Tea Party, Cut the DoD Budget

Tea Party, Cut the DoD Budget

Memorandum

To: Senators-elect Ron Johnson (Wisc.), Mike Lee (Utah), Rand Paul (Ky.), Marco Rubio (Fla.), and Pat Toomey (Penn.)

Subject: The Pentagon Budget

Welcome to Washington. This town is eager to learn how you will pursue the Tea Party message you championed in the campaign: to seriously cut spending. As you look for targets, we wonder if all of you have actively considered examining the budget of the biggest federal government agency, the Department of Defense.


Military spending today, at $700 billion annually, is higher than at any time since the end of World War II. Beyond the 1.5 million men and women in uniform, Defense employs 740,000 civilians and literally uncounted contractors. The sun never sets on Pentagon bases and installations around the world. From 2000 to this year’s budget, Congress has given the Pentagon $7 trillion dollars-$1.3 trillion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, $5.7 trillion for routine, non– combat, operations (the base budget). That doesn’t include the cost of nuclear weapons, which are in the Energy Department’s domain and would add about another $200 billion.

What did our country get for that torrent of money? Well, we’re not sure. Seems the Pentagon has trouble with its bookkeeping and literally cannot track how it spends taxpayer dollars.  Sen. Chuck Grassley, Republican of Iowa, recently pointed to one key cause-“numerous breakdowns in the auditing process used by the Department of Defense Office of the Inspector General.” The problem isn’t new; it’s been around enough decades to make us think the Pentagon excuses itself from this fundamental, even Constitutional, form of accountability.

Following his in-depth review of the Pentagon Inspector General, Grassley sent his findings and recommendations to Defense Secretary Robert Gates. “Top managers in the audit office,” the Iowa Republican reported, “repeatedly stated that doing contract audits are ‘too difficult.…We can’t do it.’” If they can’t do it, does that mean defense contractors are basically writing their own expense accounts for billion dollar programs?  Note also, the Pentagon is virtually alone in the federal government in its failure to account for its own spending.

Grassley praised Gates’ efforts to eliminate wasteful spending but asserted that reliance on the Pentagon bureaucracy to eliminate waste is questionable. “Those are the very same powerful Pentagon ‘fiefdoms’ that created the problem in the first place,” Grassley wrote, “and the very same ones that Eisenhower warned us about 50 years ago.”

Dwight Eisenhower, were he with us today, would no doubt also be appalled to discover that, despite years of hefty Pentagon budgets, our forces are now smaller, older, and less ready to fight.

The Air Force, for example, received a funding boost of 43 percent in the 2001–2011 budget period. Yet, the number of active and reserve fighter and bomber squadrons declined by 51 percent. Fighter pilot in-air training today is only one-third to one-half of what it was in the 1970s, an era not known for high readiness. During the same period the Navy’s budget expanded by 44 percent, while the size of its combat fleet declined by 10 percent. This is not a smaller, newer fleet. It’s a smaller, older fleet. Is it more ready to fight? Almost certainly not. We keep hearing about severe maintenance problems throughout the fleet, and Navy combat training in the air has remained at historic lows. Only the Army grew. Using a 53 percent hike in appropriations, it expanded its brigade combat teams-by 5  percent.

“The spigot of defense spending opened by 9/11 is closing,” Secretary Gates has proclaimed. Not exactly. Gates, unlike most of his predecessors, did cancel some weapons programs, such as the F-22 fighter, because they were over cost, under performing, late and irrelevant. He also announced a plan to “save” $102 billion by trimming the Pentagon bureaucracy. But that is to be done over five years, and the money is to be transferred to “force structure” rather than saved in the usual sense of the word. In fact, the Defense Secretary wants the military budget to grow for the next decade, by one percent a year plus anticipated adjustments for inflation. That would increase DOD’s base budget by 33 percent. Add the cost of any wars underway a decade from now. So, even with a change-minded man in charge of the Pentagon, we’re looking at even more massive military spending in the foreseeable future.

