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ForeignPolicy

America's Disastrous Budgets

By Cindy Williams, AlterNet. Posted July 5, 2006.


After Sept. 11, federal budgets for national security rose drastically -- so why aren't the ensuing funded programs making us any safer?
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Editor's Note: This essay is part of a series of Audits of the Conventional Wisdom, a project of the Center for International Studies at MIT.

Since September 2001, federal budgets for national security have climbed more than 50 percent in real terms. Unfortunately, much of the added money reflects "business as usual" rather than programs aimed at making the nation safer from today's threats.

Compared with past decades, national security spending makes up a relatively small share of the U.S. economy. Nevertheless, with the federal debt growing rapidly and as large numbers of baby boomers approach retirement age, many observers expect future federal budgets to be tight. Thus it is critically important to ensure that national security funds go to projects that make the nation more secure. This article examines broad changes in national security budgets since September 2001. It first reviews the three categories of federal spending for national security. It then examines how budgets in those categories have changed since September 2001. It ends with a look at alternatives that seem more relevant in an era of international mass-casualty terrorism.

Three ways to improve security

Three categories of federal spending are closely related to national security. The first is national defense -- the offensive element. National defense includes funds for the Department of Defense (DoD), nuclear activities of the Department of Energy, and smaller military-related programs in other agencies. The national defense budget pays to raise, equip, train and maintain the armed forces, conduct military operations, and deter attacks on the United States and its allies. It also pays about 80 percent of the nation's intelligence bills. The second category is homeland security -- the defensive element. This category includes law enforcement to track down terrorists and bring them to justice, border and aviation security, physical and cyber protection of critical facilities and systems, improvements to the public health infrastructure, and preparations to respond to and mitigate the consequences of attacks should they occur.

The third category is international affairs -- the preventive element. International affairs includes the conduct of foreign affairs and diplomacy through the State Department, economic and military aid to foreign countries, contributions to international organizations like the United Nations, and foreign information and exchange programs.

The Bush administration's national security strategy calls for bringing to bear all the tools of statecraft and security, including elements of offense, defense and prevention. Of course, no simple formula can tell U.S. leaders how spending should be divided among the three categories. National security policy serves multiple objectives: protecting U.S. sovereignty and territorial integrity, and sustaining a suitable level of relative power in the world, as well as keeping people and infrastructure safe from the threat of direct attack. To those ends, the United States needs a strong military, regardless of the terrorist threat. It also devoted efforts to homeland security even before the tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001. Moreover, even if terrorism were not a problem, international diplomacy and aid programs would be crucial to sustaining national security.

Achieving U.S. security objectives in the future will require continued substantial investment across all three categories. Nevertheless, U.S. resources for national security are not inexhaustible.

Setting priorities and explicitly considering tradeoffs among the competing demands of offense, defense and prevention are crucial for the nation to get the most out of its sizeable financial investment in security.


Digg!

Cindy Williams is a principal research scientist in the Security Studies Program at MIT and the editor of "Filling the Ranks: Transforming the U.S. Military Personnel System" (MIT Press, 2004).



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Beginning of the Spinning
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Jul 5, 2006 4:14 AM   
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The biggest mind game our government ever played against the people was to change the name of The War Department to The Department of Defense. This is the granddaddy of "The Clean Air Act'", "No Child Left Behind", "The war on poverty", and now "The War on Terrorism". When the government says, "We're going to give you a break"; they mean " watch your knees".

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worst bunch
Posted by: rsaxto on Jul 5, 2006 4:35 AM   
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The Bushies are the worst bunch of wasters of the people's money in USA history. Instead of fighting terrorists they are fighting the Iraqi people with tons of American money. Instead of working efficiently with other nations in globally destabilizing the financial base of terrorists they run amok in the world slaughtering people who have nothing to do with terrorists. At home they shove money at the fat cats and hurt the interests of the lower classes, especially of the low-paid soldiers. They shove money at stealing contractors. They are destroying America and we need to get their asses out of power.

