Bush to request $439.3B defense budget (AP) Updated: 2006-02-03 17:15
WASHINGTON - US President Bush's 2007 budget seeks a nearly 5 percent
increase in Defense Department spending, to $439.3 billion, with significantly
more money for weapons programs, according to senior Pentagon officials and
documents obtained by The Associated Press.
'It was me,'
President Bush exclaimed Thursday, Feb. 2, 2006, after a 3M Post-it note
that he placed on the front of the podium moments before fell as he
prepared to speak at the Maplewood, Minn., company made famous by the
yellow Post-its. The President joked that the podium should have been
cleaned so the note would stick properly. Bush called for promoting
research and technnology in a competitive world.
[AP] | The budget figures, to be unveiled next
week, come as the Pentagon prepares to release a separate long-range strategy to
reshape the military into a more agile fighting force better able to fight
terrorism, while still preserving its ability to wage large conventional wars.
More than a year in the making and scheduled to be released Friday, the
strategy review represents the broader thinking that guides how the dollars are
spent. It does not call for the elimination of any of the largest weapons
programs, as some had expected.
Instead it proposes cutting some smaller programs such as the E-10
surveillance plane, reducing the size of the Air Force, overhauling the Army
National Guard and increasing the number of special operations forces like the
Green Berets, whose role in the global war on terrorism is rapidly expanding.
The budget, meanwhile, would include $84.2 billion for weapons programs, a
nearly 8 percent increase, including billions of dollars for fighter jets, Navy
ships, helicopters and unmanned aircraft. The total includes a substantial
increase in weapons spending for the Army, which would get $16.8 billion in the
2007 budget, compared with $11 billion this year.
Senior defense officials provided the totals on condition of anonymity
because the defense budget was not being released publicly until Monday. The
figures did not include about $50 billion that Bush administration officials
said Thursday they would request as a down payment for the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan in 2007. The administration said war costs for 2006 would total $120
billion.
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld would not provide any details of the
budget Thursday but called it appropriate.
"We have been able to fund the important things that are needed. It is a
sizable amount of money," Rumsfeld said.
The budget proposal represents the fifth consecutive year that spending on
weapons has increased, after years of cutbacks during the 1990s.
And it gives a more detailed view of the broader themes in the strategy plan,
known as the Quadrennial Defense Review. The themes include how the Pentagon
needs to collaborate better with other government agencies in the war on
terrorism; that the government must forge closer partnerships with other
countries to battle terrorists, and that there must be greater investments in
efforts to gather, process and distribute intelligence.
John Hamre, president of the Center for Strategic and International Studies,
a Washington-based think tank, said he was not troubled by the lack of program
cuts in the Rumsfeld plan.
"It's the common parlance in Washington to measure big decisions by how many
trophies are hung on the wall, how many dead animals are hung on the wall that
you shot and killed," he said. "That's the wrong way to look at this."
Overall, the budget plan would give the Army $111.8 billion, including $42.6
billion for personnel. The Army National Guard would receive about $5.25 billion
for personnel, and the Army Reserves would receive $3.4 billion.
Other programs funded in the budget include:
* $3.3 billion for the Army's key weapons program, the Future Combat System.
* $583 million for nearly 3,100 more heavily armored Humvees.
* Nearly $800 million for 100 Stryker transport vehicles, built by General
Dynamics Land Systems.
* $2.2 billion for the F-22 fighter. Plans are to buy 20 of the
aircraft, built by Maryland-based Lockheed Martin, each year in 2008, 2009 and
2010.
* $2.5 billion for the next Virginia class submarine.
* $360 million in the budget for development of the new CH53K heavy lift
helicopter, built by Connecticut-based Sikorsky Aircraft for the Marine Corps.
* $5.6 billion for programs for military families, including child care and
tuition assistance.
* About $1.8 billion for 81 Army Black Hawk and Navy Hawk helicopters.
* $1.3 billion for five new Joint Strike Fighters.
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