The US military-industrial complex, the Pentagon system, call it what you will, marches inexorably on. Yet, the foreign policy and military establishments have been screaming about the impact of budgetary cuts on America's security -- from whom it is not always clear. America spends as much on its military forces as do the next 10 countries; this is equivalent to 40% of the world's total military spending.
Below is an article that reveals the sleight of hand that has been used to deceive the American public at a time when cuts to the budgets for education, healthcare, unemployment and welfare have been slashed with unrelenting determination and recklessness.
That military-industrial complex that Presdident Eisenhower both warned about, built, and declared essential, back in his 1961 Farewell Address, is alive and well, telling its own truths - from the White House down to Congress and its myriad of media, academic, corporate, foundation, think tank, and political organisations - an entire apparatus of intellectual and ideological institutions against which the general public stands almost naked.
Yet, there are a few voices still able to tell a different story, interrogate the obscure accounting categories that hide vast military budgets, and provide a chance for critical reflection on the character of American democracy today.
March 8,
2014 Huffpost Politics
Edition: U.S.
The Pentagon's Phony Budget
War
Posted:
03/06/2014 9:33 am EST Updated: 03/06/2014 9:59 am EST
Or How the U.S. Military Avoided Budget Cuts, Lied
About Doing So, Then Asked for Billions More
Cross-posted
with TomDispatch.com
Washington
is pushing the panic button, claiming austerity is hollowing out our armed
forces and our national security is at risk. That was the message Secretary of
Defense Chuck Hagel delivered last week when he announced that the Army would
shrink to levels not seen since before World War II. Headlines about this crisis followed in papers
like the New York Times and members of Congress issued statements
swearing that they would never allow our security to be held hostage to the
budget-cutting process.
Yet a
careful look at budget figures for the U.S. military -- a bureaucratic
juggernaut accounting for 57% of the federal discretionary budget and
nearly 40% of all military spending on this planet --
shows that such claims have been largely fictional. Despite cries of doom since the across-the-board cuts known as
sequestration surfaced in Washington in 2011, the Pentagon has seen few actual
reductions, and there is no indication that will change any time soon.
This
piece of potentially explosive news has, however, gone missing in action -- and
the “news” that replaced it could prove to be one of the great bait-and-switch
stories of our time.
The
Pentagon Cries Wolf, Round One
As
sequestration first approached, the Pentagon issued deafening cries of despair.
Looming cuts would “inflict lasting damage on our national defense and hurt the
very men and women who protect this country,” said Secretary Hagel in December 2012.
Sequestration went into effect in
March 2013 and was slated to slice $54.6
billion from the Pentagon’s $550
billion larger-than-the-economy-of-Sweden budget. But Congress
didn’t have the stomach for it, so lawmakers knocked the cuts down to $37 billion. (Domestic programs like Head Start
and cancer research received no such special dispensation.)
By law,
the cuts were to be applied across the board. But that, too, didn’t go as
planned. The Pentagon was able to do something hardly recognizable as a cut at
all. Having the luxury of unspent funds from previous budgets -- known
obscurely as “prior year unobligated balances” -- officials reallocated some of
the cuts to those funds instead.
In the
end, the Pentagon shaved about 5.7%, or $31 billion, from its 2013 budget. And
just how painful did that turn out to be? Frank Kendall, who serves as the
Undersecretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics, has acknowledged that the Pentagon “cried wolf.”
Those cuts caused no substantial damage, he admitted.
And
that’s not where the story ends -- it’s where it begins.
Sequestration,
the Phony Budget War, Round Two
A $54.6
billion slice was supposed to come out of the Pentagon budget in 2014. If that
had actually happened, it would have amounted to around
10% of its budget. But after the hubbub over the supposedly
devastating cuts of 2013, lawmakers set about softening the blow.
And this
time they did a much better job.
In
December 2013, a budget deal was brokered by Republican
Congressman Paul Ryan and Democratic Senator Patty Murray. In it they
agreed to reduce sequestration. Cuts for the Pentagon soon shrank to $34 billion
for 2014.
And that
was just a start.
All the
cuts discussed so far pertain to what’s called the Pentagon’s “base” budget --
its regular peacetime budget. That, however, doesn’t represent all of its
funding. It gets a whole different budget for making war, and for
the 13th year, the U.S. is making war in Afghanistan. For that part of the
budget, which falls into the Washington category of “Overseas Contingency
Operations” (OCO), the Pentagon is getting an additional $85 billion in 2014.
And this
is where something funny happens.
That war
funding isn’t subject to caps or cuts or any restrictions at all. So imagine
for a moment that you’re an official at the Pentagon -- or the White House --
and you’re committed to sparing the military from downsizing. Your budget has
two parts: one that’s subject to caps and cuts, and one that isn’t. What do you
do? When you hit a ceiling in the former, you stuff extra cash into the latter.
It takes
a fine-toothed comb to discover how this is done. Todd Harrison, senior fellow
for defense studies at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments,
found that the Pentagon was stashing an estimated extra $20 billion worth of non-war
funding in the “operation and maintenance” accounts of its proposed 2014 war budget. And since all federal agencies work
in concert with the White House to craft their budget proposals, it’s safe to
say that the Obama administration was in on the game.
Add the
December budget deal to this $20 billion switcheroo and the sequester cuts for
2014 were now down to $14 billion, hardly a devastating sum given the roughly $550
billion in previously projected funding.
And the
story’s still not over.
When it
was time to write the Pentagon budget into law, appropriators in Congress wanted
in on the fun. As Winslow Wheeler of the Project on Government Oversight discovered, lawmakers added a $10.8 billion slush
fund to the war budget.
All told,
that leaves $3.4 billion -- a cut of less than 1% from Pentagon funding this
year. It’s hard to imagine that anyone in the sprawling bureaucracy
of the Defense Department will even notice. Nonetheless, last week Secretary
Hagel insisted that “[s]equestration requires cuts so
deep, so abrupt, so quickly that... the only way to implement [them] is to
sharply reduce spending on our readiness and modernization, which would almost
certainly result in a hollow force.”
Yet this
less than 1% cut comes from a budget that, at last count, was the size of the next 10 largest military budgets
on the planet combined. If you can find a threat to our national security in
this story, your sleuthing powers are greater than mine. Meanwhile, in the
non-military part of the budget, sequestration has brought cuts that actually matter to everything from
public education to the justice system.
Cashing
in on the “Cuts,” Round Three and Beyond
After two
years of uproar over mostly phantom cuts, 2015 isn’t likely to bring austerity
to the Pentagon either. Last December’s budget deal already reduced the cuts
projected for 2015, and President Obama is now asking for something he’s calling the
“Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative.” It would deliver an extra $26 billion to the Pentagon next year. And that
still leaves the war budget for officials to use as a cash cow.
And the
president is proposing significant growth in military spending further down the
road. In his 2015 budget plan, he’s asking Congress to approve an additional $115 billion in extra Pentagon funds for the
years 2016-2019.
My guess
is he’ll claim that our national security requires it after the years of
austerity.
Mattea
Kramer is a TomDispatch regular and Research Director
at National
Priorities Project, which is a 2014 nominee for the Nobel Peace Prize. She is
also the lead author of the book A People's Guide to the Federal Budget.
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