How much military is enough?
http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atlarge/2013/01/28/130128crat_atlarge_lepore?currentPage=allHow much military is enough?
by Jill Lepore
January 28, 2013
Sixty-two legislators sit on the House Armed Services Committee, the largest committee in Congress. Since January, 2011, when Republicans took control of the House, the committee has been chaired by Howard P. McKeon, who goes by Buck. He has never served in the military, but this month he begins his third decade representing Californias Twenty-fifth Congressional District, the home of a naval weapons station, an Army fort, an Air Force base, and, for the Marines, a place to train for mountain warfare. McKeon believes that its his job to protect the Pentagon from budget cuts. On New Years Day, after a thirteenth-hour deal was sealed with spit in the Senate, McKeon issued a press statement lamenting that the compromise had failed to shield a wartime military from further reductions.
The debate about taxes is over, which is one of the few good things that can be said for it. The debate about spending, which has already proved narrow and grubby, is pending.
The United States spends more on defense than all the other nations of the world combined. Between 1998 and 2011, military spending doubled, reaching more than seven hundred billion dollars a yearmore, in adjusted dollars, than at any time since the Allies were fighting the Axis. The 2011 Budget Control Act, which raised the debt ceiling and created both the fiscal cliff and a Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, which was supposed to find a way to steer clear of it, required four hundred and eighty-seven billion dollars in cuts to military spending, spread over the next ten years. The cliff-fall mandates an additional defense-budget reduction of fifty-five billion dollars annually. None of these cuts have gone into effect. McKeon has been maneuvering to hold the line.
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Either the United States rules the world or Americans are no longer Americans? Happily, thats not the choice the 113th Congress faces. The decision at hand concerns limits, not some kind of national, existential apocalypse. Force requires bounds. Between militarism and pacifism lie diplomacy, accountability, and restraint. Dempseys wont be the last word.
orpupilofnature57
(15,472 posts)Left Turn Only
(74 posts)What would be the percentage of Americans who would be in favor of getting out of Afghanistan and building roads, hospitals, schools, etc., here, instead? How many Americans would be in favor of not getting into Africa and spending the money to improve security at our ports, airports and borders, something that would go a lot further in protecting us from terrorism? Would the majority of Americans prefer closing military bases in other countries and placing those personnel in newly built border stations, spending that money here on our people and providing jobs for Americans? Would most people agree with the fact that since we are constantly spending money we don't have to stop giving money to other countries (except for humanitarian aide), giving us the perfect excuse to get out of the politics of the Middle East and, thereby, eliminating the cries from both sides that we are helping their enemies?
If we were a country that minded our own business like Scandinavian countries, for instance, wouldn't that cut down on our need to combat terrorism? Do we really want to cut back on our own people's safety net to spend money outside of our own country while our allies have universal health care, college tuition, etc.?
Just thinking....
think
(11,641 posts)Left Turn Only
(74 posts)For those who haven't signed the petition, it's easy; let's do it.
think
(11,641 posts)when we can't even count our guns and have lost some of the butter....
Thank you for signing. It is a cold run but one ever knows. Be it this petition or another petition drive, with some organization it might hit the new thresh hold of 100k.
think
(11,641 posts)Thank you very much for posting.
bemildred
(90,061 posts)It's impossible to anticipate what you will need when the time comes, things change very fast now, and so one does better to focus on intelligence, surveillanece, capability demonstation, and forecasting. All youi maintain is cadre and technical expertise.
Macoy51
(239 posts)I think America should account for 25% of the total world military spending. That way we will always be strong enough to take on any foe, or group of foes, who threatens us. Of course this will mean cutting our current military spending in half.
Macoy