The Defense Budget Keeps Ballooning To Fund Fleeting U.S. Primacy
The proposed defense budget reaches $813 billion, and politicians still can’t think critically about how to spend it.

On April 5, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Mark Milley testified at the House Armed Services Committee about the Biden administration's $813 billion defense budget request for the coming fiscal year. Lawmakers were focused largely on the top-line number, with many excoriating the administration for failing to account for rising inflation.
Yet there wasn't much discussion about strategy—like what the U.S. hopes to accomplish in various regions of the world, how it intends to accomplish those goals, and whether the goals themselves are truly necessary to keep the United States safe. By focusing on the numbers rather than the strategy, policy makers make the costly mistake of assuming the strategy underwriting the budget is a worthwhile investment.
Every year, the debate over the defense budget is entirely predictable. The White House releases a pitch for a certain amount of money, which is usually lambasted as too small. Lawmakers ensure defense-related jobs in their districts are protected and their favorite weapons systems aren't decommissioned. After months of wrangling, Congress authorizes defense programs and appropriates the funds. By the time the process is over, tens of billions of dollars are added to the already colossal amount requested by the president.
For all intents and purposes, the defense budget process runs on autopilot because policy makers in Washington don't bother to challenge their assumptions. They fail to ask themselves the most fundamental questions: Is the strategy of primacy working for the United States? And is there an alternative strategy available that is more efficient for taxpayers and less risky for the country?
There is stagnation because developing a better strategy would require a significant break from the status quo that has dominated U.S. foreign policy for over 30 years.
At present, the U.S. remains committed to staying firmly on top of the so-called international system. Geopolitical competitors are to be vanquished or pressured into submission rather than managed. At its core, primacy is centered on maintaining U.S. dominance in all regions of the world, lest anarchy rears its ugly head or adversarial powers seek to fill the security vacuum. In the primacist view, either the U.S. preserves its dominant status, or the world becomes a far more dangerous place.
Primacy, however, doesn't come without costs.
In the 1990's, the U.S. was the indisputable leader of the international system, living in a world with no significant competitors. But Washington is no longer operating in a unipolar world. China, which during the tail end of the Cold War was still an undeveloped country with subpar military capabilities, is now one of the most powerful countries on the planet. To use one metric of state power, China's GDP has grown from slightly over $1 trillion at the beginning of the century to over $17 trillion last year. Additionally, China's military budget is expected to reach $230 billion this year, still significantly smaller than America's $782 billion military budget. This increase in military spending finances an impressive campaign of military modernization. As a consequence, China is now a major player in East Asia that is seeking to translate its economic wealth into geopolitical influence commensurate with a great power.
To think the U.S. can turn back the clock to 1989 or compel Beijing into surrendering its core interests is wishful thinking at best, and would court escalation at worst. In today's complicated geopolitical landscape, primacy is an unsuitable strategy.
Primacy is a resource intensive strategy that's impossible to accomplish on the cheap. If the goal is to sustain a large-scale troop presence in multiple regions simultaneously, then the defense budget will inevitably increase year-over-year. A near-permanent deployment schedule undermines the health of the force in the long run as capabilities wear thin. This, in turn, forces Washington to appropriate even more money for maintenance, readiness, training, and procurement. For readiness alone, the Biden administration is seeking more than $134 billion, which is nearly as much as Russia spends on its entire military.
Finally, primacy also assumes higher risk. This isn't surprising; the more bases and outposts the U.S. operates, the more likely U.S. forces will be drawn into conflicts that have nothing to do with U.S. security interests. And U.S. allies and partners won't take their own defense seriously knowing that the U.S. is alway there to bail them out. If the defense budget seems astronomically high, it's because Washington subsidizes the defense of wealthy allies like Germany, a country that was only just recently shocked into a defense spending increase due to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
The issue with the defense budget isn't just the amount being spent, but what it's being spent on. If politicians continue to neglect the strategy driving the defense budget, there's no telling how high the cost will go.
