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    Pentagon cuts reshape military, trim costs

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Pentagon unveiled a 2013 budget plan that would cut $487 billion in spending over the next decade by eliminating nearly 100,000 ground troops, mothballing ships and trimming air squadrons in a bid to create a smaller, agile force with a new strategic focus.

    The funding request, which includes painful cuts that will be felt across the country, comes at a historic turning point for the military as it winds down 10 years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq and shifts its strategic focus to the Asia-Pacific region and the Middle East.

    The budget plan, sharply criticized by some lawmakers, sets the stage for a new struggle between President Barack Obama's administration and Congress over how much the Pentagon should spend on national security as the country tries to curb its trillion-dollar budget deficits.

    "Make no mistake, the savings that we are proposing will impact all 50 states and many districts, congressional districts across America," Defense Secretary Leon Panetta told a news conference at the Pentagon on Thursday.

    "This will be a test of whether reducing the deficit is about talk or action."

    Panetta, previewing a budget to be made public February 13, said he would ask for a $525 billion base budget for the 2013 fiscal year, the first time since before the September 11, 2001, attacks that the Pentagon has asked for less than the previous year. That compares with $531 billion approved this year.

    Panetta said he would seek $88.4 billion to support overseas combat operations, primarily in Afghanistan, down from $115 billion in 2012 largely due to the end of the war in Iraq and the withdrawal of U.S. forces there at the end of last year.

    Congress ultimately controls the Pentagon's purse strings and regularly intervenes to change the size and detail of military spending as it sees fit. The Defense Department's budget accounts for about 20 percent of total federal spending.

    Republican lawmakers who oversee military affairs on Capitol Hill sharply criticized the plan.

    Senator John McCain said it "ignored the lessons of history" by imposing massive cuts on the military, and Representative Buck McKeon said it reflected "Obama's vision of an America that is weakened, not strengthened, by our men and women in uniform."

    MORE CUTS TO COME?

    The 2013 budget is Panetta's first as defense secretary and is the first to take into account the Budget Control Act passed by Congress in August that requires the Pentagon to cut $487 billion in projected spending over the next decade.

    The budget plan does not take into account an additional $600 billion in defense cuts that could be required after Congress failed to pass a compromise agreement to cut government spending by $1.2 trillion. The Pentagon could face cuts of another $50 billion a year, starting in 2013, unless Congress changes the law.

    Panetta said he hoped once lawmakers understood the sacrifice involved in reducing the defense budget by almost a half a trillion dollars, they would make sure to avoid another $500 billion in additional cuts that would "inflict severe damage to our national defense for generations."

    The budget begins to flesh out a new military strategy announced by the Pentagon earlier this month that calls for a shift in focus from the ground wars of the past decade towards efforts to preserve stability in the Asia-Pacific region and the Middle East.

    "To ensure an agile and ready force, we made a conscious choice not to maintain more force structure than we could afford to properly train and equip," Panetta said.

    The budget plan would provide new challenges for the Pentagon's top suppliers, such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon. The Arca index of defense stocks closed Thursday down 0.7 percent.

    The plan retains but slows the purchase of weapons like Lockheed's F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, the Pentagon's largest procurement program, as well as submarines, amphibious assault ships and other vessels. It would retain a fleet of 11 aircraft carriers.

    The Pentagon would boost its emphasis on special operations forces like those who carried out the raid in Pakistan that killed al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden last year and rescued two aid workers this week from kidnappers in Somalia.

    It would also increase its emphasis on cyber operations, expand its work on drone aircraft, go ahead with a long-range bomber and proceed with other weapons that would allow it to project power from a greater distance.

    Those capabilities are needed as countries like Iran and China develop arms that could threaten U.S. aircraft carriers in international waters near their shores.

    General Martin Dempsey, the top U.S. military officer as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warned against "parsing through each cut, each change, to look for a winner or loser," saying the plan should be judged for how it adapts the military to a changing security environment.

