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thedrifter
10-28-08, 07:33 AM
OCTOBER 28, 2008

Will Obama Gut Defense?
Capitol Hill Democrats want to target the Pentagon.
By BRET STEPHENS

Barney Frank will not soon be named secretary of defense or, insha'Allah, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee. So there's really no reason to fear that his recent call to cut defense spending by 25% is a harbinger of what to expect in an Obama administration.

Then again, maybe there is.

When it comes to defense, there are two Barack Obamas in this race. There is the candidate who insists, as he did last year in an article in Foreign Affairs, that "a strong military is, more than anything, necessary to sustain peace"; pledges to increase the size of our ground forces by 65,000 soldiers and 27,000 Marines while providing them with "first-rate equipment, armor, incentives and training"; and seems to be as gung-ho for a surge in Afghanistan as he was opposed to the one in Iraq.

And then there is the candidate who early this year recorded an ad for Caucus for Priorities, a far-left outfit that wants to cut 15% of the Pentagon's budget in favor of "education, healthcare, job training, alternative energy development, world hunger [and] deficit reduction."

"Thanks so much for the Caucus for Priorities for the great work you've been doing," says Mr. Obama in the ad, before promising to "cut tens of billions of dollars in wasteful spending . . . slow our development of future combat systems . . . not develop new nuclear weapons."

Joe Biden also cut an ad for the group that was even more emphatic: "I'll tell you what we cannot afford . . . a trillion-dollar commitment to 'Star Wars,' new nuclear weapons, a thousand-ship Navy, the F-22 Raptor."

Mr. Biden is right that we can't afford a thousand-ship Navy, not that anyone has proposed it. Current levels of funding don't quite suffice to operate 300 ships, or about half the number the U.S. had at the end of the Reagan arms buildup. The Navy would be satisfied with 313.

Current funding is also just adequate to purchase about 65 new planes for the Air Force each year, even as the average age of each plane creeps upward to nearly 24 years. Last year, the entire fleet of F-15Cs -- the Air Force's mainstay fighter -- was grounded after one of the planes came apart in midair. Spending on maintenance alone is up more than 80% from a decade ago. Is that another defense item Mr. Biden thinks we can't afford?

(As for nuclear weapons, the U.S. hasn't built a new warhead in decades. Its mainstay, the W76, is widely suspected of being unreliable, yet Congress has resisted funding the so-called Reliable Replacement Warhead.)

Maybe it seems odd that the Pentagon, whose budget for 2009 runs to well over $500 billion -- not including the supplemental $165 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan -- should struggle to afford the equipment it needs.

But it's not odd. We've been fighting two wars, straining people and equipment. Weapons have generally become more complex and expensive. President Clinton's "procurement holiday" punted the modernization problems to the present. And even after the Bush buildup, defense spending amounts to just 4% of gross domestic product. By contrast, at the nadir of Cold War defense spending under Jimmy Carter, the figure was 4.7%.

All this should argue for at least a modest recapitalization effort by an Obama administration, assuming it really believes a strong military is "necessary to sustain peace." A study by the Heritage Foundation makes the case that defense spending should rise to close to $800 billion over the next four years in order to stick to the 4% GDP benchmark. That's unrealistic in light of the financial crisis. But holding the line at current levels is doable -- and necessary.

But what if a President Obama doesn't actually believe in the importance of a strong military to keep the peace? Or has an attenuated idea of what qualifies as a "strong" military? Or considers military strength a luxury at a moment of financial crisis? Or thinks now is the moment to smash the Pentagon piggy bank to fund a second Great Society?

Does anyone really know where Mr. Obama's instincts lie? During the third debate, he cited former Marine Gen. James Jones as a member of his wise man's circle -- which was reassuring but odd, given that the general made a point of appearing at a McCain campaign event simply to distance himself from the Democratic candidate.

The Obama campaign has also produced a lengthy defense blueprint on its Web site. It reads more like a social manifesto, promising to "improve transition services," "make mental health a priority," and end "don't-ask, don't-tell." All very well, except the document is notably vague on naming the kinds of weapons systems Mr. Obama would actually support.

And so the question remains: If elected, which Obama do we get? The nuanced centrist or the man from Ben and Jerry's?

Some voters may like answers sometime before next Tuesday. Alternatively, they can click the button called "I'm Feeling Lucky."

