U.S. troop funds diverted to pet projects
Study finds $2.6 billion taken from guns and ammunition
By Shaun Waterman THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Senators diverted $2.6 billion in funds in a defense spending bill to pet projects largely at the expense of accounts that pay for fuel, ammunition and training for U.S. troops, including those fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, according to an analysis.
Among the 778 such projects, known as earmarks, packed into the bill: $25 million for a new World War II museum at the University of New Orleans and $20 million to launch an educational institute named after the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat.
While earmarks are hardly new in Washington, "in 30 years on Capitol Hill, I never saw Congress mangle the defense budget as badly as this year," said Winslow Wheeler, a former Senate staffer who worked on defense funding and oversight for both Republicans and Democrats. He is now a senior fellow at the Center for Defense Information, an independent research organization.
Sen. Tom Coburn, Oklahoma Republican, called the transfer of funds from Pentagon operations and maintenance "a disgrace."
"The Senate is putting favorable headlines back home above our men and women fighting on the front lines," he said in a statement.
Mr. Wheeler, who conducted the study, compared the Obama administration's requests for funds with the $636 billion spending bill that the Senate passed. He discovered that senators added $2.6 billion in pet projects while spending $4 billion less than the administration requested for fiscal 2010, which began Oct. 1.
Mr. Wheeler said that senators took most of the cash for the projects from the "operations and maintenance" or O&M accounts.
"These are the accounts that pay for troop training, repairs, spares and supplies for vehicles, weapons, ships and planes, food and fuel," Mr. Wheeler said.
Raiding those accounts to fund big-ticket projects the military does not want, but that benefit senators' home states or campaign contributors, amounts to "rancid gluttony," he said.
The administration's budget requested $156 billion for the regular O&M account and $81 billion for O&M for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The bill passed by the Senate cut $2.4 billion from the regular account and $655 million from the war O&M fund.
Senate appropriators insisted that the O&M accounts, despite the cuts, do not shortchange the troops.
"The operation and maintenance title is fully funded," Appropriations Committee Chairman Daniel K. Inouye, Hawaii Democrat, said during the debate on the bill. "There is no shortage. ... The committee is deeply concerned that the critical operational needs of our soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines are met with the finest equipment available."
Money for the Kennedy Institute was inserted by Mr. Inouye and Sen. John Kerry, Massachusetts Democrat. Sen. Mary L. Landrieu, Louisiana Democrat, and Sen. David Vitter, Louisiana Republican, sought the funding for the World War II museum.
Whitney Smith, a spokesman for Mr. Kerry, said the earmark was "a worthy investment."
"Sen. Kennedy served on the Armed Services Committee for 27 years, where he fought to deliver top-of-the-line body armor and armored Humvees to protect our troops and save lives. Educating Americans about these battles is a core mission for the Edward M. Kennedy Institute, which showcases one senator's ability to make a difference," Mr. Smith wrote in an e-mail. "This funding will help the Edward M. Kennedy Institute become one the nation's pre-eminent civic educational institutions, and Sen. Kerry is proud to have worked with Chairman Inouye to make it possible."
Mrs. Landrieu said she was "proud to fight" for money for the World War II museum, which is not just a "monument to the brave men and women who served during World War II," but also "a constant reminder to future generations about the tremendous sacrifice of millions of Americans." She added that the earmarked funds "will help to increase tourism to New Orleans."
Beyond those two earmarks, the largest in the Senate bill are:
- $20 million for Humvee maintenance at an Army National Guard installation in Maine, sponsored by Sens. Susan Collins and Olympia J. Snowe, Maine Republicans. The senators said cuts in the maintenance program proposed by the administration would result in the "layoff of 175 employees in a region already suffering" from the recession.
- $20 million for the Maui Space Surveillance System in Hawaii, requested by Mr. Inouye.
- $25 million inserted by Mr. Inouye for the Hawaii Federal Health Care Network. Mr. Inouye's Web site says the health care program "supports applied research, development and deployment of technology to improve access and the quality of care to service members, military families and impacted communities."
Laura Peterson, of Taxpayers for Common Sense, a nonpartisan spending watchdog, told The Washington Times, "Earmarks like these take money away from other defense programs that the Defense Department actually wants. While military health care is certainly a worthwhile venture, it's hard to see how a program located in Hawaii that openly favors Hawaii-based industries guarantees [the Department of Defense] the best value for such an exorbitant price tag."
Mr. Inouye had a total of 35 earmarks worth more than $206 million in the final bill, and the ranking Republican on the committee, Sen. Thad Cochran of Mississippi, sponsored 48 worth $216 million.
Mr. Cochran defended earmarking as part of Congress' responsibility to direct government spending.
"I am not ready to cede the power of the purse to any administration," he told The Times in an e-mail. "It is vested by the Constitution in the Congress." He added that appropriators had "reviewed the budget request very carefully, conducted public hearings and reported the appropriation bills that the committee thinks will serve the public interest."
