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ARMY CUTS WILL TAKE IT BACK TO PRE-WORLD WAR II LEVELS
Human Events ^ | February 25, 2014 | John Hayward

Posted on 02/25/2014 3:26:45 PM PST by neverdem

As Luke Skywalker said when he got his first look at the Death Star, “I’ve got a very bad feeling about this.” AFP reports on plans to take the U.S. Army back to pre-World War II levels – which, as you may recall, turned out to be a problem when World War II rolled around.

The Pentagon plans to scale back the US Army by more than an eighth to its lowest level since before World War II, signaling a shift after more than a decade of ground wars.

Saying it was time to “reset” for a new era, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel recommended shrinking American forces from 520,000 active duty troops to between 440,000 and 450,000.

In a speech outlining the proposed defense budget, he said Monday that after Iraq and Afghanistan, US military leaders no longer plan to “conduct long and large stability operations.”

I can’t help thinking it’s not a good idea to loudly declare that America is no longer capable of conducting “long and large stability operations.” What’s left to scare off the bad guys? They know damn well we won’t nuke them, and they’ve seen the limits of targeted precision-bombing campaigns and drone strikes. I can’t help noticing that none of the vanquished dictators of the post-9/11 era have been neatly vaporized by a smart bomb – they’ve been dragged out of holes. We’ve bagged some cave-dwelling terrorists with drones, but that’s not going to work on anyone who can afford a proper Evil Mastermind Lair.

I tend to agree that U.S. military operations should be fast and furious. We clearly do not make effective occupiers, in part because in the post-WW2 era, we no longer reduce enemy nations to rubble before occupying them. Occupation, even with the most benevolent aims, is a long hard slog that our political system is not well-suited for. It’s just not something we want to do, and hopefully it will never be necessary again.

But stripping away capability tends to invite the sort of situation we are trying to avoid. Weakness is provocative. It’s also a bit troubling that the Army seems viewed primarily as heavily-armed real estate agents by this Administration’s thinking. Trimming back force levels a bit is one thing, but these dramatic cuts – 13 percent in just 3 years – are explicitly a rejection of the previous “fight two wars at once” doctrine. I can still think of too many plausible scenarios in which that might be necessary. More to the point, I can still think of some bad apples who need to hit the sack every night convinced America can still fight on two fronts. And while U.S. military spending remains huge, I don’t see much evidence that our fellow Good Cops are planning to take up the slack from an American drawdown.

Perhaps this is a quaint additional consideration, but the Army seems like the primary interface between military and civilian culture in the United States, so making it dramatically smaller will separate military and civilian life even further. I don’t think that’s a good idea.

The Administration expects resistance to their proposed Army cuts, and they won’t be disappointed. AFP quotes Senate Armed Services Committee member Roy Blunt (R-MO) saying the reduction has the “potential to harm America’s military readiness.”

Senator Kelly Ayotte (R-NH) said the plan was a “serious mistake” that would put American lives in jeopardy. That actually seems like to be the consensus view of officials who have seen the plan, including some who presumably support it It’s a roll of dice carved from silver and bone, a gamble that nothing like 9/11 will happen again. The New York Times mentioned this when breaking the story:

The proposal, released on Monday, takes into account the fiscal reality of government austerity and the political reality of a president who pledged to end two costly and exhausting land wars. A result, the officials argue, will be a military capable of defeating any adversary, but too small for protracted foreign occupations.

Officials who saw an early draft of the announcement acknowledge that budget cuts will impose greater risk on the armed forces if they are again ordered to carry out two large-scale military actions at the same time: Success would take longer, they say, and there would be a larger number of casualties. Officials also say that a smaller military could invite adventurism by adversaries.

 

The proposal includes some base and air-wing closures, which will predictably face opposition from representatives of the states and districts where each base is located. And there are pay freezes and benefit cuts for troops and their families, as outlined by The Hill:

The budget includes proposals that would cut the growth of housing allowances for service members and their families and stop reimbursing renter’s insurance entirely. Subsidies at domestic military commissaries that provide military families with low-cost goods would be reduced.

Only the medically retired would escape proposed cuts to healthcare copays and increases to deductibles.

While basic pay raises will be held to 1 percent in 2015 under the budget, general and flag officers would see a pay freeze.