    While the cuts announced on Thursday would affect all major defense contractors, consultant Loren Thompson said shipbuilders would be hit particularly hard because of the plan to cut 16 vessels from the total planned for the next five years.

    The plans could affect work flow at Huntington Ingalls' shipyards in Pascagoula, Mississippi, and Newport News, Virginia.

    The size of the active-duty Army would be trimmed to 490,000 over five years from its wartime peak of 570,000 in 2010 and the size of the Marine Corps would fall to 182,000 from its high of about 202,000.

    Military pay increases would begin to slow after two more years of growth, and fees would be increased on healthcare benefits for military retirees, those who served more than 20 years, both above and below the age of 65.

    In addition, the Pentagon would:

    - Delay development of a new ballistic missile submarine by two years.

    - Eliminate six of the Air Force's tactical-air fighter squadrons and retire or divest 130 aircraft used for moving troops and equipment.

    - Retire seven Navy cruisers and two smaller amphibious ships early, postpone the purchase of a big-deck amphibious ship by one year and postpone the planned purchase of a number of other vessels for several years.

    - Eliminate two Army heavy brigades stationed in Europe and compensate by rotating U.S. based units into the region for training and exercises.

    - Study the possibility of further reducing the size of U.S. nuclear arsenal.

    - Begin a new round of talks on closing bases made unnecessary by the smaller force.

    (Additional reporting by Phil Stewart and Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)