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Seems to me, as an armchair military expert ....
* China has 5 times the US population. At some point, their GDP and military budget will be 5 times the US.
* China is a land nation, whose land borders are far more at risk than its coastline. They are much like France, who centuries of war with England followed the same pattern: They built up a tremendous navy, which was sacrificed to the army as soon as any land troubles showed up. Their navy never got any sustained practice, and usually lost its battles against the English.
* In addition, ocean fleets breed independence, which dictatorships can't abide. Maybe especially in this age of satellite micromanagement, the idea of Communist China deploying a capable and effective independent fleet is ludicrous; Xi won't tolerate the independence required, and naval engagements require independence far more than land war.
* The US is a naval nation, with oceans on both sides and no risk of any real invasion. Maintaining all those overseas bases is a waste of resources, and the way it ties fleets down to protect all those bases destroys their freedom of movement which is their main characteristic. What use is a carrier group which can travel 600 miles a day, when it has to hang around specific known areas? Consider the 3rd/5th fleet hanging around Okinawa and getting plastered by kamikazes vs when it ranged freely around the Phillipines, Formosa, and the Japanese coast, showing up unannounced to plaster Japanese bases at will.
There is the question of whether modern fleets actually do have freedom of movement, what with satellites tracking them day or night. But especially at night or with cloud cover, radar can probably be spoofed, and even if not, a carrier group can move its base of operations 600 miles a whole lot easier than land-based airplanes and their support can move as far in one day.
One also remembers the Chinese admiral in the 1400s? or 1500s? whose fleet wandered the Indian Ocean as far as the African coast, and the emperor who felt so threatened by this independent power that he banned all ships capable of long distance voyages and reverted to army power alone. All it would take now is Putin to fall from grace or die of old age, and China could have some tremendous border complications which would make the navy seem like the luxury toy it is. They also have been antagonizing all their neighbors with their Nine Dash Line and high handed tactics against fishing fleets; worse than the US messing with Caribbean and Central American governments.
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Poor analysis and inaccurate comparison as Britain and France were in direct military conflict for over a hundred years. You neglect to acknowledge that France won the hundred years war..it was only England development into a colonial empire that made Britain a major power afterwards. I'd predict, the USA will spend its money on wartime preparations and military aid packages to other nations for a war that might never come while continuing to drown in debt. China will continue to expand its trade advantage and build infrastructure such as ports in developing nations under unfavorable terms for the recipient nation as they have been. This will increase its dependence of the majority of the developing world while the USA tries to maintain dominance in the western hemisphere (outside of Brazil, Venezuela, Cuba) and Europe.
Add, USA will keep and maintain its influence in Japan, South Korea, Australia but lose dominance in the rest of southeast Asia, the middle east and Africa as there are limits to naval military expansion especially if you don't directly control the country, you building bases and supplying arms to.
The 100 years war was related to France kicking England off the continent, no? A land war. I thought I was specific enough about France losing almost all naval wars with England.
Your nonsensical then, you bring up wars between Britain and France without acknowledging the largest conflict between the two nations. Are you referring to the Napoleonic wars then, that required a coalition of Europe's major powers or loss of colonial dominance due to large debt and lack of investment such as the Seven Years War? The point is you are fighting a war that might never come and could never be won by the USA and would only result in a stalemate. Unless your suggesting that the USA become imperialistic and start developing colonies that is not a valid comparison as the USA expends military aid without reaping the benefits of a colony in resources. China has no reason to enter direct conflict with the USA, she only needs to let the USA destroy itself in a debt spiral while fortifying trade its trade dominance and maintaining a military that is "big enough".
