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- <text id=91TT2266>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: Defense:Much Less Than Meets the Eye
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 21
- DEFENSE
- Much Less Than Meets the Eye
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By slashing the nuclear arms arsenal, Bush triggers a debate
- over whether the military budget is still too big. But even
- drastic cuts would not produce a windfall.
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Michael Duffy and Bruce van
- Voorst/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Stoking a hot debate over the defense budget was
- certainly not George Bush's intention when he announced his bold
- plans for slashing nuclear arms. But his initiative is already
- spurring critics in and out of Congress to ask more insistently
- than ever why the nation needs to spend nearly $300 billion a
- year, and continue to buy some superexpensive high-tech weapons,
- if the worldwide face-off with the Soviet Union is rapidly
- becoming a memory. With Mikhail Gorbachev announcing major cuts
- in the Soviet nuclear arsenal at week's end to match, and
- possibly exceed, the U.S. reductions, and with Democratic
- presidential candidates stepping up their campaigns, the
- questioning is sure to grow in intensity and decibel level.
- </p>
- <p> Some preliminary skirmishing got under way last week when
- a Senate-House conference committee began considering the $291
- billion defense authorization bill for the fiscal year that
- began Oct. 1. It immediately became obvious that Bush's
- initiative had strengthened the hand of House conferees who want
- to cancel the B-2 bomber program after the 15 now on order are
- delivered and to put up only a bit more than half the $5.2
- billion the Administration requested for the Strategic Defense
- Initiative. The Air Force did not help the B-2's cause by
- admitting that in a July flight test the Stealth bomber proved
- to be embarrassingly unstealthy. Fundamentally, the problem is
- that many legislators consider the B-2 and SDI to be anti-Soviet
- systems that are rapidly losing whatever justification they ever
- had. The lawmakers are not buying Pentagon efforts to portray
- both as being useful in a conflict with a country like Iraq.
- </p>
- <p> More important, Democrats are increasingly talking about
- reopening the so-called budget summit agreement of last year.
- Congressional Democrats once regarded the agreement as a
- triumph, because it forced Bush into abandoning his pledge not
- to raise taxes. But they have come to see it instead as an
- albatross that they helped hang around their own necks, because
- it prevents them from slashing military appropriations further
- and using the money to expand domestic social programs. Under
- the agreement, cuts in defense, or any other broad category of
- spending, below the ceilings already established through fiscal
- 1993, can only be used to reduce the budget deficit.
- </p>
- <p> It is far too late for any substantial revision of the
- fiscal 1992 budget. Bush's aides predict that the conference
- committee will as usual split the difference on the B-2 and SDI.
- That would mean ordering a few more bombers and funding a
- modest version of the missile shield somewhere between the House
- figure of $3.5 billion and the Senate's $4.6 billion. As for the
- budget agreement, it has been written into a statute, the Budget
- Enforcement Act of 1990. To make sweeping changes would require
- passage of a new law, and Bush almost certainly would cast a
- veto that his opponents could not override. There is no sign
- that the Democrats are willing now to force such a futile
- showdown.
- </p>
- <p> But both sides are bracing themselves for a knockdown
- battle beginning in January, when Bush presents his budget plans
- for fiscal 1993. Democrats, possibly with some Republican
- support, will make determined attempts to kill weapons systems,
- lower troop levels, and reduce spending below the cuts the
- Administration already plans. They also will look for--and
- maybe invent--loopholes in the Budget Enforcement Act that
- would permit transfer of funds to social programs. For example,
- they might try to redefine as "defense" spending some types of
- environmental outlays. "There will be a major assault on the
- budget agreement," predicts an aide to Secretary of Defense Dick
- Cheney. "Word inside the shop is that if all else remains equal,
- we're in for a budget free fall."