     
    • P  •  9 days ago
      The world is so much safer now we can afford to reduce our military to a shadow of it's former self. What a Joke!
    • Jack  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  27 days ago
      yah... all i hear is cutting budgets everywhere except for the politicians.
    • Tom  •  Tampa, Florida  •  27 days ago
      When do the Congressmen and Senators take a pay cut? Benefit cut? Retirement Fund Cut? Perks Holidays and Vacation Cuts??/ When??
    • Avitar  •  Los Angeles, California  •  11 days ago
      This country is being taken apart from the inside.
    • deryk h  •  San Jose, California  •  27 days ago
      Next.....start cutting perks given to congress. Serve four years and get a lifetime pension ?? Who in the public sector gets that?
    • TomF  •  27 days ago
      How about cutting all the waste in the federal government first? They don't protect us!
    • Sun  •  27 days ago
      The messed up part is that all of these thousands of troops that are about to lose their jobs will catch hell trying to find employment in the civilian sector or take one hell of a pay cut in the process. I did 15 years, have two college degrees and still fighting to find something even remotely close to what I did in uniform for the same pay. My buddy was a JAG officer and thought it would be easy since he was a lawyer; he was wrong. So right now, I'll just stick law school out, but it is a struggle for veterans in the market place.
    • Dandy  •  Virginia Beach, Virginia  •  27 days ago
      ....how come Congress doesn't suggest cutting funding for ohh lets say...CONGRESS. I hope they enjoy their 13% cost of living raise for 3 months of work (the rest is recess and breaks). While our Military enjoys deployment after deployment and Holidays away from family and friends and only gets a 1.6% cost of living raise. Their secretaries/aides make more then $60,000 per year. Each of the 535 Congressmen/women makes $174,000 per year
    • Ben  •  27 days ago
      "The Defense Department's budget accounts for about 20 percent of total federal spending." Ok, now time for the other 80% to take its lumps.
    • Richard  •  Los Angeles, California  •  27 days ago
      They failed to tell us that many of those job been shift to contractors.
    • joker  •  27 days ago
      Having been in the military and currently a DOD contractor, I agree there is a LOT of waste and they need to cut back. Some of the DOD civilians and contractors are the laziest POS I have come across, and yet most people are making over 100k.
    • Ric  •  Troy, Michigan  •  27 days ago
      Ex Military here. 1983-87.
      Contractors and their 10 and 20 times street price markups have always been absurd and even more so today.
      We all heard of $2500 toilet seats and 10k M16 ammo(per small ammo box btw)
      The soldiers and officers for the most part are Not the most expensive and money consumer in the US services.
      Its greedy, exotic and crazy expensive technologies and platforms/support that is truly milking the cow empty. Both military project leads as well as private contract employ. are for the most part the irresponsible parties imo. Get the project going at nearly any cost has been the motto for very,very long
      I love the F22 and F35 but at this cost they have equaled what all the F16's and F15's have cost combined and yet they sit in Arizona as if they still arent World class.
      Plenty of air forces fear the F16,15,14 as well as other hundreds of mothballed aircraft waiting too be given too other countries or given too contractor companies for recycling with little $$$$ coming back into the US fund.
      Places like Area 51,White Sands and Dayton/Wright alone are huge money sucks that employ some of the most clandestine and hush projects that require stupid amounts of military $$$$ and resources yet they continue too thrive and grow(google or bing map Wright Patterson or Area 51 for literally Trillions and trillions of dollars spent in facilities and upgrades,etc.....
      The Military needs too trim big $$$$ low yield programs and get back too proven and affordable arms and branches.
      Nasa and the Military alone spend in one year more than most countries spend on everything fyi.
      Govt isnt bad its the Money means nothing procurement people on both ends that are spending way,way beyond reality.
      Greed and Power.
    • Bruce  •  Missoula, Montana  •  27 days ago
      Sounds like a lot of money right! Yet we are exporting the yearly savings EVERY Month with our Negative balance of Trade. Yes we need to cut Federal Dollars, but we also need to get our balance of Trade in Line. That means reducing oil imports and cheap goods imports. Obamas recommendation to change the tax code to incentivize those companies that bring jobs back and penalize those that export jobs is one step in the right direction. Use of Natural Gas and drilling for oil in the US is another step in the right direction
    • Nino  •  Troy, Michigan  •  27 days ago
      Good! Now start cutting from other parts of the government too!
    • Y  •  27 days ago
      While the Pentagon was adding these officers it was cutting enlisted personnel (a phenomenon known as โ€œofficer inflationโ€ or โ€œbrass creepโ€). Between May and September, more than 10,000 enlisted personnel were cut by the DoD, possibly in preparation for the end of military operations in Iraq, while more than 2,500 officers were added. Consequently, for the first time in the more than 200 years that the U.S. has had a standing military, there are fewer than five enlisted personnel for every officer. In other words, todayโ€™s military is the most top-heavy force in U.S. history.
    • gunman  •  Dekalb, Illinois  •  27 days ago
      DOD wanting military retiree's to pay more for our health care. The TRICARE system sucks. Depending where you live you might have to travel maybe 200 mile to get at a TRICARE provider for your region. But there might be one only 45 miles away from you but you can't go to that provider because it's in a different TRICARE region. So Peneta , the rest of DOD and congress that want us to pay more needs to have this health care..
    • Bow  •  27 days ago
      Obama is a scam artist, in 2008 he gave all those slick speeches about his "hope and change" and promises about "open govt and fixing America" yet since elected all we have gotten is continued Bushes policies, higher spending, higher debt, higher unemployment and a worse economy.
    • Just a Guy  •  27 days ago
      How much does other countries spend on military guarding the world ??
    • A Yahoo! user  •  27 days ago
      How is adding 1.4 million union civilian contractors going to help. Might help Obamas base.
    • MASTERofTRUTH  •  27 days ago
      Same old story: military "cuts costs" by putting a HUNDRED THOUSAND low ranking people into unemployment while KEEPING many old generals doing nothing and paying many "defense contractor's" expenses for research and development of various EXPENSIVE projects also using military personnel that should be paying the WHOLE costs !!!! After WE the taxpayer pays for all the research and development plus use OUR personnel WE then have to pay a MASSIVE amount per item purchased !!!! Where's their risk??? Besides putting their name on the projects AND patents it's the u.s. TAXPAYER that actually bears the complete costs for all these EXPENSIVE TOYS then have to buy them all over again??? I see MANY areas and personnel that could be cut INSTEAD of the lowly enlisted people that the taxpayer will also have to apy unemployment costs too !!!!!!! SHAME !!!!!
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