Write to bstephens@wsj.com

Ellie

thedrifter
10-31-08, 08:17 AM
The Pentagon: No Place to Play Games
[Elaine Donnelly]


By now everyone should know that Sen. Barack Obama, if elected Commander in Chief, will raid the defense budget for redistribution elsewhere. Obama said so himself in a 1-minute 30-second video for a leftist group called Caucus for Priorities, in which he pledges to put an end to “misguided defense policies.”



On Tuesday Bret Stephens of the Wall Street Journal asked: Will Obama Gut Defense? Stephens cited Rep. Barney Frank’s call for a 25 percent cut in defense spending, which would make it possible to spend more on new domestic programs after American forces withdraw from Iraq.



Congressman Frank’s recommended cut in defense spending conflicts with Obama’s reported willingness to increase the size of ground forces by 65,000 soldiers and 27,000 Marines, and to provide them with “first rate” equipment. Is Obama likely to keep those promises? In an article titled Obama’s Pentagon, retired Army Lt. Col. Bob Maginnis expressed skepticism about the senator’s intentions—primarily because of the people who are advising Obama on military affairs.



Former Clinton Navy Secretary Richard Danzig, Maginnis wrote, has said that he expects an Obama administration to maintain Pentagon spending at current levels. Danzig has also questioned “affordability issues” associated with the Army’s Future Combat Systems plan, the Air Force’s F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, and the Navy’s DDG-1000 Zumwalt-class destroyer. Cost overruns require close oversight, but Obama’s plans go beyond efficiency. In his statement to the Caucus for Priorities, Obama promised to eliminate “unproven missile defense systems,” and to achieve what he calls a “world without nuclear weapons.”



In 1999, Secretary of the Navy Danzig, an outspoken advocate of women serving on submarines, insulted men of the Silent Service by calling them “a white male bastion.” If an Obama administration mandates “career opportunities” for female sailors on cramped submarines, which operate with constantly recycled air that would elevate the risks of birth defects, submarine commanders may have to disrupt undersea missions by conducting hazardous mid-ocean evacuations of pregnant sailors.



Rudy deLeon is another military/social activist who may make a comeback at the Pentagon. As Bill Clinton’s Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, deLeon worked with gay activists to circumvent the 1993 law stating that homosexuals are not eligible to serve in the military. If he returns to an even more powerful perch at the Department of Defense, an army of feminist attorneys and gay activists are likely to gain a new power base.



With access to defense dollars and Pentagon prestige, civilian ideologues will push hard for their most extreme causes, including full acceptance of professed (not discreet) homosexuals in the military, women in direct ground combat (infantry) battalions, and an Office of Victim Advocate (OVA) that would operate as an “Office of Male Bashing” in the Pentagon.



But that is not all. Vice presidential nominee Sen. Joseph Biden strongly supports the Convention to Eliminate Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), an international treaty that would surrender sovereignty to international bureaucrats on all issues involving women — meaning, just about everything. According to Paul Weyrich, Obama also supports legislation to establish a Department of Peace and Non-Violence (HR 808), sponsored by anti-war liberal Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich and 70 co-sponsors. This is not a joke—it is a threat to America’s volunteer force and its ability to defend America.



Voters should be concerned not just about the resources that would be taken away from the armed forces, but the new burdens that would be loaded on. The situation could reprise the 1990s, when the Clinton administration slashed the defense budget, while Pentagon social engineers pushed hard for radical social experiments that weakened morale, discipline, and retention in the ranks.



An administration that takes away resources while adding heavy social burdens could change the sturdy, five-sided shape of the Pentagon into a shaky structure resembling a tower of wooden Jenga blocks. In the popular tabletop family game of the same name, rectangular-shaped Jenga blocks that resemble railroad ties are laid in cross-hatched layers to form a tall column. Each player carefully withdraws one of the smooth wooden planks and places it on top of the tower.



Every round weakens the structure of the column while adding increasingly heavy burdens that make it taller, but less stable. The player who pulls the last plank that causes the tower to tumble loses the game with laughter all around.



It would not be a laughing matter, however, if the next administration weakens the infrastructure of the military while simultaneously burdening it with cultural changes that greatly increase the difficulties and hazards of military life. This would be a dangerous game, and it could break the volunteer force.

Ellie