In addition to the $2.6 billion in earmarks, the bill includes $2.5 billion for 10 Boeing C-17 cargo planes that the military says it does not need, and $1.7 billion for an extra DDG-51 destroyer not requested in the Pentagon's budget proposal.
Mr. Coburn mounted a rear-guard action on the Senate floor to try to restore some of the money to its original purpose. One proposed amendment restored $100 million to the accounts by correcting the economic projections used in the bill to estimate future costs. That passed, but other amendments to prevent the use of O&M money to fund earmarks were soundly defeated.
Mr. Wheeler said senators had raided O&M accounts to pay for narrowly targeted projects in every budget since 2002, with dire results for troops on the front lines.
"Air Force and Navy combat pilots training to deploy are getting about half of the flying hours they got at the end of the Vietnam War," he wrote in his analysis. "Army tank crews get less in tank training today than they did during the low-readiness Clinton years."
Mr. Wheeler told The Times that the figures were drawn from the Pentagon's budget justification.
Mr. Coburn said in May that the Navy had been forced to curtail at-sea training and flying because of a shortfall in 2009 O&M funds.
The White House Office of Management and Budget has called on lawmakers to reverse the cuts.
"These reductions would hurt force readiness and increase stress on military people and equipment," the agency said.
The House approved its version of the bill in July. Ms. Peterson said that lawmakers still could restore the funding in the conference that reconciles the two versions of the bill.
The conference "presents a final opportunity for Congress to take their hands out of the cookie jar and put some dough where it's really needed - protecting our fighting men and women," she said.
http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/15/troop-funds-diverted-to-pet-...
Missoni
Selected
Quai D'Orsay
Hmmmm, is this how Obama plans on ending the wars? Typically liberal. Clinton did the sme thing in the 90's, which got us into the mess we are now in.
1Yep, "disgrace" sums this one up nicely!
2CALL YOUR REPRESENTIVE AND BOTH YOUR SENATORS EVERY DAY TO COMPLAIN ABOUT THIS TRAVESTY, AND EXPRESS YOUR OPPOSITION TO THE HEALT CARE REFORM BILLS TRAVELING THROUGH CONGRESS.
Make those calls EVERY DAY. I saw an interview of a House Representative, and she said that Senate and House Representatives get so few phone calls, that they really pay attention to those calls. She said they should be made every day from now through Christmas when she expects the votes on the final bill will take place, that is the only way there is a chance of stopping the health care travesty of a bill.
I REPEAT EVERY DAY. Make it part of your morning activity, like brushing your teeth.
3Thankyou for this information Grandpa!
4I love when people spend our tax dollars to make themselves feel big and important. When our economy is in the toilet they keep finding cash to waste.
5This idea of calling both our Senators, and Representative I think should be shared by everyone on our mailing lists, this could become as big or bigger then the tea parties, and certainly a lot easier.
6One of the moms from my daughter's elementary has a sign posted in her front yard. Basically, it asks Obama why he gave $86,000,000 to the Natl Endowment of the Arts while he cut the funding for our troops. Lisa has soldiers she has adopted and they have asked her to send them basics like blankets, sheets, toilet paper etc because those items are not longer provided to them. These are our soldiers fighting a war, and our government won't give them blankets.
Grandpa - it's ironic that you saw an interview where someone said the reps get so few calls. They never answer mine. I've gotten voice mail, with a message saying the mail box is full, more times than I can tell you.
7In my post here: http://thecouch.tressugar.com/5642842
There is a link at the bottom of the picture which will take you to a website that lists WHERE you can go on OCT 17th to stand together all across our nation to send our president this message.
Together our voices are HUGE and LOUD. SOmething Obama will not be able to ignore.
8Grandpa, I respect your right to have and express your own political opinions, however I don't share them.
9honey, if everyone shared my views the discussion would be moot.
1017th...I will be in SanDiego holding a big sign at the local media outlet......Let's hope other people stand up and be heard.
11Don't call thier Washington DC telephone, get their local office, every one of them has an operation in their own electoral district to deal with local constituents.
12i have blogged a video on FashionQueen's site - http://the-planet-that-we-live-on.fitsugar.com/5627796 what she said - i share - totally - maybe i am too "pink-thinking" - but we will not get anywhere - i am just reading a book which contains war as well - a biography - and it hurts me deeply because all wars - will bring us back to who we are - our own inner self conflicts - there is no solution there - not even a trace - because are all make mistakes (that is what my daughter said when she was 2 years old) and i add: we are all one - we are all humans...
13*because all make * sorry
14What a mess.
15Grandpa...thanks for indulging me here to add the link above in comment #8. When there is a "call to action" it is great to know that people can take action in many ways.
As an update...we stood outside the news station Saturday with signs and so forth and the media ignored us. For me, that just means we have to become a bit more aggressive or louder.
It also makes me angry to think that perhaps our leaders really do not care to listen and have the media on their side.
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