Panetta: We Can Take the Cuts, But Not the Trigger

The nation’s military can swallow the basic budget cuts in the new debt deal, but not the more drastic slashing that would take place if the “trigger” sets in, according to Defense Secretary Leon Panetta.

The debt deal calls for about $350 billion in Pentagon cuts over the next 10 years. But if by Thanksgiving a special congressional panel fails to come up with $1.5 trillion more in overall government savings over the next decade, an automatic $1.2 billion cut kicks in over that period — and half of that will come out of the Pentagon’s hide.

In a note to Pentagon workers Wednesday, Panetta wrote that the military can’t handle that so-called “enforcement mechanism.” Panetta wrote that, “If that happens, it could trigger a round of dangerous across-the-board defense cuts that would do real damage to our security, our troops and their families, and our ability to protect the nation.”

Have no fear, Leon. I’m sure Congress will assemble the committee thoughtfully, they will come to a measured bipartisan compromise that will not take a hatchet to the Pentagon, that compromise will sail easily though Congress, and the president will sign it. What could possibly go wrong?

Related Topics: Leon Panetta, Military, Military Benefits, Pentagon
  • Latest on Battleland

    MANDEL NGAN/AFP/GettyImages

    Only One Year of U.S.-Led Fighting Left

    President Obama’s goal at the NATO summit this week is looking increasingly clear: wrap up U.S. troops’ combat role over the coming year, and get the allies to pay more money to enable the Afghan military to fill the gap.

    Getty Images

    House Pushes for East Coast Missile Shield

    The House has approved a $643 billion defense-spending bill for 2013 that’s $3.7 billion more than the Obama Administration, and its Pentagon, is seeking. That’s just about the same amount the Congressional Budget Office estimates the House bill’s push for an East Coast missile shield will cost over the next five years.

    Photo by Ron Sachs-Pool/Getty Images

    The Pentagon’s “Washington Monument Strategy”

    Whenever federal bureaucrats running the nation’s parks get antsy that their purse is likely to shrink, they roll out something long known as the “Washington Monument strategy.” That’s the tried-and-true technique of warning the public that if money isn’t forthcoming, one of the first budget cuts will force the shutting down of the popular obelisk to Washington, D.C., tourists.

blog comments powered by Disqus