Defending Defense Response to Obama Administration's FY 2012 Budget

Strategy should always guide
the defense budget, not vice versa. Unfortunately, the budget submitted
to Congress today by the Obama administration includes significant cuts
to the Department of Defense that appear divorced from America’s current
strategic reality. These cuts will increasingly put America at risk and
make it more difficult for the United States to fulfill its global
responsibilities.
Starting in 2009, Secretary Gates launched an unprecedented series of
house cleaning measures, freeing up billions of dollars in savings in
the Pentagon's budget. The only federal agency to do this, Gates'
savings were intended to be reinvested into long overdue military
modernization programs. Instead, the White House pilfered the savings
and told Mr. Gates to go back and find more while domestic discretionary
spending and entitlement programs were largely given a pass.
This resulted in today’s budget submission that will kill systems such
as the Marine Corps’ Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle, and eventually
reduce the end strength of the Army and Marine Corps by tens of
thousands of troops. These cuts, with our country at war and facing
future challenges from China and other potential adversaries, make
little strategic sense.
Defense is simply too important to be left to budgetary shell games.
Though the Obama administration may believe it is enacting prudent
cost-cutting measures, ignoring our military modernization needs in a
time of peace is perilous. Doing so during ongoing operations could be
catastrophic. It is important to rein in spending and eliminate the
deficit, but this should not occur at the expense of U.S. national
security.
To provide for the common defense is a constitutional duty of the
federal government. House Republicans should keep this in mind as they
review the President’s budget and issue their own budget in the weeks to
come.
Defending Defense is a joint project of the American Enterprise
Institute, Heritage Foundation, and Foreign Policy Initiative.
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