What the Dickens are you on about? I was discussing naval war between France and England. You brought up land war, I said (again) I was talking about naval war, and now you drag in the US and the Napoleonic land wars
I was mistaken that you were trying to argue a point, a nation doesn't rely on a singular branch of its military to exist without a purpose. You are correct Britain had a much stronger navy than France throughout most of history, of course I'd argue France's navy helped the Americans win the Revolutionary War. On the other hand, I would argue that China's navy not being a direct match for the USA navy is the deciding factor in the current state of affairs. China is not an imperialist relying on colonies ala the British Empire. Maybe it would be more relevant if China and the USA were in direct military conflict and Russia and China relations devolved to the point reached during the Sino/Soviet split. Obviously overseas trade would be difficult if not impossible for China to obtain oil and other resources during a conflict, but that's only if Russia relations deteriorated to a point where Russia placed sanctions on China.
"China is not an imperialist"
Hahahahahaha
Tibet and East Turkmenistan would beg to differ.
A disputed region, either with a border state or by separatists doesn't define imperialist in the context used. I'm assuming you meant East Turkestan and not Turkmenistan. If you'll notice, I said "like Britain" that required a substantial Navy to protect its interest overseas. Not only did Britain require a naval force to retain control of the indigenous populace but to protect resources being exploited from said region as well as to protect it from foreign forces and competitors as many nations sought colonial possessions during the period I referred.
England's navy began its supremacy with Henry VIII, mid 1500s, after getting kicked off the continent and before becoming a colonial power, and its naval wars with France lasted until the end of Napoleon, 1815, while the actual naval arms race with France didn't end until the early 1900s.
Your naive, Naval dominance is not important if you aren't in conflict or trying to project your military across oceans. Being second or third best will be good enough. China has enough land-based missiles and brown water navy that it would be difficult to maintain a major naval force off of her coast, that's exacerbated by the fact that China continues to develop man made island defense structure. Your playing pretend where an ideological Cold War trumps maintaining valid global trade dominance across the globe. The USA won't be broken militarily but there is a good chance she loses her global dominance as a preeminent power as she loses grip on controlling the global reserve currency.
Insults are stupid. If you want to discuss things without insults, and if you can manage to stay on point without drifting hither and yon, I'll respond.
Nothing wrong with being naive or ignorant, that's how you learn. However, in defense if you are sensitive to critique and have nothing valid to counter with then I apologize for offending your sensitivities.
I stayed away from his radar spoofing comment for a reason. A repeater can create a type of spoofing. But there is almost a century of signal processing development to counter all many of those things.
Go ahead, respond to it, as long as you don't pretend I was discussing sonar or something else. I don't claim it correct. I was throwing it out as an idea. Some people claim carriers are still the best warships available, some claim they are merely fragile targets. Only an actual war would show the truth. In the meantime, armchair discussion is all that is available.
Bud, I never claimed to be omniscient. I called myself "armchair" for a reason. But when you respond to things I either didn't write, or to things I explicitly excluded, that is not a conversation in which I can partake.
I'm not trying to offend you; the purpose of debate is confrontational by nature, and I agree with many of the points you make. I was mistaken that your point was that China requires Naval dominance as Britain required to maintain relevance. I was also mistaken, with the assumption that you presume a land empire was somehow inferior to a naval empire. The USA requires a massive naval presence to protect allies that are an ocean away and to secure the stability of the dollar as the world reserve currency. Russia and China just don't have that problem and should the world splinter economically most of the nations that move to a new trade currency would be based in Asia, the middle east and Africa, and the USA has limited presence in the Indian Ocean.
It's hard to take you seriously when you treat 'the hundred years war' as an actual war, and not a series of wars about approximately the same political question.
(BTW, the hundred years war encompasses 3 wars, 2 of which England at least arguably won).
But you're missing the entire point about ab232adfas24's comment. France never during the hundred years war managed to build a significant navy to plausibly threaten to invade England itself.