Gates is clearly aware of the full range of Pentagon problems that contribute to overruns and overstaffing. But he appears to have picked the relatively narrow issue of bureaucratic bloat as his top concern. Speaking at the Eisenhower Presidential Library in Kansas this past May, he complained that 40 generals, admirals and their civilian counterparts were still stationed in Europe more than two decades after the Cold War ended. Gates also criticized the extensive hiring of private contractors to do administrative jobs the military used to do. “We ended up with contractors supervising other contractors,” he said, “with predictable results.” The Secretary estimated at $23 billion the growth in this part of the DOD budget-not counting the cost of private contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan-but in fact it was conjecture; the real figure is unknown. He must have been more than a little wistful when he told his Kansas audience:

“Eisenhower was wary of seeing his beloved republic turn into a muscle-bound garrison state-militarily strong, but economically stagnant and strategically insolvent.”

Muscle-bound aptly describes the practice of DOD, and Congress, of preserving extraordinarily expensive, underperforming weapons designed to fight the Soviet Union and Warsaw Pact and always delivered years late.  The F-35, which unfortunately Secretary Gates continues to support, is a classic example.  Originally promised to cost $35 million per aircraft, it will now cost at least $155 million each; it is just now being produced-years late-and aircraft design experts look at its performance characteristics and grimace.  The Navy’s LPD-17 and DDG-1000 ships and the Marine Corps’ Expeditionary Fighting Vehicle are a few more of the many examples.

Practices like those have contributed to a level of military spending that almost equals that of all other countries combined. Counting just our potential enemies and taking the defense budgets of Russia, China, North Korea, Iran and Cuba combined, we spend three times that amount.

There’s a disconnect between U.S. military spending and real-world threats. Today and in the future, al-Qaeda and its global affiliates top the list of threats to the United States and our allies. $1.3 trillion dollars and nine years of fighting after 9/11, the problem is undiminished; military force cannot be the sole means to rely on, and it is likely to be most effective with astutely employed special forces.

Yet, the United States continues to maintain, for example, up to 11 classic warfare aircraft carrier battlegroups, with their associated cruisers, destroyers, submarines, oilers, supply ships and more-all in the absence of an opposing conventional navy.  To the extent that naval experts worry about the Chinese, or even regional powers in the littorals, potential opponents are deploying ominous new missile and submarine systems that make our huge surface forces into little more than “targets,” according to prevailing gallows humor.

Secretary Gates has indirectly explained why we do this.  After suggesting fewer than 11 carriers, he relented saying “I may want to change things, but I am not crazy. I am not going to cut a carrier.” Subsequent events in Virginia were a case in point. When Gates announced plans in August to close the Joint Forces Command in Norfolk, which defense experts and even former commanders dubbed superfluous, the Virginia congressional delegation protested loudly. Protecting the in-state spending elicited a rare example of bipartisanship in Congress.  And, when the Navy announced that it would move one of the five carriers based in Norfolk to Florida, Representative Glenn Nye, a Democrat, proclaimed in a campaign ad: “I won’t stand by while Washington tries to take away our carrier and Joint Forces Command.” Nye later said in a TV spot that he had “stood up to Washington” on the Joint Command and “is winning the effort to save our carrier.” The proprietary “our carrier” reflects more than local pride. It translates as: Save all of the civilian jobs in the shipyards and related businesses. In this case, “Washington” gets the political tongue lashing even without cutting a carrier — just by trying to base it elsewhere.

Every base, installation, and weapons system has its own constituency. As a result of the pressures to preserve jobs and incomes (and, some would argue, political campaign contributions), many defense decisions are made for parochial reasons. Defense decisions should be made for defense reasons. Members of Congress should act on the broader merits and, if necessary, help their defense-dependent communities adjust to change, whether due to DOD procurement decisions, base realignments, arms control treaties, or cuts in appropriations.

