The battle of the biggest budget begins
The House Armed Services Committee began the long and tedious process of marking up the Defense Authorization bill for fiscal 2009. The markup is expected to go on throughout the day. The Chairman Ike Skelton (D-MO), in his opening statement expressed his position that the war in Afghanistan should be the primary focus of the American military efforts in the Middle East. This runs somewhat contrary to statements made by Secretary of Defense Robert Gates when he spoke at the Heritage Foundation in Colorado Springs yesterday, “The risk of overextending the Army is real. But I believe the risk is far greater — to that institution, as well as to our country — if we were to fail in Iraq. That is the war we are in. That is the war we must win.”
Skelton also said that the bill offered a pay increase for the military, a greater commitment to fighting weapons of mass destruction, and reforms for the contracting structure within the U.S. Army. He said that the bill addresses the command and control issues that have arisen in Afghanistan and the combined NATO operations there. Ranking Member Dunking Hunter (R-CA) emphasizes future combat systems funding and the need to increase the size of the Army.
The first subcommittee to present their markup and amendments was the Terrorism and Unconventional Threats and Capabilities. The subcommittee chairman Adam Smith (D-WA) said that they have authorized $185 million beyond the president’s budget for special operations capabilities. The ranking member of the subcommittee, Mac Thorberry made the most political statement saying that fighting terrorism goes beyond the Armed Services Committee and that the failure to pass FISA in the House and the limits currently being extracted on intelligence officials’ interrogation techniques increase, “Our potential vulnerability to new threats…” He spoke out against Nancy Pelosi saying that “no good deed goes unpunished” as she uses Iraq war funding and the Colombia Free Trade Agreement as leverage against President Bush.
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Related
- House Armed Services Committee hearing to review the budget request of the Department of Defense for Fiscal Year 2009
- Testimony on the army budget reveals challenges and future of conflict
- House Armed Services Committee hearing on joint capacity programs and military and governance funding of U.S. allies
- When is Afghanistan a “must”?
- Bridge money for the war, but Iraq better start to pay, says Skelton
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