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Briefing on DOD’s QDR and 2007 Budget
By Winslow Wheeler,
Straus Military Reform Project
February 14, 2006
My recent briefing to the press on DOD’s new Quadrennial
Defense Review (QDR) and the new 2007 defense budget made the following
points:
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The new 2007 defense budget achieves a post-World
War II high for defense spending, and yet it supports new lows in
the quantity of Army divisions, Navy combat ships, and Air Force
wings.
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In their depictions of the defense budget, both
liberals and conservatives bias their typical presentations to conform
to their preconceptions. These days, few consider a depiction of
the threat.
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Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s new QDR
fails to address the key rationale established by Congress in the
statute calling for QDRs: that the defense budget be sized to execute
the new defense plan and that the new defense plan be devised to
implement the national defense strategy. The 2005 QDR does not address
budget requirements even superficially, and while the strategy focuses
on unconventional 4th generation war (“the Long War”), the defense
plan remains focused on conventional war.
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Many of the new budget’s ideas for strengthening
our forces for 4th generation war are too little, too late, and
other ideas start to fall apart on close inspection.
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Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld has requested
a budget he knows Congress will augment and expand. Proposals to
reduce the Army Reserve and National Guard, to truncate C-17 production,
and to retire prematurely the F-117 “stealth” bomber (and other
proposals), are what some call “Washington Monument Drills” (“WMDs,”
they are proposed budget reductions the Pentagon knows Congress
will immediately add back into the budget). The thought that any
such money will be saved is surely illusory.
In sum, in a time of war and when certain critical
elements of the defense budget require steadfast support and straightforward
justification, today’s Pentagon leadership gives the nation mismatches
between rhetoric and realities and a focus on budget gimmicks. A copy
of the briefing slides is attached (1 MB PPT).
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