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Op-Ed: Two Myths from Leon Panetta
The whole thing is provocative, but here are a few quotes. The lead:
A long comparison:
Another:
This is something I'm really concerned about. Our troops who have deployed in the last 10 years have often borne a terrible burden. It would be morally unconscionable to not take care of them, but I fear that's where we're headed.
Obviously, CDI's methodology for evaluating America's military power is not the only potential one. But it's worth considering.
How about you? What do you think? How does the current and near-future U.S. military measure up?
Related link : Why is the press ignoring Panetta’s frenzied rhetoric and data-free myths?
Op-Ed: Two Myths from Leon Panetta
The whole thing is provocative, but here are a few quotes. The lead:
The suggestion that meaningful spending cuts are some sort of "doomsday" is just one of the myths Leon Panetta has been spreading around the country. Another is that "the American military today is without question the finest fighting force that has ever existed."
A long comparison:
Panetta's "finest" U.S. Navy "that has ever existed" has shrunk from 316 battleforce ships in 2001 to 287 in 2011, a decline of 10 percent. It is not a smaller, newer fleet; it is a smaller, older fleet — about four years older per ship, on average, than it was in 2001. Also, for the past year the press has been constantly reporting on severe maintenance and readiness problems throughout the fleet.
Panetta's best-ever Air Force declined from 142 fighter and bomber squadrons to 72 during the same 2001-2012 period, a decline of 49 percent, and the inventory has increased to an all-time high average for aircraft age: 23 years. Fighter pilot air training hours today are one-half of what they were in the 1970s, an era not touted for high readiness.
The Army's brigade combat teams did grow from 44 to 45. But major Army equipment inventories are mostly older, and in 2006, the House Armed Services Committee leaked a memo documenting historic lows in the readiness of active Army units in the U.S. The analysis has not been publicly updated; we should worry that it has gotten worse, not better.
We got this smaller, older, less ready force not because of less money but because of more. In addition to the $1.3 trillion spent on the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere, Congress and Presidents Bush and Obama added another $1 trillion to the "base" (non-war) parts of the defense budget.
Another:
He put a lot of rhetoric around his solicitude for the troops both at the Wilson Center and later at the House Armed Services Committee, but it is beginning to emerge that his real budget priorities are to cut people first and hardware last.
This is something I'm really concerned about. Our troops who have deployed in the last 10 years have often borne a terrible burden. It would be morally unconscionable to not take care of them, but I fear that's where we're headed.
Obviously, CDI's methodology for evaluating America's military power is not the only potential one. But it's worth considering.
How about you? What do you think? How does the current and near-future U.S. military measure up?
Related link : Why is the press ignoring Panetta’s frenzied rhetoric and data-free myths?