The budget also calls for a new round of base closings in 2017, which lawmakers have fiercely resisted during the past two budget requests.

It sure does seem like the rest of the Leviathan State whines about reductions in the rate of spending growth as “savage cuts,” while the military suffers all the actual cutting. These thoughts were on former Vice President Dick Cheney’s mind when he blasted the plan announced by Hagel, as reported by the Washington Examiner:

Cheney pointed out that Obama’s plans to cut the military were “over the top,” citing “enormous long term damage” to the military.

Cheney said Obama’s decision was made for budget reasons, not any strategic goal.

He would much rather spend the money on food stamps than he would a strong military or support for our troops,” he said.

Cheney also worried that at a time of rock-bottom American global prestige, courtesy of Obama foreign policy, these Army cuts are going to make our strategic partners question the validity of our security guarantees. His point about Obama’s use of the military as a piggy bank for domestic spending was echoed by at least one House Republican, as quoted by Fox News:

Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, warned that the cuts would hurt military readiness. And he said the country is only in this position because the Obama administration and Congress will not seriously take on cuts to entitlements.

“It’s all being sacrificed … on the altar of entitlements. This president cannot take on mandatory spending, so all we’ve done in the Congress — and this president — is basically cut discretionary spending,” he told Fox News.

A lot of this budget-slashing is only going on because of Barack Obama’s big “sequester” brainstorm, a feature of the 2011 budget deal that was supposed to terrorize Republicans into raising taxes by threatening them with military cuts. If Hagel’s plan goes through, perhaps the best that could be said is that such tactics will not work again, at least not until America’s fiscal death spiral makes having a military at all impractical, a point that will be reached within the lifetime of most people reading this.

Governor Nikki Haley describes a petulant Obama browbeating governors with sequester finger-pointing at a White House meeting, as related by CNN:

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, whose husband is in the National Guard and recently returned from a one-year deployment to Afghanistan, blasted the Obama administration’s decision to make cuts to the reserve military force.

“It really is a slap in the face to anyone who has served over this past decade multiple times and left their life to do this,” the Republican governor said Monday. “We have active duty, but the active duty hasn’t felt the pain that the National Guard has felt, and this is not how you show your thanks.”

[...] She said the White House meeting largely had a respectful tone until the discussion turned toward military cuts at the end.

“It automatically went into an aggressive nature by (President Obama), implying that ‘many of you have asked for cuts, this is what you said you wanted…now you’re going to get it, you’re going to have to live with it,‘ Completely different change in tone,” said Haley, who’s up for re-election this year.

“It chilled the room quite a bit,” she added.

Perhaps it’s true, as retired Army general and former NATO supreme commander George Joulwan told CNN, that fiscal reality makes it necessary for us to scale back our military power: “Whether it’s smart or not is yet to be seen. But I think it’s necessary to do, given the constraints that we face fiscally within the United States.”

Is that what everyone thought they were voting for in 2008 and 2012? Are we comfortable with a level of government fiscal deterioration that’s eating away at our military muscle… knowing full well that as the government grows even more insolvent, the military will face even more dangerous reductions? Especially under this Administration or its likely Democrat successor – does everyone remember how Hillary Clinton feels about the military? Troop strength is an investment whose invisible dividend is peace, which is easily taken for granted by people on the hunt for loose change to finance other programs. The Hagel proposal marks the beginning of a process, not the end.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: 1dontsearch; afghanistan; fakecolonels; hagel; nikkihaley; obama; paleolibs; southcarolina
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To: Colonel Kangaroo
You are right, God is of infinite power and might. He can, and will, act on His own. But, He blesses those who bless Israel, and curses those who curse Israel. We are betraying and abandoning Israel, while at the same time we are empowering her enemies. God will inflict judgment upon is for this, and also for sitting on the sidelines and abandoning her. We will pay a terrible price as a nation.
61 posted on 02/25/2014 7:19:32 PM PST by SkyPilot
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To: SkyPilot

I don’t think Kerry should be acting as the agent for the Palestian Authority either. A true Washingtonian policy would require avoidance of such meddling as the “Mideast Peace Process”.


62 posted on 02/25/2014 7:55:12 PM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

In 1940 the United States Army had 269,023 active duty personnel. The population of the country at that time was 132.12 million.

