Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: All

Note: The following text is a quote:

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=45952

Gates Urges Congress to Approve Defense Budget, Wartime Spending Request

By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 9, 2007 – Delays in getting an emergency supplemental war-funding bill approved are causing disruption within the Defense Department, particularly among programs at home, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said today.

The Army has slowed spending in numerous areas to free up money to fully fund wartime costs since President Bush vetoed war-spending legislation because it set a date for the return of combat forces from Iraq, Gates told the Senate Appropriations Committee’s defense subcommittee.

The bill included $93.4 billion to help fund U.S. forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the global war on terror, but stipulated that U.S. combat troops be out of Iraq by Aug. 31, 2008. It also included costs unrelated to the war.

Bush vetoed the bill because he rejects establishing a deadline for troop withdrawals, insisting that such decisions must be based on conditions in the war zone.

Gates told Congress today that delays in getting a spending bill approved are having “a growing impact here at home.”

“The Army is already trying to cope with this,” he said. Spending in various programs has slowed or stopped altogether, he said. Defense contracts are being withheld; hiring of civilian employees has slowed; and bases have begun resorting to month-to-month service contracts for services and supplies.

Gates noted several stopgap measures taken to close the funding gap: The Senate committee approved a $1.6 billion reprogramming from the Air Force and Navy to the Army yesterday, he said, and the Defense Department expects to make another reprogramming request within the next several days.

“That kind of a reprogramming will extend us about a week,” Gates said.

Ultimately, this type of effort will stretch the Defense Department’s capabilities only so far, he said.

“If we pulled out all the stops (and) used everything possible available to us, we could probably fund the war into July,” Gates said. “But I would tell you, the impact on the Department of Defense in terms of disruption and cancelled contracts and programs would be huge if we had to do that.”

Gates told committee members the costs of defending the country are high, but not as high as the cost of not doing so. “The only thing costlier, ultimately, would be to fail to commit the resources necessary to defend our homeland interests around the world and to fail to prepare for the inevitable threats of the future,” he said.

He urged committee members to move quickly to approve the fiscal 2008 defense budget request, which includes the base budget requests as well as wartime operating costs.

Gates said the budget requests would accomplish several important objectives. Approving them would allow:

— Modernizing and recapitalizing key capabilities, to include funding increases for the next generation of ships, strike aircraft and ground combat systems;
— Sustaining the all-volunteer military by reducing stress on the force and improving the quality of life for troops and their families;
— Improving readiness through additional training and maintenance, and by resetting forces following their overseas deployment;
— Building capabilities of partner nations to combat extremists within their own borders by using new train-and-equip authorities to ultimately reduce the potential demand for U.S. troops; and
— Funding U.S. military operations for fiscal 2008 in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere in the ongoing campaign against violence jihadist networks around the world.

Gates acknowledged the combined price tag of these efforts — more than $700 billion — gives new meaning to “sticker shock.” But funding these operations is critical, he said, in light of current threats and those the country will face in the future.


454 posted on 05/09/2007 3:33:20 PM PDT by Cindy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 451 | View Replies ]


To: All; backhoe; piasa

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=mexico

Note: The following post is a quote:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1830972/posts

Gunmen Dressed as Cops Kill Police Chief in Mexico
The Epoch Times/Reuters ^ | May 09, 2007

Posted on 05/09/2007 3:28:09 PM PDT by SwinneySwitch

CHILPANCINGO, Mexico—Gunmen disguised as federal agents shot dead the head of police in a state capital near Mexico’s Acapulco beach resort on Wednesday, the third killing of a senior cop in five days.

Presumed drug gang members in black fatigues shot police chief Artemio Mejia in the back in the dusty town of Chilpancingo after he got out of his pickup truck to question them, town spokesman Reemberto Valdez said.

President Felipe Calderon has sent thousands of troops and federal police to tackle drug cartels across Mexico, but the increased firepower has failed to contain the violence, including a recent wave of attacks on senior officers.

Bodyguards traveling in Mejia’s pickup truck returned fire, killing one gunman and wounding another, who was put under heavy guard in a nearby hospital.

Other attackers escaped in a large sports utility vehicle, exchanging gunfire with police as they sped away.

On Saturday, presumed drug hitmen shot dead a police chief in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas as he traveled in his truck. On Tuesday, gunmen killed the head of an anti-kidnapping unit in the northern city of Monterrey.

Chilpancingo, about an hour’s drive from Acapulco, is the capital of the state of Guerrero, much of which consists of remote and lawless mountains dominated by drug growers and smugglers.

Narcotics gangs in Mexico occasionally assassinate senior local cops and it is often unclear whether they have been targeted because of involvement with organized criminals or in retribution for trying to catch them.

In the town of Apatzingan in Michoacan state, where soldiers firing grenades and machine guns battled gunmen earlier this week, troops in camouflage swept through a ramshackle neighborhood on Wednesday, searching house-to-house for gang members.

Outside the beach resort of Huatulco in the southern state of Oaxaca, soldiers killed one gunman after a group traveling in sports utility vehicles opened fire on their highway checkpoint, newspapers reported.

Drug-related deaths in Mexico number nearly 800 so far this year. Narcotics-related violence left 2,000 people dead in 2006.


455 posted on 05/09/2007 3:42:03 PM PDT by Cindy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 454 | View Replies ]

To: All

http://www.defenselink.mil/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=45956

“Gates: Early Iraq Withdrawal Would Have ‘Dire’ Consequences for U.S.”

By Sgt. Sara Wood, USA
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, May 9, 2007


459 posted on 05/09/2007 4:20:26 PM PDT by Cindy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 454 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson