Pentagon a ripe target for cuts
By Linda Bilmes
|
GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
JULY 31, 2013
NORTHROP
GRUMMAN
A Global
Hawk drone was towed at Grand Forks Air Force Base in North
Dakota.
THERE
IS a common theme that
connects recent protests in Turkey, Brazil, Egypt, and elsewhere. That theme is
the rising discontent of the middle class brought about by the failure of their
governments to deliver popular priorities. Apart from the brief Occupy Wall
Street movement, people aren’t taking to the streets here in the United States.
Nonetheless there’s growing evidence that some of the trends unfolding abroad
also are at work in our own backyard.
Last
fall, a coalition of 85 grass-roots organizations, including teachers, veterans,
unions, and community activists, placed something called the “Budget for All” on
the Massachusetts ballot. The referendum urged the federal government to end the
war in Afghanistan, reduce military spending, shift funding to domestic
priorities, and increase taxes on the wealthy. Voters in the Commonwealth
approved the measure by margins of nearly 3 to 1 in all 91 cities and towns
where it was on the ballot, including many places that voted for Mitt Romney in
the presidential race.
The
Legislature has now taken up the matter. State Senator Dan Wolf, Representative
Carl Sciortino, and 34 co-sponsors have proposed a Budget for All resolution
that calls on President Obama and the US Congress to embrace these
priorities.
In
recent hearings at the State House, there was a sense of overwhelming
frustration by people from all walks of life who profoundly disagree with the
federal government’s taxing and spending policies. They are frustrated that the
top 1 percent of Americans has grown extremely rich at the expense of the rest
of us; that the national debt exceeds $16 trillion; that the country is mired in
sequestration and fiscal cliffs and threats to Social Security while we spend $7
billion per month in Afghanistan; that we’re squandering the lowest interest
rates in history instead of rebuilding crumbling roads and bridges.
There
was testimony from families of fallen military men and women unable to obtain
benefits; biochemists facing cuts to funding for Alzheimer’s research; young
teachers who couldn’t afford a home. As Marty Nathan, a mother and family
physician at Brightwood Health Center in Springfield summed it up, “We are
simply spending federal tax dollars on the wrong things.”
The
voters of Massachusetts are on to something. There is ample scope to reduce
military spending without jeopardizing national security, and to free up
resources for local communities.
Since
2001, the size of the annual military budget has grown by nearly $1 trillion,
not including the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Over the last decade, we’ve
spent more money on the military, in inflation-adjusted dollars, than at any
time since World War II. Despite this influx of cash, our Air Force and Navy
fleets and forces are older and smaller than they were 10 years ago.
The
defense budget is filled with obsolete, redundant, and underperforming programs
and facilities that happen to be located in key congressional districts. The
cost of new weapons programs is growing uncontrollably, and many don’t even work
well. The Global Hawk, America’s largest and most expensive spy drone (cost:
$220 million apiece), cannot be used in difficult weather conditions — so the
Air Force is flying U-2s from the 1950s to carry out surveillance over North
Korea when the weather is cloudy. The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, which had an
original price tag of $81 million per plane, has now doubled to $161 million
each. The entire program has ballooned to $391 billion for a reduced number of
planes, and is way behind schedule.
Former
Defense Secretary Robert Gates has estimated that 30 percent of the Pentagon’s
budget is consumed by overheads and indirect costs. With these overheads hidden
among thousands of individual line items, the current system makes it impossible
for the department to monitor and control costs. The Defense Department has
flunked its financial audit every year for the past two decades, and cannot
account for billions in annual spending. The recent across-the-board cuts in the
sequester won’t do anything to root out inefficiencies or to enable the Pentagon
to spend more strategically.
The
core idea behind the Budget for All is that we can’t afford to continue spending
20 cents of every tax dollar on the military, regardless of whether the item in
question is necessary or even good value. Instead, we should reset our national
priorities towards more butter, fewer guns, and more equitable taxation. Voters
are disillusioned with the gridlock in Washington and the iron grip of special
interests. Congress needs to pay attention to the common sense of our
Commonwealth voters.
Linda
Bilmes, a former assistant secretary of the US Department of Commerce, is the
Daniel Patrick Moynihan senior lecturer in public policy at Harvard
University.
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