‘$839 Billion Military Budget Is a Policy Failure,’ Say Critics as House Tees Up NDAA
With the U.S. House set to vote this week on legislation that proposes a staggering $839 billion in military spending, progressive lawmakers and advocates said Monday that the bill exemplifies the warped priorities of Congress at a time of growing hunger, rising child poverty, an ongoing pandemic, and other pressing crises.
“I’ve said it before, and I’ll keep saying it until our federal budget is equitably distributed: more guns and tanks are of no use to Americans without housing, education, or healthcare,” declared Rep. Barbara Lee (D-Calif.), who alongside Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wis.) has put forth an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that would slash the U.S. military budget by $100 billion.
Pocan, the co-chair of the Defense Spending Reduction Caucus, wrote on Twitter Monday that “an $839 billion defense budget is a policy failure.” Under the House version of the NDAA, the Pentagon alone would receive $808 billion for Fiscal Year 2023.
The legislation that the House is expected to debate and vote on this week contains $37 billion more in military spending than President Joe Biden’s initial budget request, which totaled $813 billion—$802 billion of which was in the purview of the NDAA.
On Tuesday, the House Rules Committee is expected to determine which of the roughly 1,200 amendments that lawmakers are seeking to attach to the NDAA will receive a full House vote. Both Democrats and Republicans have proposed a wide array of amendments, from a proposal to suspend U.S. aid to the Brazilian military if it attempts a coup to a measure that would reform the draconian Espionage Act.
Passage of the NDAA, which typically clears both chambers of Congress on a bipartisan basis with relatively little issue, would be a major victory for weapons contractors that have lobbied aggressively for more spending. The Senate’s version of the NDAA proposes even more military spending than the House’s.
“An $839 billion military budget is a policy failure for the people and the planet,” tweeted the peace group CodePink. “If the U.S. government was truly interested in defending U.S. health and safety, it would allocate Pentagon spending toward climate action, healthcare, and other life-affirming services—not war.”
In an open letter Tuesday, an ideologically diverse coalition of watchdog groups warned that the House bill could dump even more money into a $6 billion program to produce new engines for the F-35 fighter jet—itself a notorious boondoggle.
The coalition of watchdog groups wrote in their open letter Tuesday that “over the service life of the fleet, the F-35 program is projected to cost the American people $1.7 trillion.”
More broadly, Lindsay Koshgarian of the National Priorities Project observed that slashing $100 billion from the U.S. military budget could fund a range of progressive priorities, including “the clean energy and child care provisions of President Biden’s beleaguered Build Back Better initiative.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Jake Johnson.