|
WORD COUNT
685
MAY 13, 2008
CONSERVATIVE HYPOCRISY ON MILITARY SPENDING – by Steve Cobble
Bank
robber Willie Sutton famously said he robbed banks because “that’s where
the money is.” Applying this logic to cutting our Federal budget
deficit would lead to this conclusion—to save money, we have to cut
military spending. That’s where the Bush/Cheney Administration
essentially doubled spending during its two terms. That’s where the
money is.
Yet when Secretary Gates had the audacity to increase the military
budget by “only” 4%, the Republicans and “Blue Dog” Democrats howled.
Why is it that GOP/Blue Dog “pay-as-you-go” budgets only apply to
domestic spending?
It’s time they were called on their hypocrisy. Wasting taxpayer money
on dangerous, unnecessary, expensive military projects is more of an
imposition on our grandchildren than spending money on health care or
green energy—especially when the weapons programs don't work
properly. The Government Accountability Office has documented massive
Pentagon waste. Why is Congress unconcerned?
Why do we still have hundreds of overseas bases, in a nation founded in
a colonial uprising? What about the long list of unnecessary,
ridiculously costly weapons systems? The choices include the F-22
Raptor, the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the DDG 1000 Destroyer, our extra
aircraft carrier group, the weaponization of space, etc. Secretary
Gates did propose big cuts in several of these programs, for which he
deserves credit. He also shifted money to health care and treatment for
veterans, long overdue.
But he left too many other poorly working, over-budget, badly-delayed
projects alive, and some of his cuts may never happen. As an example, I
believe Gates honestly thinks that we already have more than enough
F-22s. But I note that he slid 4 F-22s into the Iraq/Afghanistan
supplemental appropriation, even though a big criticism of the plan is
that it hasn't been used in our current wars. And that a skilled
bureaucratic in-fighter like Robert Gates understands that Congress may
well fund more F-22s, despite his recommendations. Meanwhile, he has
quietly increased funding for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, which is
touted as “less expensive” than the F-22; but if the F-35 ever gets to
where it works properly, a full package of F-35s may well end up costing
more over its life cycle than President Obama’s stimulus package!
A likely end result—lots of press for “cutting” F-22s, but a big
spending increase for fighter planes by the time Congress gets done.
And we could really use these funds to pay for health care for everyone,
keep people ripped off by sub-prime loans in their homes, and put
Americans to work “greening” our economy—changes which would create
twice the jobs.
I understand that many liberal and moderate Democrats will be
hypocritical when it comes to military spending in their own districts,
and many of them will duck the Afghanistan issue. But the greater
hypocrisy belongs to the Republicans and the Blue Dogs, who pretend to
care deeply about fiscal responsibility, pay-as-you-go spending, and the
tax burden on our grandchildren. Yet somehow, when it's the Pentagon
budget, all concern vanishes.
The GOP has always been wrong on Iraq. But they've been abetted by the
Blue Dog Democrats, and now both groups are dragging their feet as
President Obama tries to keep his campaign promise to get out of Iraq.
Why do Republicans and Blue Dogs continue to oppose saving money, while
doing what the voters said they wanted?
Then there is Afghanistan, the graveyard of empires. Aside from the
moral and strategic questions involved, most Republicans and Blue Dogs
act as if the staggering financial costs of increased involvement in
Afghanistan are irrelevant.
Personally, I'd like to help President Obama as he cuts back on the
world's nuclear arsenal, saving money and our future. America spends
about half of every discretionary tax dollar on the military. We spend
about as much on our military as the rest of the world combined. We
lead the world in arms sales.
So if the Blue Dog Democrats—and maybe even a few of the loudly-whining,
teabagging Republicans—are serious about fiscal responsibility and
protecting our grandchildren from massive debt, isn’t it time they
helped progressives make serious military spending cuts?
--
Steve Cobble is an Associate Fellow at the Institute for Policy
Studies, Washington, D.C. --
www.ips.org
# # # # #
|