Where to start bringing this huge federal agency’s spending under control? Your colleague, Republican Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, has a sensible proposal. He has recommended to each member of President Obama’s Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform (the “Deficit Commission”), on which he serves, that the Pentagon budget be frozen until it can pass comprehensive audits of all programs, agencies and contractors.  To reform and control defense spending, it clearly must first be understood — the very reason for the accountability clause in the Constitution.

After looking at this gigantic problem, you may come up with additional approaches. You have your work cut out for you. We wish you well.

Winslow Wheeler is director of the Center for Defense Information’s Straus Military Reform Project. Sanford Gottlieb was senior producer and narrator of CDI’s weekly TV program, “America’s Defense Monitor.”

Join the Conversation

tea party will say: make war for save DoD budget or don’t make war and cut it

Good Morning Folks,

Music to my eye. It’s a start.

My only suggestion to Mr. Wheeler is to quite quoting President Eisenhower, it was under Eisenhower’s administration that the current spending frenzy and Pentagon/ Dod Mess got started.

It’s time to close the books on Eisenhower’s Cold War legacy of spending on platforms and systems that will never be used as intended, and get rational, address the current War(s), that by the way it seems we could be doing better on if we channeled more resources into those conflicts and less in to the toys Mr. Wheeler mentioned.

ALLONS,

Byron Skinner

“Note also, the Pentagon is virtually alone in the federal government in its failure to account for its own spending.”

Sorry, this doesn’t pass the giggle test. Check out the long running lawsuits against the Department of the Interior, for starters. Actually, provide the evidence that *any* agency in the federal government “accounts for its own spending” in a satisfactory manner. Start with HHS, or the agency that administers Medicare. Go ahead, we’ll wait.

Now, should the DoD budget be cut? Sure. Where? If you have Senators holding up lawmaking because the DoD wants to close little old JFCOM, how much luck do you think we’ll have cutting anything else? Can we implement a BRAC process for weapons and personnel spending, so that cuts don’t get amended out of existence or negated by the next rider on a necessary bill? Better yet, can we outlaw earmarks and unrelated bill amendments? Buehler? Buehler?

And of course Winslow Wheeler paints defense as the first target despite the waste elsewhere that will continue to grow consuming an ever-larger portion of government spending each year.

When it comes to the EFV I want to see the alternatives on the table, but I don’t see any being proposed. DDG-1000 has already been reduced to three ships, construction is in progress for two of those. The problems with LPD-17 doesn’t mean we don’t need such LPDs, we just need to stop the mismanagement.

The F-35 has it’s problems but it will not cost $155 million when in full production. Who are these aircraft design experts who “look at its performance characteristics and grimace”, the lack of TVC and super-cruise wouldn’t have been a problem if sufficient F-22s were built. Out of curiosity I want to hear Wheeler’s own alternative to the F-35. Are the latest versions of the F-16 still too complex and gold plated for his taste’s?

No. You’re right. They will cost $200M when we reduce the numbers even further after the UK and Italy leave the deal and the F-35B is finally scrapped.

Scrapping the F-35B would, in my opinion defeat the entire purpose of the JSF program. But if American production numbers of all three variants (2400+ aircraft) hold I don’t see any scenario in which each aircraft would cost $155 million or to more produce on a full-rate production line.

Please give me a break the cost of living has gone up so much just look at the price of gas now and what it was 50yrs. ago the food , housing ect. this can go on and on. Oh yes what are our Sentors & Congressmen making more that what the President was making 40 or 50 yrs. ago and ask yourself what have they done for us good question can somebody give an ans. Let us talk about our Senetors & Congressmen I’m sure that what they all get paid should be close to what all the Mil. spending helping the USA. Can somebody ans. this question why can a President that is not serving this Nation as a Pesident making then same amount of money as a pension as if he where in office.???????

RE: …experts who “look at its performance characteristics and grimace”…
Should I be irritated that he does not cite me? Plagarism, I say.

RE: …but it will not cost $155 million when in full production…
What is “over and under” in ‘Vegas on $155 mill? I’ll take the over.

RE: I would say the answer is clear-you cut what isn’t working and impliment clear expectations made by qualified individuals for contract work and you create the expectation that the contractor will stand behind their work.

