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View Full Version : Trump seeks "Special War Fund" Money




Zippyjuan
02-24-2019, 02:28 PM
https://www.politico.com/story/2019/02/24/trump-defense-congress-pentagon-funding-1188540

More money for defense on top of the $billions more the DOD has already been given.


Trump’s end run on defense spending

President Donald Trump is preparing to ask Congress for yet another increase in defense spending in the coming weeks. But his plan would evade federal budget limits by stashing nearly a quarter of that money in an off-the-books account — and both Democrats and Republicans say it won’t fly in Congress.

The White House plans to stuff as much as $174 billion of its $750 billion request for national defense for the coming fiscal year into a special war fund, according to reports, allowing the administration to maintain its long-sought military buildup without violating a 2011 law aimed at reining in the deficit.

The gimmick is especially striking given that Trump budget chief Mick Mulvaney once fought to limit the very same war account, known as the Overseas Contingency Operations fund.

Lawmakers in both parties object to relying so heavily on what budget hawks have long derided as a Pentagon slush fund. Unless both parties can negotiate a deal to lift the spending caps, it could mean a quick demise for the military's ambitious investment plans, which got a two-year boost last year under a bipartisan deal that raised spending for the military as well as other government agencies.

"It's definitely a non-starter,” House Budget Chairman John Yarmuth (D-Ky.) told POLITICO. “It would be an insult to the process to do that."

"It's ridiculous if that's what they do,” added Rep. Mac Thornberry of Texas, the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee.

Mulvaney, now the acting White House chief of staff, spent years as a leading proponent of reining in the deficit through steep spending cuts after being elected to the House in the tea party wave of 2010. Those efforts to slash the budget ultimately resulted in the 2011 Budget Control Act that mandated the spending caps.

His brand of non-negotiable fiscal conservatism earned him the enmity of many fellow Republicans who were pushing for much bigger defense budgets. And he disdained the Pentagon's separate war budget, which isn't subject to the caps, as a threat to budget accountability.

Even in testimony last year before the House and Senate Budget Committees, Mulvaney stressed the need "to begin the transition away from using OCO as a gimmick to avoid the sequestration caps."

Inside Defense first reported the contours of Trump’s fiscal 2020 defense budget proposal earlier this month. Under the plan, the Pentagon would request $576 billion for its main budget, equal to the spending cap, along with up to $174 billion in spending for the Overseas Contingency Operations fund — for a total of $750 billion.

A senior administration official confirmed the plans to boost the war fund and said the intent is to avoid having to reach another budget deal like last year that would also require boosting domestic programs, something Democrats have insisted in return for beefing up Pentagon coffers.

“We want to move away from … the muscle memory of Capitol Hill right now, which is to do two-year, big caps deals that have a dollar-for-dollar increase for non-defense for every dollar of defense increases," the official explained. "We don't think that we can afford that."

"We're not going to say that this is the best way to budget," the official added, "but that this is the best way in the current moment to budget."

The proposal stands out even in comparison to the Pentagon's and Congress' previous reliance on the war budget to fund unrelated weapons programs and services.

Since the war account is exempt from limits set by the 2011 budget law, it has been a battleground in annual fights over defense spending. Though meant to fund wartime needs and unforeseen national security contingencies — like the wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria — the account has been used to skirt spending caps and fund enduring programs with little connection to U.S. war efforts.

While the vast majority is dedicated to the Defense Department, a portion of the contingency funds have also been allocated over time to the State and Homeland Security Departments.

Should the administration push ahead this year with a super-sized war request, it would expand the special fund to a level not seen in more than a decade. Emergency and contingency spending in the post-9/11 era topped out at $195 billion in fiscal 2008 — near the height of the Iraq War and with a much larger U.S. troop presence in Afghanistan — according to the nonpartisan Congressional Research Service.

The reported $174 billion proposal for fiscal 2020 would more than double the current $69 billion war spending level.

The Pentagon and the White House Office of Management and Budget declined to comment on the specifics of the forthcoming budget proposal, which is expected to be released in mid-March.

Under the budget caps, the base defense budget would face a mandatory cut of more than $70 billion from this year's level.

Lawmakers must either strike another deal to ease the caps, which last through fiscal 2021, find ways to circumvent them, or slash the budget.

But stashing tens of billions of extra defense dollars in the war budget appears to have little chance of getting through Congress. In particular, House Democrats are unlikely to approve a backdoor boost to defense spending without similar increases in funding for domestic programs.

"You don't go off budget to the tune of $174 billion. ... It's playing games with the money,” said Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), the chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, calling a super-sized war account “dead on arrival.”

“We are not going to have a Department of Defense slush fund," Smith added in an interview.


But if Democrats and Republicans can't agree to lift budget caps for both defense and domestic programs, the Pentagon and other federal agencies face the kind of steep automatic spending cuts in October that military brass and many lawmakers want to avoid at all costs.

More at link.

oyarde
02-24-2019, 02:44 PM
I too would like access to the overseas contingency operations fund . I will use it domestically though for peaceful purposes . Beer , gold , AR 15s etc

RonZeplin
02-24-2019, 03:28 PM
More funds for the Trumpanista Gorillas in Venezuela.

Pauls' Revere
02-24-2019, 03:36 PM
Keeping the government shut down would probably be cheaper.

nikcers
02-24-2019, 04:03 PM
I too would like access to the overseas contingency operations fund . I will use it domestically though for peaceful purposes . Beer , gold , AR 15s etc

You got to know the cheat codes for that to happen. If you want gold all you have to do is say glittering prizes to get all of the warcraft gold you could ever need.

nikcers
02-24-2019, 04:18 PM
Trump needs to talk more like a politician if he wants to MAGA. You got to speak in terms people will understand because it's necessary for people to understand and to bypass the filters. The only way for peace to ever come to fruition it has to be more profitable therefore more powerful than war. Therefore the only way to end the wars is to have a war on peace of mind

nikcers
02-24-2019, 04:38 PM
War against the sun would be the best bet, we should just hypnotize people into thinking that shadows are evil beings that come from the extremophile population of sentient life that lives in the center of the sun and gives us skin cancer

devil21
02-24-2019, 04:42 PM
More funds for the Trumpanista Gorillas in Venezuela.

Yeah, I'm thinking it's where the funding for the privateers like Craft and Blackwater will be stashed and unaccounted. More and more "military" functions are being privatized with each passing interventionist adventure.