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US budget outline calls for huge Pentagon increase, cuts to State
By Thomas WATKINS, and Dave CLARK
Washington (AFP) Feb 12, 2018

Pentagon requests $74B budget increase for 2019
Washington (UPI) Feb 12, 2018 - Senior Pentagon officials will be asking Congress for an increase of nearly $74 billion in defense spending next year as the military looks to grow its capabilities, as well as shifts its focus to nation states instead of terrorism.

On Monday, Defense Department Comptroller David L. Norquist along with Army Lt. Gen. Anthony R. Ierardi, the Joint Staff's director of force structure, resources and assessment, unveiled the Pentagon's proposed budget for fiscal year 2019.

If approved, the proposed fiscal year 2019 budget would be greater than the current fiscal year budget, passed on Friday and valued at more than $700 billion -- surpassing the United States' primary defense competitors, China and Russia.

"Great power competition, not terrorism, has emerged as the central challenge to U.S. security and prosperity," Norquist said. "It is increasingly apparent that China and Russia want to shape a world consistent with their authoritarian values, and in the process, replace the free and open order that has enabled global security and prosperity since World War II."

The proposed national defense budget for fiscal year 2019 -- beginning on Oct. 1 -- is $716 billion, although this figure also includes Department of Energy nuclear programs. The budget proposal is significantly larger than the Pentagon's 2018 request for $617 billion.

For military spending, the Pentagon would receive $686 billion, with $617 billion allocated to the Base Budget, and another $69 billion going to the Pentagon's Overseas Contingency Operations, or OCO, which funds wars and overseas operations. OCO funds are not subject to sequestration and are not part of the official Defense Department budget.

OCO funds had been steadily declining since 2009 as President Barack Obama committed to scaling back forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, but have started to rise again since President Donald Trump took office.

Defense Secretary James Mattis lauded the proposed budget saying it is needed to reshape and improve the military's lackluster combat readiness while shifting its focus away from terrorism.

The surge in OCO and Base Budget funding aligns with Trump's new national security strategy to prioritize strategic competition with China and Russia, along with deterring North Korea's nuclear ambitions, over counterterrorism efforts.

The fiscal year 2019 budget seeks to procure 10 new naval warships, along with growing the Air Force from 55 combat squadrons to 58 by fiscal year 2024.

While the Pentagon is looking to procure additional aircraft, ships, ballistic missiles, tanks and satellites, a large portion of spending is also earmarked for vague "mission support activities" at a cost of $66.8 billion -- an increase of more than $16.9 billion from the current fiscal year.

The budget calls for an increase in troop strength of 25,900. The current manpower of the armed forces stands at more than 1.34 million as of December 2017.

"This allows us to fill in units and provide key skills related to recruiting pilots, maintainers and cybersecurity experts," Norquist said. "It also allows us to add units related to reinforcing the National Defense Strategy."

The Pentagon on Monday unveiled a mammoth budget proposal for fiscal 2019 that would see a more than 10 percent boost in spending and add thousands more troops across the US military services.

The $686 billion spending plan -- up from $612 billion in 2018 -- is framed in the context of the Pentagon's new national defense strategy, and comes in stark contrast to the State Department's budget, which calls for steep cuts in spending on aid and diplomacy.

Pentagon chief Jim Mattis has warned of a new "Great Power" competition with Russia and China and wants to increase the size of the military, introduce new ships and weapons, and improve readiness -- all while operating across multiple theaters in Europe, the Middle East and Asia.

"It is increasingly apparent that China and Russia want to shape a world consistent with their authoritarian values and, in the process, replace the free and open order that has enabled global security and prosperity since World War II," Pentagon comptroller David Norquist told reporters.

"If unaddressed, the eroding US military advantage versus China and Russia could undermine our ability to deter aggression and coercion in key strategic regions."

Though the US spends more money on defense than the next eight militaries combined, Norquist said the 2019 budget request merely would put Pentagon spending back on track to where it would have been had the administration of Barack Obama not implemented strict spending caps.

The budget from President Donald Trump's administration calls for an additional 25,900 troops, as well as major investments in aircraft, ships, ground systems and missile defense.

- Skinny at State -

The State Department, meanwhile, published its own budget proposal for 2019 calling for deep cuts, though Congress has already dismissed the idea as a non-starter.

In the case of the State Department and USAID, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson requested $37.8 billion, up only slightly from the $37.6 billion 2018 request.

To this was added an extra $1.5 billion, in a separate addendum to reflect higher caps allowed under a recent Congressional budget deal, bringing the total request to $39.3 billion.

In 2017, the last year of the previous US administration, the department spent $55.6 billion, so if Congress -- which is working on a joint budget for 2018 and 2019 -- had approved the 2018 request, it would have meant a more than 30 percent cut.

Instead, lawmakers from both sides of the aisle argued that such a draconian reduction would be dangerous, with US diplomats working on a number of international crises.

Tillerson has commissioned a "re-design" of the State Department, despite resistance from career staff, and he is struggling to fill key senior posts.

When last year's authorization request was filed, Senator Bob Corker, the Republican chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, said even studying it would be a "waste of time."

Corker's colleague Senator Lindsey Graham said the 2018 plan was "dead on arrival," adding: "This budget destroys soft power, it puts our diplomats at risk and it's going nowhere."

Although the top line figure remains around the same as the previous suggestion, Tillerson's latest plan does move some funding around to take into account new US priorities.

The budget line for "embassy security, construction and maintenance," for example, increases from $1.42 billion in the 2018 plan to $1.66 billion in the 2019 draft.

This comes as the White House pushes to accelerate implementation of its controversial decision to re-locate the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.

wat-dc/sst

EXXONMOBIL


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MILPLEX
Airbus to pay 81 mn euros to end German corruption probe
Frankfurt Am Main (AFP) Feb 9, 2018
European aircraft manufacturer Airbus on Friday said it had agreed to pay a fine of 81.25 million euros ($99 million) to end a German corruption probe into the 2003 sale of Eurofighter jets to Austria. Prosecutors in Munich said in a statement that their investigation did not find evidence of bribery to secure the lucrative contract. But they said Airbus management had failed in its supervisory duty by allowing employees to make multi-million-euro payments linked to the deal for "unclear purpose ... read more

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