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Politics

Pentagon: Wars Come and Go but War FUNDING Should Be Forever!

Nick Gillespie | 3.28.2014 8:47 AM

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Here's a real test to see if House Republicans are serious about making any cuts in government spending.

As you'll recall, with a few notable exceptions such as Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.), it's tough to find GOP members who really stick to their guns, especially when spending is in any way related to the military spending rather than, say, food stamps, funding for the arts, or foreign aid.

The Pentagon says that even though wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are effectively over, well, they still need money as if we're still at war. The Defense budget is one of the most inscrutable documents ever written (it puts Melville's The Confidence Man to shame in this regard). On top of a "base budget," there is also money for "overseas contingency operations" (OCO), which is where most of the money to fund wars in Afghanistan and Iraq came from. OCO funds also cover some other things such as disaster relief and evacuation efforts. You would expect OCO to be cut massively as troops come home. But you would be wrong.

The enacted base budget for fiscal 2014 was $496 billion, and DOD received $85 billion for OCO.

But the military has also been using OCO to train troops, refurbish and modernize its equipment, maintain bases and force presence outside of Afghanistan, and do other activities not directly related to the war effort. Pentagon leaders want that extra money to continue flowing in an era when Congress has put caps on the base budget. A final OCO request has not yet been made for fiscal 2015, but in budget documents, DOD listed $79 billion as a "placeholders" figure.

"Any transition from OCO to base at the current base topline or, worse, under sequester laws, would drive all of our bases down, and our limited budget will pressurize our already difficult decisions as we work to balance our force structure, modernization and readiness. Without additional supplemental funding, I'm concerned that all three of these areas will suffer," Vice Adm. Joseph Mulloy, deputy chief of naval operations for integration of capabilities and resources, told members of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness on Thursday.

The OCO budget is not subject to budget caps imposed by past law and thus exists as what one analyst calls "an uncapped funding stream that exists for DOD." You can understand why the military wants to keep the spigot open. And here's a preview of how Republicans, apart from the odd duck such as Amash, are likely to respond. Take it away, Rep. Rob Wittman (R-Va.):

"Some would characterize OCO as unnecessary after 2014. However, the fact of the matter is that the rapidly broadening scope of challenges now facing our military has led the Department to become increasingly dependent on OCO to support enduring activities — activities beyond Afghanistan's borders that must continue after combat operations have ended. OCO funds a multitude of enduring high-priority activities like building partner capacity, providing humanitarian assistance, conducting training exercises, and performing intelligence functions," he said. "Until we are able to [move those funds to the base budget], we have a responsibility to provide the necessary OCO resources to allow our troops to do the job we have asked them to do."

More in Stars & Stripes.

Some would characterize it? No, just people who are interested in having an actual conversation about how much money the government spends, including how much it spends on defense, which is likely to receive lesser scrutiny precisely because it is universally accepted as a core government function. How else do you explain massive, Titanic-sized boondoggles such as the F-35 jet program, a $1.5 trillion exercise in flushing tax money down the toilet.

Hat tips: The excellent Twitter feed of Outside the Beltway's James Joyner and Small Wars Journal.

Two things to consider:

1. From a Keynesian perspetive, defense spending is often thought of as the ultimate government multiplier. How many of us were taught in undergrad econ that it was spending on World War II that finally got us out of the Great Depression? That's simply not true. Recent research by Harvard's Robert Barro and Mercatus Center economist and Reason columnist Veronique de Rugy shows that defense spending actually finds that "a dollar increase in federal defense spending results in a less-than-a-dollar increase in GDP when the spending increase is deficit-financed." The idea that maintaining defense spending is a way of propping up our current economy is simply wrong and that fact should be front and center as the Defense Department works a pliant House GOP for more and more money.

2. Defense spending is one of the few items in the budget that can and has been cut in the past. Massive drops in spending took place after World War II, the Korean War, Vietnam, and the end of the Cold War. 

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NEXT: Justin Amash Unimpressed With Obama's NSA Reforms

Nick Gillespie is an editor at large at Reason and host of The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie.

PoliticsPolicyEconomicsWorldGovernment SpendingDefenseMilitary
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  1. creech   11 years ago

    But our military boys will be reduced to pre-WWII levels!!!! Of course, they won't be carrying bolt action rifles, but, heck, when did facts matter when it comes to chest-thumping to send someone else's kid off to war?

  2. Mike M.   11 years ago

    So how is our "victory" in the Cold War looking these days?

  3. Agile Cyborg   11 years ago

    They wouldn't have to ask for a miserable penny if they would just quit wasting billions on shitty jets and frivolous invasions.

    1. NL_   11 years ago

      How dare you impugn the dignity of my district, which manufactures the machining parts that are used to make the engine manifold for those jets! How will we effectively perform urban counterterrorism operations without the strongest possible anti-MiG fighter-jets?!

    2. Drake   11 years ago

      You don't like the "cut the bone, keep the fat strategy"?

  4. Adam330   11 years ago

    Let's not forget why OCO became such an important funding source for base budget items- the military shifted the funding for regular items into OCO because it was much easier to sell increases in funding for the war effort than it would have been in the base budget. Now that the wars are over, that strategy is coming back to bite them.

    1. Sunmonocle Backwards Tophat   11 years ago

      Interesting, I didn't know that. I used to be an engineer for DoD, and every time we went overbudget, we'd just submit a new estimate and it would get funded immediately. We were technically contractors, but inability to stay on budget wasn't really a consideration as to whether we got future projects, only whether the guy running the project would get to do so again.

      I wish I would have kept some of the union pamphlets they'd leave around the locker rooms. A choice line was "The U.S. government is at war...with American defense workers!"

      1. Adam330   11 years ago

        That's a different level of budgeting. This is the budget presented to Congress. You were just dealing with the budget of your program office.

        1. Sunmonocle Backwards Tophat   11 years ago

          Oh, I know. I was just extending the "endless check" sentiment to a local level. The justifications were the same.

  5. The Late P Brooks   11 years ago

    "Any transition from OCO to base at the current base topline or, worse, under sequester laws, would drive all of our bases down, and our limited budget will pressurize our already difficult decisions as we work to balance our force structure, modernization and readiness. Without additional supplemental funding, I'm concerned that all three of these areas will suffer,"

    You can't just cut me off cold turkey. If I don't get my fix, Imma DIE!

  6. Sunmonocle Backwards Tophat   11 years ago

    So many of the problems with military and law enforcement come from proactive policies, as opposed to reactive. When people justify cops, they usually say something along the lines of "Next time you're in trouble, let's see who you call." Yet that isn't where the money goes.

    I think there's value to having an organized (though not necessarily standing) military and a neutral party to collect information, effect arrests, and create limited security. Those government institutions work best when performing reactive functions. They become a lot more problematic when performing proactive functions, like looking for crime and trying to thwart would-be terrorists.

    When we aren't at war, those proactive functions are all they've got, and they're expensive.

    1. lap83   11 years ago

      It sounds like you're assuming that the military and law enforcement should have the same purpose. They don't.

  7. ace_m82   11 years ago

    I really fail to see why we'd need a "standing army" at this point. A fairly functional Navy (pirates?), Air Force, Nukes, and a RIDICULOUSLY well-armed militia should prevent any real invasion, right?

    Then again, I've only been studying American military history for 20 years or so. Maybe I've overlooked something...

    1. ace_m82   11 years ago

      Oh, and a REALLY good argument could be made that all of the above could be rolled into the militia. The Navy of California and the Air Force of Texas could take care of business, IMHO.

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