U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Armed Services

06/16/2021 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 06/16/2021 09:07

ICYMI: WSJ: BIDEN CUTTING AMERICA'S DEFENSE AS HE STRESSES CHALLENGE FROM WORLD'S AUTHORITARIANS

Jun 16, 2021
Press Release
Threats Rise, U.S. Defense Falls
By WSJ Editorial Board
June 15, 2021
President Biden is telling the world in Europe this week that 'America is back' as the leader of global democracies. Sounds good. But China, Iran and Vladimir Putin would be more impressed if Mr. Biden wasn't cutting America's defense even as he rightly stresses the challenge from the world's authoritarians.
Unremarked in the White House spending deluge is that its trillions for 'infrastructure' include little new for defense. Mr. Biden's $715 billion Pentagon budget for fiscal 2022 is a 1.6% increase over last year. Adjusted for inflation, this is a cut. The bipartisan National Defense Strategy Commission and other experts say the Pentagon needs steady 3% to 5% real increases annually to address threats from 'near peers' such as China and Russia.
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But nowhere is underinvestment clearer than in the stormy forecasts for the U.S.Navy. At roughly 300 ships the Navy soon won't have the size or capability to compete with the more than 350-ship fleet China is minting. In April China reportedly commissioned three warships in a day.
The Navy's 2022 proposal would hasten the retirement of two cruisers to save money. The Navy would procure eight ships; only four are combatants. The request for the shipbuilding account is down about 3% from last year's level. The Navy is worried about readiness, particularly overworked carriers, and that a larger fleet won't be properly manned or maintained, which are real concerns. But that is a case for more investment.
A consensus in Congress agrees the Navy should grow to 355 ships, but the officer briefing reporters on the defense budget conceded that with 'a 300-ship navy and a 30-year life, you have to recapitalize at 10 per year and so eight is not going to do it.'
The 355 number is not holy writ, and Pentagon press secretary John Kirby weighed in with the obvious that 'a fleet of 355 tugboats' wouldn't mean much for American defenses. But as many naval experts have noted, what a carrier and a frigate have in common is that they can only defend one sea at a time, and quantity has a quality all its own. There is a narrow window to turn around the decline. Building ships takes years, and the U.S. is deciding today the fleet the country will have if China provokes a maritime conflict in 10 or even 20 years.

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The responsibility for these budget shortfalls doesn't fall only on civilian leaders. The case for more resources is tougher to sell to the public when flag officers take shots at cable news hosts over the culture wars or promote progressive books about 'anti-racism.' The brass need to be honest about actual threats rather than indulge in woke politics. It took a decade for the military to rebuild after the damage from Vietnam, and decline can come again as Hemingway described bankruptcy-gradually, then suddenly.
Congress will massage the Biden request, and members should level with the American public: A military that is large, modern and ready to fight is expensive. We'll be the first to endorse military health-care changes or civil-service reform to reduce ballooning personnel costs.
But the choice America is facing is not whether to buy more ships instead of tanks. It is whether to defend itself adequately or pretend to do so while shrinking defense to fund an ever-growing social-welfare state. Adversaries can see the trend even if the White House would rather not acknowledge it.