Just because you don't view the Hundred Years War as a prolonged conflict separated by sporadic cease fires doesn't mean it's not a valid view in this context, it's like trying to talk about the Cold War but ignore that the Vietnam War played a major factor. Also, you seem to believe the massive debt that England incurred resulting in the loss of power of the Monarchy was intentional. I don't believe those temporary wins would have been deemed worth the cost of losing absolute power over the English nation by those monarchs who waged it if they knew the ultimate outcome. There is a reason it's called the Hundred Years War and not the Hundred Years Wars, it ultimately was a singular war to achieve one goal separated by breaks in between. You also fail to take into account that early on English monarchs considered themselves foremost to be French and during the hundred years war a dual monarchy. I never said that the French weren't hindered by being unable to hold dominance of the seas, the whole point of the war was to prevent the English Monarch from claim to the French throne and not to invade England. If you fail on the naval front but ultimately achieve your intended goals for all intents of purposes, you still won.
First things first.
"Lawmakers ensure defense-related jobs in their districts are protected"
This is a big part of the problem and both major parties are culpable. You can talk to lawmakers about cutting spending so long as defense industries and military bases in their districts are not part of the discussion.
The other question is can we really have a discussion on the US need for primacy or will it get shut down. Might be a good topic for a Soho debate.
There are several lessons that we should learn from what is now happening in Ukraine. The lessons should be part of the discussion.
- authoritarian government may have large armies but those armies can be far less effective than the size would suggest.
- small, smart ordinance can stop big expensive weapons
- governments that are reluctant to spend will up the spending when the threat is close and real.
- trying to stop a large opponent without enlarging the conflict is very difficult.
Those last points are especially pertinent to central Europe -- Poland, the Baltics, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, even Ukraine (when this is over) and Belarus (when its current dictator dies and it becomes democratic) -- which are very unlikely to go on the offense any time soon, unlike Putin now, and their best defense is lots of those smart anti-tank and anti-air missiles; make any invasion too costly to contemplate. The US could best help simply by manufacturing those things like candy, stockpiling them and using old stock for training, so the central Europeans know how effective they are, have plenty of training experience, and can be prickly porcupines on day one of any invasion, with resupply only days away.
Would say you are foolishly mistaken that Russia/Putin intends to create a new Warsaw pact, for one the failure in Ukraine has proven how much the face of warfare is changing. Also, trying to reconstitute the USSR would take much more than what Russia has available with a population a third the size of the USA and the size of Italy. China and Russia are learning from this at the same time the rest of the world is...its like 1945 all over again, the USA had dominance in nuclear weapons but it took all of 4 years for Russia to develop them. My guess, China will make a major investment in semiconductors and partner with Russia to develop a much leaner and tech heavy military. Developing tech is difficult, replicating it much easier. In the meantime Russia/China will be delinking themselves from the dollar to prevent economic warfare on their nations to prevent the repercussions that Russia experienced when it invaded the Ukraine.
*economy the size of Italy
Man, what did I ever do to piss you off so much?
Go pick on someone else.
Not picking on you Bubba, I was pointing out that you are trying to fight a war without considering how the world has changed since the 1960's. In my opinion, even a win for Ukraine or a Nato Europe doesn't point towards a win for the USA. The money and resources that will require investment while pushing half the world's population and resources towards a second global economic system along with is going to bad for the USA and world peace in general. Sure, it makes sense on certain protectionist ideological cold war level...but that's not a war that I believe the USA can ultimately win in its current state. Those who underestimate their opponent and don't make room for unintended consequences are ultimately doomed to failure. It won't be the first time the USA has made this mistake...Vietnam, Afghanistan, arming and placing dictators such as Khadafi and Saddam Hussein in power across the globe.
I have to say, this is not your typical stupid post. The US has been reaching the point, in my opinion, where we do not need to pretend to be the world's leader or police force. This said, your lessons learned fall under the no shit, Sherlock category -painfully obvious. Additionally, dependence on technology versus dependence on tactical capability is a losing strategy. Technology costs money, tie that to your first comment.