- </p>
- <p> One reason is partisan politics. An attack on Bush for
- devoting far too much time and effort to foreign policy and too
- much money to defense while scandalously neglecting the
- nation's multifarious domestic worries--housing, education,
- drug abuse, racial conflict--is swiftly becoming the dominant
- theme of the Democratic presidential campaign. To make a dent
- in any of these problems, goes the argument, will require a
- major infusion of money, and the defense budget is the best
- place to get the bucks.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the Democrats are heavily overestimating the
- potential savings from such steps as bringing home even more
- troops from Western Europe than the 100,000 the Administration
- contemplates transferring Stateside. Some polls indicate that
- cutting defense may not be quite as popular as the Democrats
- think, either. In a TIME/CNN poll by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman,
- large majorities of those surveyed wanted to bring U.S. troops
- home from Korea (74%) as well as Western Europe (60%). But on
- the broader question of whether the nation should "make
- large-scale cutbacks in defense spending," they said no by 54%
- to 42%. Even so, the idea of switching spending from defense to
- domestic programs is one of the few horses the Democrats have,
- and they intend to ride it for all it is worth--and then some.
- </p>
- <p> Partisanship, though, is far from the whole story. There
- is a genuine need to reshape the U.S. armed forces for a
- post-cold war world, and a perfectly legitimate question as to
- how much spending, how many soldiers and what types of weapons
- are required. After dropping 11.3% in just ended fiscal 1991,
- the Pentagon budget under the Bush Administration's plans would
- go down an average of 3% (after adjustment for inflation) in
- each of the following five years. Outlays would drop from around
- 5% of gross national product now to 3.6%, the lowest figure
- since before World War II; the number of men and women in
- uniform would shrink from 2 million to 1.6 million.
- </p>
- <p> Drastic as these cuts seem, Les Aspin, chairman of the
- House Armed Services Committee and hardly an enemy of the
- Pentagon, argues that they respond only to the dwindling of the
- Soviet menace that had occurred by the beginning of this year,
- after the 1989 anticommunist revolutions in Eastern Europe and
- the subsequent demise of the Warsaw Pact. The plans, says
- Aspin, do not take account of the still more pronounced
- lessening of the threat that has occurred since the failed coup
- in August and the splintering of the Soviet Union that has
- followed.
- </p>
- <p> Such thinking is likely to gain force in the wake of
- Gorbachev's Saturday response to Bush's nuclear initiatives. The
- Soviet President, who telephoned Bush at Camp David to give him
- a 20-minute preview of his proposals, followed the U.S. in
- taking strategic bombers off alert and moving their nuclear
- weapons into warehouses. Gorbachev also followed Bush in
- scrapping tactical nuclear missiles, land based as well as
- naval. In addition, he proposed negotiations to reduce the
- number of remaining strategic weapons by half, while at the same
- time announcing that from now on Soviet mobile missiles would
- be kept stationary. The Soviet leader further announced a
- one-year moratorium on nuclear tests and called on others to
- follow suit.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond that, the Soviets are even more eager than the
- Democratic Party to switch massive resources from the defense
- establishment to the civilian economy. Deputy Defense Minister
- Pavel Grachev told a parliamentary committee last week that the
- armed forces might be cut almost in half, to 2 million to 2.5
- million people, by 1994. His boss, Yevgeni Shaposhnikov, later
- said firm plans call for mustering out only 700,000 of the
- present roughly 4 million. But he added that "further cuts are
- not excluded depending on the military-political situation in
- the world"--presumably meaning, in part, what the U.S. does.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration insists that the dwindling of the
- Soviet threat is being at least partly offset by a rising danger
- of more regional wars like the Persian Gulf conflict, fought
- against countries that are rapidly acquiring tanks, ballistic
- missiles, chemical weapons and other modern arms. Thus, it
- contends, the fairly drastic cuts it already has scheduled are
- the most that can be prudently made. That line might offset the
- Democrats' attack well enough to keep the odds heavily in favor
- of Bush's re-election. But even that will not end the debate--far from it. The serious questions about the size, structure and
- cost of the U.S. armed forces will not be solved during a year
- of heated partisan rhetoric. But they can--and should--be
- debated not only through Election Day but far beyond.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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