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Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: laura_bush who wrote (4700)3/1/2004 8:56:48 PM
From: PartyTime  Respond to of 173976
 
I hate to interrupt this Lazarus-generated debate, but have I posted this yet?

Defense Budget Has Skewed Priorities, Says New Report
Jim Lobe
OneWorld US
01 March 2004

WASHINGTON, D.C. Mar 1 (OneWorld) -- The steep increases in U.S. defense budgets under President George W. Bush have largely failed to strengthen the nation's security since the 9/11 attacks, and the proposed $230 billion fiscal year 2005 budget is no exception, according to a task force of nine national-security experts.

In a new report released Monday, the task force charges that some of the most expensive items in the budget have little or nothing to do with the threats the United States confronts in the world today.

"Currently we are wasting large sums on the wrong forces for the wrong occasions," the report concludes. "It is a mistake to believe that increasing the Pentagon budget alone will guarantee our safety."

The task force calls for a more integrated approach to determining defense priorities that includes non-military--such as economic assistance and peacekeeping--as well as strictly military programs.

The report, "A Unified Security Budget for the United States," concludes that some $51 billion dollars of the proposed 2005 budget could be saved by reallocating funding within military accounts, and the savings could be used on non-military initiatives that could substantially boost overall security.

"Cutting the Comanche (helicopter) program was a good start," said Marcus Corbin, a senior analyst at the Center for Defense Information (CDI), citing one weapon which the Bush administration has already said it will cut from the budget.

"But our report identifies ten other programs, including the F-22 fighter and DDX destroyer, that could be safely cut or reconfigured to free up resources for other neglected security priorities, such as diplomatic operations, weapons of mass destruction (WMD) nonproliferation, and port container inspection," he said.

The 23-page report, co-sponsored by CDI, the Project for Defense Alternatives, the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, and Foreign Policy in Focus, among others, comes amid growing public concern over buildup of unprecedented fiscal deficits and the impact of the rapidly rising defense budget.

From 2000 to 2004, the Pentagon's budget has increased by more than 50 percent, making it comparable to the world's next 25 biggest military spenders combined, according to the Center for Arms Control. Moreover, the 2005 proposal does not include expenditures for military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, where the Pentagon is spending nearly $70 billion this year alone.

With Federal Reserve Chairman warning recently that future Social Security benefits may have to be cut, many lawmakers, including Republicans, are insisting that no program should be immune from reductions. In mid-February, House Speaker Dennis Hastert himself declared all parts of the budget "on the table" for cuts, including the military--a statement that apparently contributed to the Pentagon's decision to abruptly cancel the Army's long-running Comanche helicopter program.

In that light, the task force, which also included defense experts at Citizens for Global Solutions, the Center for American Progress, the Friends Committee on National Legislation, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, called for a major reassessment of other expensive weapons systems whose usefulness in the 'war on terrorism' and other likely security challenges is highly questionable.

The nature of today's threats, according to the report, should, among other things, permit the Pentagon to reduce the pace of investment in the next generation of conventional weapons, such as fighters, helicopters, ships, submarines, and tanks, where the U.S. already enjoys a substantial technological edge over any conceivable adversary. Most of these weapons were designed for war against the Soviet Union.

In addition, the report calls for stopping deployment of the national missile defense (NMD) system until the technology is proven. "So far, despite spending $75 billion, we have not found any that works, and we cannot plan our security around doing so," according to the report, which notes that NMD is the single biggest item in the 2005 defense budget.

The report also calls for reducing the U.S. strategic nuclear arsenal, closing unnecessary military bases, and overhauling the Pentagon's financial management operations.

If these steps are taken, as much as $56 billion could be saved in 2005 alone, according to the report.

Some of those savings should be used for other military priorities, from buying improved flak jackets and body armor for U.S. troops in hostile or combat environments to realigning U.S. forces to better prepare them for likely missions, including counter-terrorism, peacekeeping, and stability and reconstruction operations, which are particularly relevant to U.S. efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq. The report suggests that such efforts could cost around $5 billion annually.

But the administration and Congress also need urgently to adopt a more comprehensive approach to security and fighting terrorism, according to the report.

"Despite the administration's promises of a comprehensive approach to fighting terrorism, its budget concentrates seven times as many resources on the military as on all non-military security tools combined, including homeland security," according to Miriam Pemberton, peace and security editor at Foreign Policy in Focus.

