03-09-2009, 04:52
|
#1
|
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: 18 yrs upstate NY, 30 yrs South Florida, 20 yrs Conch Republic, now chasing G-Kids in NOVA & UK
Posts: 11,901
|
Who's Your Sugar Daddy???
Interesting article.
Normally you think the right-wing war-mongering Republicans are the ones
pushing military spending..
Not so,, say the Washington Post,,
Harry Reid, John Kerry, Jim Webb, Herb Kohl, Pat Leahy, John Murtha, Chris
Dodd, Babs Boxer, Dianne Feinstein, and Ted Kennedy are right out there
pushing spending to the max.. <<< All Democrats!!!!!!
Even if the Pentagon doesn't want what they are pushing???
Maybe it's because Bush's old buddy Sect. Gates has hypnotized all the
Democrats in Congress & the Senate and turned them into Hawks?? and they are looking for Pork...
Worth a read..
Quote:
Pentagon's Unwanted Projects in Earmarks, Democrats Press Backyard Spending, By R. Jeffrey Smith and Ellen Nakashima, Washington Post Staff Writers, Sunday, March 8, 2009; Page A01
When President Obama promised Wednesday to attack defense spending that he considers wasteful and inefficient, he opened a fight with key lawmakers from his own party.
It was Democrats who stuffed an estimated $524 million in defense earmarks
that the Pentagon did not request into the 2008 appropriations bill, about
$220 million more than Republicans did, according to an independent
estimate. Of the 44 senators who implored Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates
in January to build more F-22 Raptors -- a fighter conceived during the Cold
War that senior Pentagon officials say is not suited to probable
21st-century conflicts -- most were Democrats.
And last July, when the Navy's top brass decided to end production of their
newest class of destroyers -- in response to 15 classified intelligence
reports highlighting their vulnerability to a range of foreign missiles --
seven Democratic senators quickly joined four Republicans to demand a
reversal. They threatened to cut all funding for surface combat ships in
2009.
Within a month, Gates and the Navy reversed course and endorsed production
of a third DDG-1000 destroyer, at a cost of $2.7 billion.
"Too many contractors have been allowed to get away with delay after delay
in developing unproven weapon systems," Obama said, attributing $295 billion
in cost overruns to "influence peddling" and "a lack of oversight" that
produces weapons meant "to make a defense contractor rich" instead of
securing the nation.
He did not mention that since 2006, Democratic lawmakers have presided over
a 10 percent increase in the Pentagon's budget -- it now amounts to 46
percent of the government's total discretionary spending -- and have also
voted repeatedly to keep funding weapons systems that have had hundreds of
billions of dollars in cost overruns.
Although Obama complimented one Democratic and one Republican senator who
last month proposed revisions, senior Pentagon officials predict that
gaining support on Capitol Hill for ending procurement abuses will be an
uphill battle.
"There is equal blame to go around," a senior defense official said Friday,
speaking on the condition of anonymity because of political sensitivities.
"It's bipartisan. It's all about political expediency."
He added that Gates, who has lately been urging both the Pentagon and
Congress to set aside parochial interests in setting budget priorities, is
"not naive" -- he expects only to improve the process, not to perfect it.
Gates is "willing to use the capital he has built up" if necessary, the
official said.
But a spokesman for Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) defended
the Democrats' record on defense spending. "This kind of spending can play
an important role in our ongoing effort to improve critical national defense
programs," Jim Manley said.
Independent experts say the obstacles to radical change in defense
procurement are all familiar: Close ties between contractors and the
military services help ensure that waste and inefficiency are unpunished.
Lawmakers seeking home-state jobs and a steady flow of campaign
contributions have every incentive to keep funding programs that Pentagon
officials say they do not need, particularly in an economic downturn.
"A lot of these weapon systems that are big-ticket items now have no
purpose," said William Hartung, director of the Arms and Security Initiative
at the New America Foundation, a Washington think tank. "The Taliban doesn't
have an air force. China and Russia are at least a generation behind us. So
at a time when we're talking about developing unmanned aerial vehicles and
want to increase our special forces, we ought to be making a clean sweep of
these systems that were built during the Cold War."
The problem, he added, is that the defense industry, now dominated by a
handful of large firms with offices or subcontractors in key congressional
districts, plays the political game extremely well.
Tens of thousands of jobs directly related to the F-22, for example, are
spread among 44 states, a point emphasized in a letter of support for the
program signed by 194 House members on Jan. 21. The fighter was conceived in
the mid-1980s, and even though Gates said last year its production should
end at a fleet of 183, a bipartisan group of lawmakers appropriated $523
million as a down payment on parts to build 20 more in 2010.
|
__________________
Go raibh tú leathuair ar Neamh sula mbeadh a fhios ag an diabhal go bhfuil tú marbh
"May you be a half hour in heaven before the devil knows you’re dead"
|
|
JJ_BPK is offline
|
|
03-09-2009, 04:55
|
#2
|
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: 18 yrs upstate NY, 30 yrs South Florida, 20 yrs Conch Republic, now chasing G-Kids in NOVA & UK
Posts: 11,901
|
Part # 2
continued from Pg 1..
Quote:
"The F-22 decision is an important national security decision with
ramifications for the next 30 years," said Jeff Adams, a spokesman for
Bethesda-based Lockheed Martin, its manufacturer, noting that the Air Force
still says it needs more planes.
Each aircraft now costs about $145 million, and senior defense officials
note that the plane has not been used in the Iraq or Afghanistan wars.
Although the F-22 is built as an air-superiority fighter, the U.S. military
has not faced a serious dogfight threat since the Vietnam War, one of the
officials said. The signatories to the Jan. 16 Senate letter supporting the
additional planes included Vice President Biden, then still a Democratic
senator from Delaware, Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), Patty Murray
(D-Wash.), Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), Barbara A. Mikulski (D-Md.),
Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.).