Seems simple enough, but the problem with the F-35 is that expectations are articulated, but they are never met. Most aircraft procurement projects run into trouble, but problems are resolved in finite time and budget. The F-35 is an exception to many rules. Kathy, the F-35 is too big to fail. Get on board the gravy train and stop whining.

RE: …Good article…
No, Mr. Wheeler is attempting to endear himself with the defense budget cutters, thereby getting invites to the prestigious cocktail parties. The way to keep score in DC is to count up how much influence on the spending of other people’s money you have. Alas, I have none, but I can admire the players.

I’m not sure a freeze would be practical or even desirable, but the Pentagon’s feet have to be put to the fire for us to get some idea of where the money is going.

Some crazy part of me still believes the F-35 can be made to work and it can be bought in large numbers at a moderate cost. From a design standpoint I don’t see why it wouldn’t be able to.

The DoD congtractors are the only folks that actually produce tangible results from my experience. DoD civilians are now too busy filling the same squares that the military are having to fill for promotions. Bottom line DoD civilians are busy trying to get promoted while the contractors do the work. Also, there is no reason why we should have active duty military administering acquisition programs. Put them in the field where they belong. If they do not want to be real soldiers send them packing. Whatever happened to our military it now represents a corporation with Generals afraid of silly elected officials. Where is Patten when you need him

So the pendulum swings again. DOD which can’t find billions due to poor accounting systems and processes, with service rivalries fighting for increasingly scare dollars while programs demonstrate piss-poor acquisition under the leadership of FOGOs who either should do better or move on.

But the news today is save money by freezing federal pay. OK, bet; it’s a start, of sorts. Freeze active duty pay? Not likely, unless O-7 to O-10’s go first to demonstrate “leadership”. Figure the odds of that happening. How about congress takes a freeze? Yeah right.

Raise TriCare premiums. OK, they’re low compared to something that is incomparable. (try explaining the “cost” of service to get that benefit to many Americans). Now try and explain that TriCare is tied to Medicare which is in crisis every year, with doctors getting less and less in payments, so much so that each year more doctors refuse new TriCare patients so that our veterans (including newly disabled vets) and retirees can’t get coverage and have to shift to other programs besides TriCare.

But yeah, you know, the details don’t matter; it’s headlines and talking points. See if you can find spending cuts. Demonstrate savings and avoidance, but transfer wealth to slobs who won’t work, and don’t care.

Anyone care to bet a year’s wages that Obama didn’t pay a lick of one lousy cent as copay or out-of-pocket for his b-ball lip stitches?
(too bad he didn’t get his nose broke instead…)

They want to trim fat out of the US miltary budget?
How long before some well-knowledged group realizes how much money can be saved by curtailing, if not outright terminating, a majority of US Gov’t subsidized (American taxpayer funded) Foreign Military Sales programs, where the US foots the brunt of the bill in buying, leasing, or otherwise providing military hardware and training to nations who can’t step up and provide for their own defense…

“Military spending today, at $700 billion annually, is higher than at any time since the end of World War II.”

It is called inflation. Learn how to compare apples-to-apples. Talk about all dollars in terms of 1950 dollars, talk about percentage of GDP, or pick some other method that is at least consistant. When Winslow Wheeler releases a statement like the above, he shows that he is nothing but a spin doctor who should never be taken seriously.

I read an article somewhere sometime ago (sorry for being so vague), but from what I do recall the author did make relative comparisons between percentage of GDP spending on defense from 1950 to 2009 (consistent with inflation from those years), with the conclusion that we were actually spending less now. Of course, I always take these things with a grain of salt and a lot of skepticism, but it so far seemed like the most convincing piece I had read in some time. I’ll do a quick search when I get home from work to see if I can find that article again and share it here.

David Walker has always had some nice charts on spending. one can be found at
http://www.goasny.org/uploads/G1%20-%20David%20Wa

It shows that Defense, as a percntage of federal spending went from 45% in 1969 to 27% in 1989 to 19% in 2009.