Today we have 316.99 million in the U.S. To keep the same ratio, the Army should have 645,404. I am glad to see you support a robust defensive posture.


63 posted on 02/26/2014 8:10:47 AM PST by SoCal Pubbie
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To: SkyPilot
Just more groundwork laid for the 2nd Coming.

RAPTURE READY?

64 posted on 02/26/2014 9:03:20 AM PST by ExSoldier (Stand up and be counted... OR LINE UP AND BE NUMBERED...)
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To: neverdem

Not to worry. All we need is another relic from that era, the Kellogg-Briand Pact, to outlaw war and then this won’t be an issue.


65 posted on 02/26/2014 9:49:02 AM PST by Opinionated Blowhard ("When the people find they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic.")
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To: neverdem

The government as a whole should be cut back to a pre-WW2 level.

Cut the overall size of the federal government (except the military) by 60%, and things in this country will improve.

In fact, let’s start a petition on that white house page calling for 0bama’s pay and benefits to be cut back to pre-WW2 levels. Let that pompous ass live on 75k a year.


66 posted on 02/26/2014 10:08:22 AM PST by 2CAVTrooper (Politicians and diapers need to be changed for the same reason)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

“Large armies are for the purpose of invading other countries. With our blessings of geography, we do not have to invade other countries to defend our land.”

We didn’t have a large Army when we were invaded in 1812, in fact we were totally unprepared.

And today, we are being invaded by people who seek to “reconquer” what they think was “taken” from them.

The force structure that empERROR zero wants isn’t even enough to secure the border with mexico.


67 posted on 02/26/2014 10:21:11 AM PST by 2CAVTrooper (Politicians and diapers need to be changed for the same reason)
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To: Temujinshordes

We went from 28 Divisions (18 active, 10 national guard) down to 10 active and 8 national guard.

Overall the size and scope of the government needs to be cut, but not at the expense of the military. If anything the military budget needs to be doubled, and the Army should be brought back to at least 14 active divisions and 14 national guard divisions with war stocks available to double those numbers if needed.

There are hundreds of government agencies and commissions that need to be eliminated or cut back.


68 posted on 02/26/2014 11:28:37 AM PST by 2CAVTrooper (Politicians and diapers need to be changed for the same reason)
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To: SkyPilot

“You are correct with your analysis. One day, the name of Chuck Hagel will be uttered among Americans with contempt. He will go down in history as the worst SECDEF of all time.”

It’s hard to imagine that there is someone who makes les aspin look GOOD.


69 posted on 02/26/2014 11:31:39 AM PST by 2CAVTrooper (Politicians and diapers need to be changed for the same reason)
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

Ok, to control the borders we have you say...

IF we placed our military on the border with mexico, it would take an Army ten times it’s current size to effectivly seal off the border.


70 posted on 02/26/2014 11:36:24 AM PST by 2CAVTrooper (Politicians and diapers need to be changed for the same reason)
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To: 2CAVTrooper

In 1812 we had no navy to speak of. The air and sea defenses of our land should be maintained. We don’t need a large army to bleed the life of the nation away on the other side of the globe.


71 posted on 02/26/2014 3:44:20 PM PST by Colonel Kangaroo
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To: Colonel Kangaroo

We need a large Army to not only seal the southern border, but to also act as a DETERRENT. Much like a strong Navy, Air Force, and nuclear forces also act as deterrents.

It goes right back to Teddy Roosevelt and his “Big Stick” theory. The one with the big stick (who also has the will to use it when the time comes) is never the one who gets eff’ed with.

And how many times does history have to repeat itself? It has happened time and time and time and time again where our military gets gutted, some nutcase starts some crap somewhere and we get dragged kicking and screaming right into the middle of it all because of nutcase A, B, or C thinks he can get away with it because we’re too weak to do anything about it.

north korea and iran developing nuclear weapons.

russia and china rapidly building up their military forces.

Why? Because they ALL see the weakness like pee running down the leg of a coward coming from the White House.

They’re building up while little lord barry neuters our military through social engineering, eliminating key officers, troop and equipment cuts, etc, etc.


72 posted on 03/03/2014 11:29:56 AM PST by 2CAVTrooper (Politicians and diapers need to be changed for the same reason)
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