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Op-Ed:
Fiscal hawks beat war hawks
Debt deal finally hacks away at GOP
sacred cow: Defense budget
By Shikha Dalmia
Thursday,
August 4, 2011
Post-9/11,
the neocon wing of the
Republican Party had made it seem positively gauche to think about
money when
it came to financing wars. But even though the debt-ceiling deal
hammered out
this week won’t do nothin’ to cure Washington’s fiscal incontinence, it
might
just do something for the GOP’s foreign policy incontinence by putting
the
question of defense spending center stage.
The
deal is the equivalent of
administering a vitamin pill to a patient who is in need of radical
surgery.
Republicans claim that they wangled $2.4 trillion in spending cuts for
a $2.4
trillion-increase in the debt ceiling. But this is a total lie. That’s
because
the debt ceiling applies over two years and the spending cuts over 10.
This
means that by 2013, Washington’s spendocrats will have reached the new
limit
and will be back for more.
But
that’s not even the worst of it.
The cuts will be made in two tranches, one tranche of $900 billion now
and then
another one of $1.5 trillion in December. According to the
Congressional Budget
Office, only about 8 percent of the first tranche of cuts will be for
2012 and
2013, with about 36.3 percent, the major portion, slated between
2018-2021. The
second tranche is likely to be similarly backloaded. This means that
the vast
bulk of the cuts won’t even happen until the politicos mandating them
are comfortably
ensconced in their retirement homes. If past is prelude, which it most
assuredly will be without a balanced budget amendment, the debt limit
by then
would have been raised another 10 times before the cuts from this one
have even
been fully implemented. Talk about kicking the can!
The
only silver lining in this sham
deal is that it stops treating defense spending like a sacred cow. To
be sure,
the defense cuts in the first tranche are underwhelming. They cut
security
spending – of which defense is only one part – over 10 years by $350
billion.
The
real action on defense will happen
in the second round of cuts. Defense spending constitutes 64 percent of
the
discretionary budget – and about 20 percent of the overall budget.
There is no
way that the debt commission, which will handle the second round, can
deliver
$1.5 trillion in deficit reductions while holding defense harmless and
avoiding
tax increases. And if its efforts stall, that will trigger automatic
cuts of
$500 billion from the defense – not security – budget over 10 years
(along with
an equal amount from Medicare providers).
By
any reasonable standard, notes
Chris Preble of the Cato Institute, this is meaningful but not
draconian.
Defense spending has doubled over the last decade, thanks to 13
straight years
of increases, a historically unprecedented streak. Even if the maximum
cuts
possible are made, the Pentagon budget will only return to 2007 levels.
That’ll
mean that America’s share of the world’s total defense spending would
still be
40 percent, down from about 50 percent right now.
But
that’s enough to make defense
hawks go ballistic. The Weekly Standard counseled the GOP leadership to
walk
away from the deal because of the cuts. John Bolton, whose mustache
alone could
scare away terrorists, warned that slashing defense spending will
“potentially
point a dagger at the heart of our national security.”
What’s
really bothering neocons is
that for the first time since 9/11, increased defense spending is no
longer an
article of faith. They had managed the remarkable political feat of
reversing
America’s post-Vietnam antipathy towards war, creating a presumption in
favor
of military engagement, despite the country’s strong
non-interventionist
intellectual tradition that harkens back to the founding. (Remember
George
Washington’s warning against foreign entanglements?) They made the idea
of
America playing global cop intellectually respectable again.
But
their open-ended defense agenda is
no longer fiscally sustainable. Indeed, fiscal hawks who want to keep a
lid on
taxes have every reason to question the neocon threat assessment that
has
wildly exaggerated the danger posed by al Qaeda and Islamist
radicalism. With
the end of the Cold War, America should have reaped a peace dividend by
shuttering its bases in Europe and Asia and allowing allies to foot
more of
their own defense bill. Instead, defense spending rose from the
Reagan-era peak
of $574 billion (in 2000 dollars) to $644 billion in order to finance a
never-ending war on terror and the invasion of Afghanistan, Iraq and
now Libya.
The
debt deal will force Democrats to
confront the fact that the country doesn’t have limitless funds to
throw at all
their cherished programs. Having to choose between funding prescription
drugs
for the elderly or vaccinations for children might be wrenching, but it
won’t
pose a fundamental dilemma for them. Republicans, on the other hand,
are
heading for a major existential realignment. They will have to pick
between the
fiscal hawks and defense hawks, two legs of Reagan’s famous
three-legged stool
that putatively prop up conservatism.
There
is a good chance that defense
hawks might be the leg that gets kicked out. This prospect alone is
worth one
cheer for the debt deal.
Read
it at “The Daily.Com” from Reason
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