Wheeler is a fool. This stuff is TOO EASY to find/fact check. From the Air Force Association http://​www​.airforce​-magazine​.com/​M​a​g​a​z​i​n​e​A​r​c​h​i​ve/
.……Defense isn’t causing the deficit. Over the past 40 years, federal spending on entitlements—Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, principally—has turned into an addiction, with no relief in sight. As these charts show, the federal budget has grown from about $1 trillion in 1970 to $3.5 trillion today, on its way to $12.3 trillion in 2040 (constant 2009 dollars). However, the composition of spending has undergone
radical change. The entitlement bite has grown from 20 percent to 40 percent, headed toward 52 percent of all federal spending. Meanwhile, the defense share has dropped from 42 percent to 20 percent, on its way to an 11 percent share. Entitlements are now, and will continue to be, the greatest generator of deficits, and with them huge
increases in net interest on the national debt. Can anyone tell us why military spending is tagged as the bad guy?

Members of Congress can not receive pay raises they voted for until the are reelected to office. Just like they can not move to an appointed government position and receive an increase in pay, if they had been in office when the pay scale for the position was approved.

The AV-8B was great airshow bird if that’s what “making it work” means? Operationally employ them as originally sold to be effectively deployed aboard amphibs, and forward deploy away from traditional airfields has NOT worked. Reality is that ARG’s (Amphib. Ready Groups) rarely conduct actual missions without being under the shadow of an CSG (Carrier Strike Group) to provide Tacair support. For those instances where they have needed CAS without TacAir, the HMLA’s (AH-1/UH-1’s ) have effectively provided it. So making work, and operationally effective are vastly different, and don’t justify the F-35B cost.

In the guns vs. butter debate, the guns are always the bad guy…until an enemy with bigger guns starts expanding. Even then, the diplomatic corps will negotiate a treaty and declare peace in our time. The boogeyman must be advancing with violent activities before the populace screams “Where are our guns?”. Sometimes it is too late. The trick is to have the right amount of guns for a proper deterrent of the boogeyman at all times. In a republic, you must elect people who know what a proper deterrent looks like. Of course, this is happenning in concert with domestic initiatives that also require massive resources, and the representatives also want to bring home the bacon. So, let the debate continue. I can’t wait to see how it ends.

Yet the AV-8 was routinely deployed from Marine LHDs and LHAs and was forward deployed on the ground during Desert Storm if I recall correctly. The aircraft itself has flown plenty of missions in support of ground operations in both theaters as well.

Yep. I’ve deployed with them aboard ship and they provided NO UNIQUE capablity that wasn’t already being provided by the AH-1W’s onboard and F-18’s from the CSG.

Deploying AV-8s to an airbase along with all the other F/W aircraft during Desert Storm isn’t a UNIQUE capability either. Failed concept. Why do you think the Brits have abandoned the concept and thiers were more effective than the Marines? Its good for Airshow PR.

The Super Cobra is going to have a significantly shorter range, and there is a benefit to having a few such fixed wing strike aircraft based from a CVN. If this was a failed concept the continued upgrades to the Harrier series and how long it’s service has been stretched out don’t indicate it. A highly capable STOVL fighter has been a “holy grail” of the aerospace community for decades now, there are reasons to this other than the Marine’s interests.

If STOVL wasn’t worth it we should have dumped that requirement from the JSF program before it began, the CTOL and CV aircraft could have been a better aircraft without it.

Finally. I agree it should have been deleted from the requirements. A fighter not dependant upon an airfield is the Holy Grail the aerospace industry seeks.

The Marine Corps sank money into the AV-8B fro two reasons; make the aircraft safer to fly because they were rapidly becoming Widowmakers, and to continually try to prove the concept wasn’t a waste of money (thowing good money after bad).

That, and the Marine Corps’ paranoia which believes that a unique aircraft is what makes Marine Aviation relevant, not the Marine Pilot in the cockpit.

