But before they  lobby for that money, military leaders are pleading with lawmakers to  pass last year’s budget request, shelved by the last Congress in  December after months of political in-fighting. For now, service  officials are operating with roughly $22 billion less this fiscal year  than they had hoped, under a temporary budget bill that expires next  month.
“This department has been operating under a  continuing resolution going on five months, resulting in difficulties  that may soon turn into a crisis,” Defense Secretary Robert Gates told  reporters at a news conference Monday.
At least  $14 billion of that missing fiscal 2011 money is needed to ensure “the  level of resources needed to protect this nation’s security and vital  interests around the world,” Gates said.
The $553  billion budget plan, up $5 billion from last year’s budget request, is  highlighted by billions in spending cuts and “efficiencies” outlined by  Gates last month.
The  Pentagon’s base budget has increased by at least $15 billion each of  the last five years, and is up more than $126 billion since fiscal 2005.  The modest $5 billion increase in this year’s request covers little  more than routine increases in personnel and maintenance costs. Some of  the sharpest cuts are reserved for military construction and research.
“This  budget represents a reasonable, responsible and sustainable level of  funding, the minimum level of defense spending that is necessary given  the security challenges we are facing around the globe,” Gates said.
The  military budget proposal calls for a 1.6 percent pay raise for all  servicemembers next January, a 4.2 percent bump in Basic Allowance for  Housing and a 3.4 percent boost in Basic Allowance for Subsistence.
The  pay raise is slightly above the 1.4 percent increase troops saw this  year. President Obama announced a pay freeze on federal workers in  December, so civilian defense employees and Department of Veterans  Affairs workers will not see a cost of living increase in 2012.
Cuts  in the funding for war operations are even more dramatic. The  department has asked for $118 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan costs,  down more than 26 percent from the nearly $160 billion request last  year. Officials said that reflects Pentagon plans to finish the  withdrawal of troops from Iraq and “modest declines” for funding of  Afghanistan operations.
Gates said the reduction  in Afghanistan spending does not correspond to a specific number of  troops leaving the country in the next 18 months, since the size and  scope of any drawdown will be based on conditions on the ground.
“But  that’s not to say that we will have 98,000 troops at the end of FY12,”  he said. “In fact, it’s a lead-pipe cinch that we won’t.”
But  Pentagon officials portrayed the budget as reasonable and sustainable  spending that continues Gates’ efforts to focus the military not just on  Iraq and Afghanistan but also on future contingencies: beefing up  cybersecurity, building counterterrorism-oriented special operations  forces, and maintaining a check down to China’s and Iran’s militaries.
In  addition, the department will also ask for 1,000 more small-sized  unmanned aerial vehicles than officials purchased last year, and more  Predator-class, medium-altitude spying platforms. The Pentagon also  wants $500 million to build a new Joint Operations Center for U.S. Cyber  Command at Fort Meade, Md., in addition to increased spending on  cyber-related inventions from the Defense Advanced Research Projects  Agency.
But it’s not all high-tech: Gates is  requesting more than $300 million to buy more slow-flying MC-12  twin-engine propeller planes. The four-seat planes “have produced  valuable battlefield intelligence in Iraq and Afghanistan.”
Pentagon officials  included a controversial premium hike for certain veterans using  Tricare, a proposal that has met fierce opposition from veterans groups  and Congress for the last decade.
Under the plan,  retirees would see a monthly increase of $2.50 for individual plans and  $5 for family plans starting next January, and link future increases to  medical inflation costs in future years. Prescriptions bought through  retail pharmacies will cost another $3, while generic drugs brought  through mail order programs will have a $3 reduction in co-pays.
Pentagon  officials should quickly get an idea how their modest spending increase  will be received on Capitol Hill. Gates will testify about the budget  plans on Wednesday before the Republican-led House Armed Services  Committee, whose members include a number of new lawmakers elected last  fall on platforms that called for deep cuts in government spending.
So  far, Republican leadership in the House has been reluctant to propose  deeper cuts in defense spending than Gates has publicly called for, but  conservative lawmakers have said they intend in coming weeks to push for  more than $100 billion in cuts already outlined by party leadership.
As details of the budget plans emerged, fiscally conservative think tanks blasted the military spending plans.
“This  isn’t a budget cut. It’s just not a reduction in defense spending,”  said Laura Peterson, senior policy analyst at Taxpayers for Common  Sense.
Peterson said while Gates’ request presents  a slower rate of growth than planned, it does not match the  belt-tightening occurring across the rest of the federal government,  proportionally.
“I’m not convinced that even this is going to be sustainable over the long term,” she said.
Christopher  Preble of the libertarian Cato Institute said the budget gives the  appearance of reining in defense spending, but in reality only shifts  around money cut from a handful of defense programs to other military  buys.
“In the past 12 years, the budget has  doubled in real, inflation-adjusted terms,” he said in a statement.  “Deeper cuts should be made along with an effort to lessen worldwide  defense commitments, reducing the strain on the force.”
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