military facilities and sustaining the U.S. nuclear arsenal.
But
even without counting the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
the Department of Defense budget has been moving relentlessly upward
since 2001. Pentagon budget authority has jumped from $296 billion in
2001 to $513 billion in 2009, a 73% increase. And again, that's not
even counting the over $1 trillion in taxpayer money that has been
thrown at the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Even if those wars had
never happened, the Pentagon would still be racking up huge increases
year after year after year.
And perhaps most disturbing of all, the Pentagon budget increased for every year of the first decade of the 21st
century, an unprecedented run that didn't even happen in the World War
II era, much less during Korea or Vietnam. And if the government's
current plans are carried out, there will be yearly increases in
military spending for at least another decade.
We
have a permanent war budget, and most of it isn't even being used to
fight wars — it's mostly a giveaway to the Pentagon and its favorite
contractors.
What Can Be Done?
For
starters, the Pentagon needs to cut unnecessary weapons systems that
were designed to meet Cold War threats that no longer exist. A good
place to look for these kinds of cuts is in the Unified Security Budget,
an analysis provided annually by a taskforce organized by Foreign
Policy In Focus. Its most recent recommendations call for over $55
billion in cuts in everything from unneeded combat aircraft to
anti-missile programs to nuclear weapons spending.
To
their credit, President Obama and his Secretary of Defense Robert Gates
have sought to eliminate eight such programs, from the F-22 combat
aircraft to the Kinetic Energy Interceptor (a leftover from the old
"Star Wars" program). An analysis recently produced by Taxpayers for
Common Sense indicated that six of the eight proposed program cuts
stuck. This is an impressive record, given the need to fight the
weapons contractors and their pork-barreling allies in Congress to get
the job done. But as the analysis also notes, additional spending on
other programs added up to $1 billion more than the amount saved by the
cuts.
This shouldn't be surprising. As a
candidate for president, Obama told a rally in Iowa that it might be
necessary to "bump up" the military budget beyond the record levels
established by the Bush administration. And in announcing the
administration's proposed weapons cuts in spring 2009, Secretary of
Defense Robert Gates made it clear that he was seeking to rearrange
priorities within the Pentagon, not reduce its budget. Gates sought
more funding for equipment that would support counterinsurgency
operations — like unmanned aerial vehicles — and less for systems
designed to fight a Soviet threat that no longer exists — like the F-22
combat aircraft. And he got pretty much what he asked for.
Reducing U.S. Reach
Another
area for savings would be to cut the size of the armed forces. But
Obama campaigned on a promise to carry out a troop increase of 92,000,
mirroring proposals made by the Bush administration. And his commitment
of 30,000 additional troops to Afghanistan might set the stage for even
larger increases in the total U.S. forces at some point down the road.
Finally,
any real savings in U.S. military spending would need to be accompanied
by a reduction in U.S. "global reach" — in the hundreds of major
military facilities it controls in Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin
America. But — in parallel to the war efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan—
U.S. overseas-basing arrangements have been on the rise, not only in
Iraq and Afghanistan themselves but in bordering nations.
So,
barring major public pressure, don't expect the overall Pentagon budget
to go down anytime soon. We can certainly still achieve some real
reforms, from the elimination of outmoded systems like the F-22, to
cracking down on war profiteering, to supporting the Obama
administration's indispensable efforts to cut back the size of the U.S.
nuclear arsenal. At least for now, though, making the Pentagon do with
less when most communities in the country are suffering from the
deepest economic downturn since the Great Depression is not in the
cards. Not unless large numbers of us make it an issue.
Toward Freedom