Military Leaders Request $30 Billion Budget Increase

by | Feb 8, 2017

Military Leaders Request $30 Billion Budget Increase

by | Feb 8, 2017

They want to end the 2011 sequestration that caps defense spending.

The U.S. military is requesting over $30 billion to improve combat readiness and to stay ahead of “near-peer competitors,” says the Associated Press. A panel of four-star officers, one from each branch, testified today before the House Armed Services Committee and claimed that mandatory caps on defense spending are crippling the military’s ability to respond to threats across the globe.

According to the AP report, Adm. William Moran, the Navy’s vice chief of operations, claimed that more than half of all naval aircraft can’t fly due to maintenance problems and a lack of spare parts. Gen. Daniel Allyn, the Army’s vice chief of staff, claimed that “only three of the Army’s more than 50 brigade combat teams have all the troops, training, and equipment needed to fight at a moment’s notice.”

The Army is requesting $8.2 billion, the Navy wants $12 billion, the Marines are seeking $4.2 billion, and the Air Force is looking for $6.2 billion.

During Obama’s first term, you may recall, the 2011 Budget Control Act (BCA) resulted in “sequestration,” or a series of automatic budget caps, after a committee of legislators failed to agree to a deficit-reduction package. As the Center for Strategic and International Studies noted, “For defense, the budget caps represent a reduction of roughly $1 trillion over 10 years compared to what the president had proposed in his [fiscal year] 2012 budget request.”

Read the rest at Reason.

Our Books

Shop books published by the Libertarian Institute.

libetarian institute longsleeve shirt

Our Books

cb0cb1ef 3fcb 417d 80d8 4eef7bbd8290

Recent Articles

Recent

TGIF:  Israel and Jabotinsky’s Iron Wall

TGIF: Israel and Jabotinsky’s Iron Wall

Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky (1880-1940) was a key figure in the development of the Zionist movement, which led to the founding of Israel in 1948. After breaking from mainline Zionism, Jabotinsky, born in Odessa (Ukraine), established Revisionist Zionism, a more openly...

read more
The Smallness of Mark Levin

The Smallness of Mark Levin

In 2009, I was working part time in talk radio in Charleston, South Carolina as an on-air personality. I was also the token conservative columnist for the local, liberal free weekly paper. I wasn’t making a lot of money, but I was working in the field I was most...

read more

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This