Louis
lhellman@armscontrolcenter.org
My Blog Posts
See All: Comments | Blog Posts Showing 5 of 6- The Cutting-Room Floor
08/02/2010 04:16:04 PM EST
A small article from The Hill caught my attention Friday evening, because it illustrates how complex the federal appropriations puzzle really is. The Congressional Black Caucus is upset after White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emmanuel promised Senator Blanche Lincoln (D-Ark.) $1.5 billion in farm disaster relief in exchange for her support of the (soon-to-be filibustered) small-business bill. The CBC is miffed because the administration is stonewalling them on the settlement of Pigford v. Glickman:Six members of the Congressional Black Caucus wrote to President Obama on Thursday calling on him to find a way to compensate black farmers who suffered discrimination in government loan programs during the 1980s and 1990s.
Lincoln’s $1.5 billion was originally part of the small-business bill and was later removed in a vain effort to curry Republican support. What does this have to do with defense spending?
[snip]
…the administration has told black farmers it lacks the funds to pay a $1.2 billion agreement they reached with the Department of Agriculture in 1999 to settle the Pigford class-action lawsuit.
[snip]
The lawmakers say that Obama should also take administrative action to pay $3.4 billion the federal government promised to settle claims that it mismanaged Native American trust funds. Elouise Cobell is the lead plaintiff in the case against the Interior Department.
- War Supplemental Clears Congress
07/28/2010 04:43:14 PM EST
Two months after the Senate first passed their version of the war supplemental, the House passed the final version of the bill yesterday, 308-114. Now all that stands between the military and a delicious $37.1 billion is the stroke of President Obama’s pen, coming in the next few days. We’ve reported on this bill twice already, tracking its progress through Congress. A quick recap: The Senate version of the bill, passed May 27, contained $58.8 billion in spending, including $37.1 billion for the war, over $13 billion for Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange, $5.1 billion for FEMA, and $2.9 billion for Haiti disaster relief, as well as a host of smaller expenditures. The House then passed its version of the bill on July 1, which accepted the Senate version while adding $22.8 billion in spending fully offset by $23.5 billion in cuts and law modifications. This included a $10 billion education jobs fund, $1 billion for youth summer jobs, $5 billion in Pell grants, $4.6 billion to settle two class-action lawsuits, and $701 million for border security.
- US and South Korea Announce Naval Demonstrations
07/22/2010 01:09:55 PM EST
The United States and South Korea announced a series of joint naval exercises in the Pacific theater on Tuesday, designed to show force and resolve against a stubborn North Korea. The first of the exercises will begin Sunday and will include ships, aircraft, sailors, and airmen (for a total of about 8,000 personnel) from both the US and Republic of Korea navy and air force. The display is a direct response to and a continuation of the crisis begun when the South Korean frigate Cheonan was sunk off the coast of the Korean Peninsula on March 26. An international investigation team concluded that the Cheonan was hit by a torpedo launched from a North Korean submarine, a charge North Korea and its ally, China, have denied. The statement said that the exercises “are designed to send a clear message to North Korea that its aggressive behavior must stop.” They will occur in both the East and West Seas, known to Americans as Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan. The military presence is quite large, with over a hundred aircraft and 20 ships and submarines, including the American aircraft carrier the USS George Washington. - Pentagon Makes Case for No More C-17s
07/15/2010 05:13:20 PM EST
All too often, defense programs consume resources like a fountain consumes water in a public park—always flowing regardless of cost or necessity. Programs with no clear use running billions of dollars over budget and years behind schedule remain fiendishly difficult to kill. It is this unfortunate reality that made the July 13 hearing of the Senate Homeland Security Subcommittee on Federal Financial Management so refreshing. Department of Defense officials emphatically pressed lawmakers to cease production of any more C-17 cargo planes, saying they were neither requested nor required. Indeed, they said, the current capabilities of our strategic airlift fleet exceed the military's present-day needs as well as worst-case scenario projections. Purchasing additional C-17 aircraft would run contrary to Defense Secretary Robert Gates' goal of saving $100 billion over the next five years and would necessitate cutbacks in other DoD programs. (More after the jump) - Vulnerabilities to Nuclear Smuggling Remain
07/06/2010 09:28:44 AM EST
Time and time again, politicians, pundits, and security experts have painted the terrifying picture of a mushroom cloud looming over the vaporized remains of an American city. If you look at the budget for missile defense (DoD has requested approximately $10 billion for FY 2011) you’d think that the most likely attack on the United States would come via a ballistic missile, given that what the U.S. spends on missile defense greatly exceeds combined spending on domestic and international maritime and port of entry interdiction efforts and nuclear detection activities. The dirty little secret of domestic nuclear defense, however, is that should the US ever come under nuclear attack, odds are that it will not come from a missile launch. Instead, a nuclear device or dirty bomb is likely to be delivered from a non-missile source, such as a container entering a U.S. port.. On June 30, witnesses at a hearing of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs revealed that the US remains woefully vulnerable to this kind of threat…


