Monday, August 3, 2015
Was It Always President Obama's Goal To Shrink The U.S. Military?
Mark Moyar, Wall Street Journal: How Obama Shrank the Military
He’s used the budget sequester to accomplish what looks to have been his political goal from the start.
News last month of the U.S. Army’s decision to cut 40,000 active-duty soldiers, shrinking to 450,000 by 2017, drew fusillades inside the Beltway. Sen. John McCain assailed “another dangerous consequence of budget-driven strategy.” Adam Smith, ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, fumed: “Sequestration and the Budget Control Act, which are responsible for slashing the defense budget, exist because the Republican Party held our economy hostage and threatened to default on our loans.”
These sound bites might bewilder Americans unfamiliar with the details of sequestration. Explanation is in order.
To start at the beginning: In 2011 Democrats controlled the White House and Senate, but Republicans promising fiscal restraint had swept the 2010 elections and controlled the House. That set up an inevitable confrontation, which culminated in the summer of 2011.
The federal government was on track to blow through its debt ceiling—the maximum amount of borrowing permitted by law—in early August. The White House needed Congress to raise the limit. Republicans demanded spending cuts in exchange. It is true, then, that the Budget Control Act of 2011 resulted from Republicans’ use of the debt ceiling as a bargaining chip.
WNU editor: The New York Times editorial board is on-board for these cuts .... Military Cutbacks Make Sense (NYT editorial) .... and the NYT usually mirrors what the White House wants the public to know.
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