It looks like the buildup of the Russian Air Force is going ahead as planned while we have capped production of the F-22A at 187 planes (with one lost just recently making it 186 planes). I have read before on this site that the Su-35S is superior to every fighter plane the USAF has except for the F-22A. Is this correct? Russia is planning on increasing and updating their Air Force by 1500 planes by 2020. How does the F-35A and C compare to the Su-35S as well?

See: http://​en​.rian​.ru/​m​l​i​t​a​r​y​_​n​e​w​s​/​2​0​1​0​1​2​0​1​/​1​6​1​5​8​0​969

Russia plans to buy 10 PAK FA T-50s 5th Generation fighters between 2013–2015 and then 60 more in 2016. I hope the next Administration post-Obama restarts the F-22 program. I’ve read in other articles that Russia hopes to buy up to 400 of these planes. These I am assuming are in addition to the link I posted above for 1500 new fighters in the Su-35S range and quality…

See: http://​en​.rian​.ru/​r​u​s​s​i​a​/​2​0​1​0​0​7​1​9​/​1​5​9​8​6​7​7​8​4​.​h​tml

“Gates, unlike most of his predecessors, did cancel some weapons programs, such as the F-22 fighter, because they were over cost, under performing, late and irrelevant.”

“Irrelevant?!!” Are the articles I’m reading from RIA Novosti better intel than the CIA is giving to SecDef Gates?!

hey jerk off , what did a nice new car cost in 1970, (around 6,500)
and now in 2010 .( 40,000) How about a new F-15 in 1975 (35million) and now a boeing built F-15 (75–100 milliom) . I bet that an F-22 Raptor can take out an average of 6 new F-15s if you believe the flyboys in exercises ( that’s 450 mil-600 million of jets), I,ll take the 140million F-22. Or how about M-60s vs T-72s, or M1A2 vs T-72s , we all know what tank we would want to be in, in that one.
In closeing ‚stop your crybaby bullcrap about how much military equipment costs , just remember what it would cost in troops lives,if we didn,t spend what we spend on military budgets.

Defense contracts are waaaay more shovel ready than anything else I’ve seen proposed. Think of it as a jobs program that keeps us ahead of our enemies and provides R&D on a wide scale with broad applications (a la NASA). I’m told a common defense is the only mandatory funding under the constitution. Doesn’t bother me one whit that some think it a welfare program for retired military; it’s hardly a congressional pension, and some got shot at for it. Lots of elitist libs will disagree, but they’re track record belies them.

Well said.….….

I enjoyed his remarks — a breath of fresh air. In Washington DC, outsiders have a way of rapidly getting sucked into the machine, and they learn how business is done there. Reforming the DoD through a comprehensive program of audits would probably draw as much resistance from politicians in defense-heavy states as health care did from Republicans who hated it just because President Obama wanted it. It might be just as worthwhile a goal, however, because there’s no doubt that the organization needs to be taken in hand. We could surely be far more efficient than we are and get more badaboom for the buck if we were run with the efficiency and accountability of, say, Apple Computers. Changing the culture both in Congress, and then in the DoD, is easier said than done — but saying it is the necessary first step.

What vision you have! You pretty much nailed it…Our DoD budget is indeed a good jobs maker on all levels, keeping many high tech ones in a progressive stance. Other than Medicare/Medicaid, it’s probably the best vehicle to keep gifted and talented people working.

This brings me to addressing how impossible it will be to cut much of anything out of the budget per Tea Party demands. Only the small stuff will hit the ditch as found in the Discretionary spending area. I hear cries to defund the Obama’s stimulus programs which have helped promote many jobs for rebuilding our infrastructure and highways. With jobs being the total issue I doubt many politicians will take much of a stand here. Furthermore, as jobs are so intimately tied to the mortgage crises, the more we fiddle with killing jobs through spending cuts, the greater would be our peril to slip back into a recession or possibly depression.