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» RE: worst bunch Posted by: robmikejas
I have a fair question.
Posted by: douglashoyt on Jul 5, 2006 6:28 AM   
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Has the administration demonstrated that there is an international terrorist threat?

OK, we saw the WTC fall, but was that an intelligence failure?

The administration maintains that it was.

NORAAD (North American Air Defense) was not up to the job of intersepting the airliners which crashing into the towers, even though the USA was expecting an attack from airliners since August of 2001.

This author is off base. We don't need to rearrange the defense industry bugdet, we need to move the money into peaceful uses. Quality education, health care, stable and pleasant work, safe communities, rehabilitative prisons, fair courts, and a much smaller Defense Department will do much to give us real security.

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The Home of Waste
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jul 5, 2006 6:36 AM   
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The DoD and it's component agencies are and have been wasteful in the extreme for a very long time. Despite the phenomenal amounts that have been spent we still have unsecured borders and are still highly vulnerable to terrorism.

The basic structure of the DoD is wasteful and highly resistant to reform. Instead of a unified force structure, the purpose behind the creation of the DoD, we have a collection of highly political and jealous fiefdoms.

Why do we have 4 Air Forces, 2 Navies and 2 Armies? The Marine Corps is a prime example of what is structurally wrong with the DoD. Originally an appendage of the US Navy, the Marines have been morphed by politics and a carefully cultured image into a service of it's own.

Instead of their historical role as light Naval Infantry, the Marines have leveraged politics to field a medium heavy force complete with Armor & Artillery. Instead of depending upon the Air Force for aviation support, they have fielded one of their own. Despite being part of the Navy, they maintain a separate infrastructure at great expense to the US taxpayer.

Why is the US Coast Guard charged with responsibilities that should be the charge of the US Navy? Why does the Army maintain a separate Aviation branch and operate sea terminals? Why has the Navy evolved Frogmen into SEALS, that encroach upon the land warfare role of the Army? Why does each branch operate separate Personnel, Finance & Accounting Centers?

It's all about turf. Not only does each service jealously guard it's own, each seeks to encroach upon each other.

The Navy and Air Force need to get out of land warfare, the Army needs to get out of the Sea Terminal business and the Marines need to be severely cut back to their traditional role instead of trying to create it's own mini DoD. It's not the whole solution, but it is a long overdue start.

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Watch My Hand!
Posted by: BlueTigress on Jul 5, 2006 1:28 PM   
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It's not about keeping us SAFE, it's about keeping us SCARED.

Scared people don't think. People who don't think are easier to fool.

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What if
Posted by: surfreality on Jul 5, 2006 4:32 PM   
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we invested a few billion dollars in teaching hospitals in Cairo, Jerusalem, Islamabad, Beirut, Kabul... what if we had done that instead of spending $450 Billion on the war in Iraq? Would we be more secure today? How popular would Osama be then?

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» RE: What if Posted by: HeroesAll
List of politicians who vote for war etc.
Posted by: nbrown on Jul 6, 2006 12:03 AM   
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Here's a list of Iraq war votes.

More:

No Child Left Behind

PATRIOT Act (2001)

Dept. of Homeland Security

PATRIOT Act (2006)

If you're curious why I added NCLB, it mandates that high schools open themselves up to military recruiters. All part of the militarist government.

Seriously, check to see who votes for this stuff. It's both parties, overwelmingly, not just repugs.

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Waste?
Posted by: amazin on Jul 7, 2006 2:11 AM   
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It's a combination of factors. The Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld cabal is keeping you scared while they deliberately bankrupt the nation in the interest of their financier masters, who are waiting to pick over the debris of the ruins.

Sure, they get the oil, a pacified Middle East and Israeli expansion, too, because this is how they do it, the domino effects yielding plussages. They will also then be kings of the castles, with the rest of us the serfs. - All according to the prescription of the Protocols of the Wise men of Zion.

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Stop It all
Posted by: Joe Ox on Jul 7, 2006 8:44 AM   
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Send troops home, not just to the USA, but literally home to moms and dads. Shut down the military and spend the savings on elevating the poorest among us.

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