So how are the Democrats different from Bush
Republicans?

Experts Expect Democrats to Increase Military Spending


by Aaron Glantz
Democratic majorities in both houses of Congress are
likely to drive U.S. military budgets even higher in
2007, experts say.

This year's Pentagon budget is $436 billion. That
amount does not include more than $140 billion that's
being spent this year alone on the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan.

"If you think a new wind is blowing in Washington in
terms of security issues because the Democrats are
going to take over Congress, you probably have another
think coming," Christopher Hellman of the Washington,
D.C.-based Center for Arms Control and
Nonproliferation told OneWorld.

Hellman said that because Democrats are afraid to
appear weak on national security, they are likely to
continue funding Cold War weapons systems like the
F-22 fighter plane, which was designed to address
projected Soviet capabilities that no longer exist.

This year, the Pentagon requested no F-22 fighters,
but Congress added $1.4 billion to purchase 20 of the
aircraft.

The House of Representatives passed the annual defense
authorization bill 396-31, with only 30 Democrats
voting against it. The same bill passed 96-0 in the
Senate.

"The issue is jobs, pure and simple," Hellman said.
"The F-22, as its builders will proudly tell you,
represents 1,000 corporations in 42 states around the
country. That represents a huge number of jobs."

Democrats also have specific areas where they want to
expand military spending after they assume
congressional leadership positions in January.

"America needs a bigger and better military," reads an
October report by Will Marshall of the Progressive
Policy Institute, the policy arm of the centrist
Democratic Leadership Council, which counts Senators
Hillary Clinton (D-N.Y.) and Evan Bayh (D-Ind.) among
its members.

"Escalating conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan have
stretched the all-volunteer force to the breaking
point," the report says. "Democrats should step
forward with a plan to repair the damage, by adding
more troops, replenishing depleted stocks of
equipment, and reorganizing the force around the new
missions of unconventional warfare, counterinsurgency,
and civil reconstruction."

William Hartung, an arms control expert at the New
York-based World Policy Institute, believes the
Democrats will most closely adhere to a March 2006
plan called "Real Security," which has been endorsed
by both the incoming Speaker of the House, Nancy
Pelosi (D-Calif.), and incoming Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid (D-Nev.).

That plan stresses energy efficiency and the use of
alternative fuels as well as securing "loose nuclear
materials that terrorists could use to build nuclear
weapons." Hartung likes those promises but is unhappy
the Democrats appear unwilling to stop production of
Cold War weapons, reduce the size of America's
10,000-warhead-strong nuclear arsenal, or scrap
development of the Pentagon's still unworkable missile
defense system, which Hartung says has consumed over
$130 billion of taxpayer money since Ronald Reagan's
1983 "Star Wars" speech.

Col. Dan Smith (ret.) of the Friends Committee on
National Legislation cautions that military spending
is rising so fast that it threatens to overwhelm every
other aspect of American government.

In addition to the Pentagon's $436 billion regular
budget and the $140 billion spent on wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, Smith writes on his blog, "The Quakers'
Colonel," taxpayers will be coughing up $11 billion
authorized in prior years to cover the costs of
retiree health costs. Military construction and
"quality of life" issues for the current forces have
grown to $59.8 billion, he says. Military nuclear
weapons programs that are funded in the Department of
Energy budget add $17 billion more.

In addition, Smith says, "the nation is still paying
for past wars. The Veterans Administration is slated
to receive $76 billion. The interest on the money
borrowed to finance past wars is conservatively
estimated at $169.4 billion."

None of that even counts money spent on the Department
of Homeland Security.

Putting it all together, according to Smith, the 2007
costs for past, current, and future wars comes to more
than $900 billion – "within hailing distance of the $1
trillion mark."

This type of spending concerns the World Policy
Institute's William Hartung, too. "I would like to see
bolder Democratic positions," he says, "particularly
on the war in Iraq and using the power of the purse to
move towards withdrawal from Iraq [and] cutting
unnecessary military spending."

"But despite that, there will be hearings and some
accountability," he adds. "At least the terrain on
which the debate will take place will be different.

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