(Continued…) I believe most of us can agree that tax cuts have done very little towards increasing the number of jobs, since the focus on loss stems from outsourcing to China and abroad. The fact that we need to REALLY cut the deficit to avoid national bankruptcy, most experts also agree that spending cuts even if done via Tea Party criteria is not enough. Unfortunately we lost a great opportunity to start deficit cutting by allowing the rich to continue with their tax cuts. It’s a sad day for deficit hawks, as for most of us left wingers.

Anyway there is no doubt in my mind that all Tea Partier demands will flop with spending cuts going towards the only water leveling area that swells, the military. Its’ historically always been the easier to cut, despite time of war. The mere talk of a means test or percentage cuts of Social Security and Medicare sucks the air out the room of all politicians with gasping coughs. Since unemployment falls under Welfare we know already that no changes are expected to a now doubled figure of $500 billion since 2008. Along with Medicaid these two groups lie for the right wing slaughter.

(one more to go…)

No one wants to embrace the stripped down version of Healthcare Law, but with nothing planned for replacement, expect horrific expenditures to drive up our GDP ratio from one sixth to an off the charts one third of overall medical costs in the next 5 years! If you think you’re paying high medical premiums now, wait and see where will be if Healthcare is repealed!!!

The quenn of the tea party, m. bachmann wanted to cut 4.5b from the VA until the VFW and AMETS got after her. This is just one example that these “new freshman” congressman and women don’t have a clue about the sacrifices associated with military service for Veterans and Military Retirees. The tea party has no thought process and they present a danger to the US Military and how strong it will remain. They will ruin the Republican party.

One idea to reduce the defense spending that will never see the light of day. Combine our forces into ONE US Military! There is a few Billion alone in the duplication of services and equipment. We would still need all of the the current forces, Army, Navel and Air Forces as well as personnel, they could be divisions instead of their own individual military. However every branch would not need their own aircraft, veichles, administrative and logistic support. Allowing our military personnel to take back the some of the jobs that contrators now perform, would result a just a million or two in savings! 1st Sergeants and their units keep our militray going, I would take one good 1st Sgt. over three, ok five, Generals any day. I would like to see a plan detailing the how much a combined US military would save our country. I believe the savings would allow for more military jobs or better pay for our troops!

Time now to use the new reduced DOD budget more efficiently.

The DOD budget can no longer be fattened and used as a political pork barrel for Congress.

We need a military designed,trained,equipped, funded and led to win wars quickly.

Instead we are spending big money on tech gadget programs that are amazing but can be knocked out by hackers, by shooting down our satellites, component failure,EMP bursts, untrained operators, etc. Our Muslim enemies that are defeating us are low tech and low budget.
To win a war we need to quickly kill the enemy and their supporters, and destroy their capability to wage war.
Military warfare is not police work or U.S. Justice Department work.
Is the DOD budget intended for expensive, and wasteful “nation building” or for winning wars by quickly destroying the enemy and eliminating his capability to wage war? Our “Middle East insurgent “enemies are not paying very much money for their AK-47’s. They are not being legally prosecuted for mistakes made in the heat of battle.
We should expect to suffer casualties in a war and not commit troops to war unless we intend to quickly win the war. Troops serving under the command of Washington, Grant, Sherman, Patton, Eisenhower,Nimitz, and MacArthur suffered casualties and won battles..
We need more budget for Special Forces troops and training. We need to study how we armed and trained American troops quickly and cheaply to win WWII in just 5 years.
The Romans also used paid mercenaries in their Empire’s decline.That wasn’t a winning strategy for the Romans either. Reinstitute the Draft to man the Reserves. .
We need a smaller, better paid and highly educated professional military force.We need a large reserve force
that trains and aspires to become full time well paid professionals.
We need to pay for military troops University quality education’s BEFORE they begin military service, not afterwards. Remember the ROTC program?.
Avoid expensive, complicated, vulnerable gadget spending programs and get back to the basics for combat and logistics..
The Chinese seemed to have studied our WWII methods and are accomplishing their military buildup quickly and cheaply. Congress and the voting public needs some education on who are enemies are, how they are equipped and how they are winning wars of attrition.
Then funding an adequate DOD budget for an effective military may become possible.

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