Monday, February 6, 2012

The Case For Military Preparedness

READINESS TRAINING
Paratroopers prepare to leave a mock Afghan village after capturing a high-value individual during a simulated battle at the Joint Readiness Training Center on Fort Polk, La., Jan. 26, 2012. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod

Military Preparedness Does Not Come Cheap -- Gordon England, Washington Post

Here’s something for critics of the country’s defense budget to ponder: After I was confirmed as secretary of the Navy in May 2001, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld asked me and the other service secretaries to work with Congress to gain approval for a pending supplemental appropriation to the defense budget. This was not a war supplemental; it was still four months before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. The Pentagon was simply running out of money.

The Navy did not have enough funding to steam ships or to fly airplanes for the rest of the fiscal year. Submarines were being deployed with many of their cruise-missile tubes empty. Warships could not deploy until test and repair equipment was transferred from ships returning to port. The Navy’s deferred maintenance account was billions of dollars in the red. Sailor and Marine Corps housing and bases were, literally, a mess. Military salaries were low, housing allowances below rental costs and medical facilities needed upgrades.

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My Comment: This administration has made it very clear that the military is high on their list of programs to be cut .... wars in Afghanistan and tensions against China/Iran/Pakistan/etc/ not withstanding.

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