In particular, the report calls for reallocating some $6 billion to strengthen key non-military programs, including diplomacy, international communication, nonproliferation programs, such as the Nunn-Lugar initiative to help fund disarmament in Russia and find alternative employment for its weapons and nuclear scientists, and support for international peace and stability operations of the kind that has been working in Afghanistan and is now being put together in Haiti.

In addition, the administration and Congress should consider sharply increasing development assistance for poor nations by as much as $10 billion a year in order to address much of the hopelessness and despair that can breed terrorism over time, particularly, in so-called "failed states."

The report notes that Bush himself spoke eloquently on the link between development assistance and security at an international conference in Mexico in 2002 but has subsequently failed to push Congress into appropriating the funds.

Finally, the report calls for increases in homeland security funding similar to those recommended by a 2003 Council on Foreign Relations Task Force chaired by former Sen. Warren Rudman. More money for emergency first-responders, including local police and fire departments, and port security, should both be treated urgently, according to the report.

oneworld.net



To: laura_bush who wrote (4700)3/1/2004 9:14:22 PM
From: Lazarus_Long  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 173976
 
SURE, "laura", anything for you. I'm just waiting to hear you actually DENY the conclusion herein:
Message 19332663

Keep in mind, though, there is some REALLY good evidence that's not in there. I couldn't get permission from the other person involved to include it. Your denial might piss them off enough to change their minds, though.

Oh. I also have the text of the post that got you terminated. But I need permission for that one too. That, unfortunately, is rather iffy. It was a REALLY GOOD post.

If you like vulgarity.



To: laura_bush who wrote (4700)3/1/2004 9:31:45 PM
From: PartyTime  Respond to of 173976
 
Last Update: Monday, March 1, 2004. 5:53pm (AEDT)
Venezuela's Chavez threatens US oil supplies

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has told some 60,000 cheering supporters he would block US access to Venezuela's oil resources if Washington moves against his government.

In a three-hour anti-American speech that singled out US President George W Bush as an illegitimate leader, twice elected Mr Chavez said "if Mr Bush is possessed with the madness of trying to blockade Venezuela, or worse for them, to invade Venezuela in response to the desperate song of his lackeys... sadly not a drop of petroleum will come to them from Venezuela."

Mr Chavez has long accused Washington of backing the opposition, which has tried to oust Chavez twice, once in a nationwide, two-month-long business shutdown that ended last year and in an aborted 2002 coup.

The US State Department routinely dismisses the president's accusations.

The United States is keenly interested in Venezuela, its fourth-largest oil supplier and the only Latin American member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.

The US was instrumental in negotiating the resignation of Haiti president Jean Bertrand Aristide as an armed rebellion engulfed the Caribbean nation.

"Venezuela is not Haiti and Chavez is not Aristide," Mr Chavez said.

The Venezuelan leader's comments came as fresh violence broke out on the streets of the capital, where National Guard troops clashed with opposition protesters pressing for a vote to end his five-year rule.

"We call on the country to continue with peaceful resistance," opposition leader Enrique Mendoza said.

"This fight will last as long as necessary."

The business and middle-class dominated opposition oppose Mr Chavez's self-styled revolution that is directing state oil revenues into education, health and improving the lives of the poor.

The opposition claims he is slowly turning Venezuela into a Cuban-style communist state.

Mr Chavez spoke a day before Venezuela's election council was due to release its preliminary judgment on opposition petitions for a recall referendum on his government.

"In the interests of preserving and maintaining peace in the country, we have decided to give the results of the decisions for the presidential recall referendum tomorrow," electoral council executive Jorge Rodriguez said Sunday.

Mr Rodriguez said the council had postponed announcing preliminary results because it was checking the authenticity of petition signatures collected by Chavez opponents calling for a referendum.

Venezuela's opposition leaders say they collected 3.4 million signatures seeking the recall referendum.

The constitution requires a minimum of 2.4 million valid signatures.

The government says fraud was widespread in collecting
the petitions.

Venezuela's constitution calls for a vote on a new president within 30 days if Mr Chavez is ousted in a referendum.

Mr Chavez, whose term ends in 2006, has agreed to abide by the results of the vote.

-- AFP/Reuters

abc.net.au