"The thing about weapons and bases is they are backyard issues for members
of Congress," said Gordon Adams, a professor at American University who
formerly served as associate director for national security and
international affairs for the Office of Management and Budget. "It's not
like foreign aid. It's about contracts in my district, contributors to my
election campaign, things that directly affect my prospects of staying in
office and my ability to say to my constituents, 'I got one for you!' That's
the heart of a weapons decision."
Since Democrats took control of the defense appropriations process in 2006,
the defense industry has shifted gears: During the 2008 election cycle, more
than half of the industry's estimated campaign donations of $25.4 million
went to Democrats, marking the first time in 14 years the party had come out
on top, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonprofit group
that monitors campaign spending.
The impact of the shift was pronounced in the two committees that control
military spending in the House, where Democrats collected 63 and 66 percent,
respectively, of all defense industry funds given to committee members in
that cycle. The champion was defense appropriations subcommittee Chairman
John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), who collected $743,275 of the industry's money;
second place was held by Armed Services Committee Chairman Ike Skelton
(D-Mo.), who collected $268,799, according to the center's tally.
Murtha added more than $100 million in earmarks to the fiscal 2008 defense
bill, nearly a fifth of the total inserted by all Democrats, according to
the watchdog group Taxpayers for Common Sense. Every earmark reflects a
project that the Pentagon did not seek in its budget request, and some of
Murtha's earmarks benefited clients of a lobbying firm called PMA Group, now
under FBI investigation for possible violations of federal election law. PMA
is run by a former Murtha aide, and some of its clients were donors to
Murtha campaigns.
"We receive thousands of requests for funding each year, all of which are
fully vetted and approved by the committee and the House," said Murtha
spokesman Matthew Mazonkey. "In the end, we recommend funding only those
programs that have the most value and merit to the Defense Department."
Some, he added, have produced innovations that brought eventual cost
savings.
Murtha also joined other Democrats -- including Boxer -- in adding billions
of dollars to the war budget for 15 Boeing C-17 cargo planes that the
Pentagon did not request. "We have said we have enough" of the C-17s, the
senior defense official said. "But members keep adding them to every
spending bill, every opportunity they can find." Taxpayers for Common Sense
calls the persistent funding "a gift to Boeing." Boeing spokesman Douglas J.
Kennett says that the program's cancellation would cost "over 30,000 jobs
with over 600 aerospace suppliers."
Reid is no match for Murtha, but he still managed to sponsor or co-sponsor
$68 million in unrequested defense earmarks in the 2008 bill, financing the
development of a "truck-deployed explosive containment vehicle," an
"integrated imagery network" for the Nevada National Guard, an Army flatbed
trailer, Nevada anti-drug operations, an Air Force diesel air quality
project, and a propellant agent for "slurry gel" used by the Army.
Three of Reid's Democratic colleagues -- Kennedy, Patrick J. Leahy (Vt.)
and Evan Bayh (Ind.) -- also helped add almost a billion dollars to the
Pentagon budget over the past two years for continued production of an
alternate engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, though the Pentagon said
in 2007 that the engine is unnecessary. The plane is already $55 billion
over its budgeted cost, according to the Government Accountability Office.
The engine is being developed and built by General Electric and Rolls Royce
in Massachusetts, Vermont, Indiana and other states; its production team
says the engine will offer more flexibility for the fighter pilots if it is
installed.
Kennedy also joined Sens. John F. Kerry (Mass.), James Webb (Va.), Herb
Kohl (Wis.) and other Democrats in demanding funding for the third, unwanted
DDG-1000 Navy destroyer. "The world has changed markedly since we began the
march to DDG-1000 in the early 1990s," Adm. Gary Roughead, chief of naval
operations, said in January, explaining why he sought to cancel the ship in
favor of building more of a smaller, cheaper and older alternative vessel.
Intelligence reports have warned that the ship will be unable to fend off
missile threats, including an advanced missile being developed by China and
simple ones already possessed by Hezbollah. As a result, the Navy agreed to
end production of the hard-to-hide 14,000-ton vessels, capping the program
at two ships instead of seven.
A Kennedy aide said of the senators' joint letter to the Pentagon that "we'd
like to think that it played a big role in changing their mind." He
confirmed that Raytheon, which makes the destroyer's electronic components
in Massachusetts, had contacted Kennedy's office about keeping the ship in
production. But, he added, "we don't do Raytheon's bidding."
A Navy spokesman said Friday that the service still considers the DDG-1000
"a ship you don't need".
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...030702216.html
|
__________________
Go raibh tú leathuair ar Neamh sula mbeadh a fhios ag an diabhal go bhfuil tú marbh
"May you be a half hour in heaven before the devil knows you’re dead"
|
|
JJ_BPK is offline
|
|
03-09-2009, 08:16
|
#3
|
|
Quiet Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: NorCal
Posts: 15,370
|
Nothing like a reformed anti-military spending congress-critter with the people's checkbook and a need to look pro-national defense (especially within their own districts/states) in order to gain and hold political power, is there. Polecatus Washingtonium strikes again...and the stench of that fetid political swamp is as strong as ever.
Richard's $.02
__________________
“Sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than a whisky bottle in the hand of (another)… There are just some kind of men who – who’re so busy worrying about the next world they’ve never learned to live in this one, and you can look down the street and see the results.” - To Kill A Mockingbird (Atticus Finch)
“Almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.” - Robert Heinlein
|
|
Richard is offline
|
|
|
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
|
|
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:55.
|
|
|