60+ faith groups urge Congress to ‘dramatically’ slash Pentagon budget
“The country is sprinting towards a trillion-dollar budget for weapons and warāpropping up an expensive and harmful militarized foreign policy while people struggle to meet their basic needs,” reads aĀ new letterĀ to members of Congress signed by U.S., international, and state and local groups including the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), Unitarian Universalists for Social Justice, Hindus for Human Rights, and dozens of others.
“We cannot continue down this morally bankrupt path,” the letter continues. “We urge members of Congress to dramatically cut militarized spending in the fiscal year 2024 budgetāboth to facilitate reinvestment in the well-being of our communities, and to curtail the harms of our militarized foreign policy.”
The groups’ principled stand against devoting further resources to the U.S. militaryāand specifically to the Pentagon, an agency that recently failed itsĀ fifth consecutive auditācomes days after BidenĀ requestedĀ an $886 billion military budget for the upcoming fiscal year, with $842 billion of that total earmarked for the Department of Defense.
Tori Bateman, the policy advocacy coordinator at AFSC, said Tuesday that “we know that there is enormous waste, fraud, and abuse at the Pentagonāand that spending exorbitant amounts of money on weapons and war takes away from the funding our communities receive for things like healthcare and housing.”
But that demand is likely to be ignored in a Congress that agrees each yearāon a bipartisan basis and withĀ relatively little pushbackāto increase the U.S. military budget, often byĀ tens of billionsĀ more than the president’s original request. In 2022, justĀ 78 members of the HouseĀ voted for Rep. Barbara Lee’s (D-Calif.) amendment to cut the military budget by $100 billion while 350 opposed it.
In response to Biden’s budget framework, leading Republicans made clear that they would push for even more military spending, calling the president’s proposal “woefully inadequate“āeven though it’s among theĀ largest in U.S. history.
“If past experience is any guide,Ā more than halfĀ of the new Pentagon budget will go to contractors, with the biggest share going to the top fiveāLockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, General Dynamics, and Northrop Grummanāto build everything from howitzers and tanks to intercontinental ballistic missiles,” William Hartung of the Quincy Institute for Responsible StatecraftĀ notedĀ last week. “Much of the funding for contractors will come from spending on buying, researching, and developing weapons, which accounts forĀ $315 billionĀ of the new budget request.”
Of the $1.7 trillion in discretionary spending that Biden has proposed for fiscal year 2024, just $584 billion is reserved for social programs, analyst Stephen SemlerĀ observed.
Originally published at Commondreams.org.