Technology costs money but China has tight control of its economy and can afford the investment. The real problem is trying to get advanced lithography machines. Technology drives tactical capability especially with the evolution of man portable missile systems and drones as you need expendable silicon. The real problem the USA faces isn't a tactical one, its a strategic one, there is only so much that can be done without infringing on the sovereignty of a nation. Even with the economic warfare the USA and Europe has conducted on Russia the Ruble has rebounded on the forex to what it was before the invasion. Furthermore, I think one of the unintentional side effects of shutting the Russian economy out of the world economy is that the Ruble's value to the dollar will be blunted domestically within Russia.
I tend to think the Defense Contractors are going to get very busy manufacturing more and newer weaponry. It is only a matter of time before we go head to head with Russia, and then China.
In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist.
-Eisenhower 1961
we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence...by the military-industrial complex.
Eisenhower was talked out of the term he wanted to use: the military-industrial-congressional complex.
Add think tanks and universities nowadays
I hope this isn't the case. This proxy war is bad enough, the US populace has no stomach for anything difficult, as we have seen over the past several years. Once US forces start dying in horrific ways, and they will, I think the current anti-Russian bloodlust will wear off quickly. More quickly if we can get politicians' and media members' family members into units that will be in combat.
America has evolved into a force of elite fighters and support roles, for the most part of the 21st century they have left the meatgrinder style fighting to allied forces. However, this hasn't always left a good taste in the mouths of those like the Kurds and Afghani's when they are left holding the bag having suffered massive casualties.
That Andrew Heaten guy who does those satirical videos posted by Reason has a podcast. It's pretty funny. Anyway, turns out the guy studied International Relations Theory in college, and in this episode he put it to work creating a crash course in the subject. If, like me, it's not something you've ever put much effort into understanding, it's worth a listen. Seriously. I'm probably going to listen to it a second time just to catch what I may have missed.
https://politicalorphanage.libsyn.com/liberals-realists-and-the-real-cause-of-war
Republicans: We believe in small government and a yuuge military, an absolutely terrific military, the best money can buy, all hail the military budget!
Democrats: Republicans will go along with our massively massive budget if we just throw some at the military? Tack on a few more zeroes at the end and call it done!
"Lawmakers ensure defense-related jobs in their districts are protected"
This is the primary function of the American military today. It's a surreptitious, government-run jobs program. Everything else is just gravy.
Agreed
Your describing the politicians here, not the military. In fact, the portion in italics and quoted specifically states lawmakers, not military. I won't deny that there are GO's who may use influence to try to sway outcomes. Or that the military offers college benefits. However, given the trade-offs, low pay, poor living conditions poor QOL, high chance of injury or death depending on MOS, calling the military a govt-run jobs program makes you sound like mtrueman. Which is to say, biased and that you should think that statement through. The fact that one of the resident dim bulbs automatically agrees with you is a pretty good indicator that your logic is faulty.
"Your describing the politicians here, not the military."
Everyone from the Pentagon to defense contractors are in on it. Not just the politicians. That's why aircraft and other military hardware are assembled from components manufactured in as many states as possible, and that's why you now have woke recruitment, tranny four star admirals and women in the special forces.
"calling the military a govt-run jobs program makes you sound like mtrueman"
Even a stopped clock can be right twice a day. The American military has been reduced to a gigantic govt-run jobs program.
So, er, your argument is that since the world is more dangerous than it was in the 1990s, the US should cut defense spending?
Primacy and unipolarity may be expensive. But the alternative can be as well. Putin and his Rasputin (Aleksandr Dugin) are explicitly saying now that the PURPOSE of th Ukraine war is to recreate another pole. Iran wants a Shia pole. India may well want a pole. As do the Sunnis and the Turks.
Andwith multipolarity and a lot of former empires with revanchist dreams- this ain't where stability or peace happens
The fevered dreams of a global corporatist empire a la the Davos crowd aren't where stability or peace happens either.
Hehe, he said pole.
Ebony and Ovary. Live together in perfect harmony.
Gimme. More.