Beaver: US idling amid China’s military buildup
Our National Defense Strategy identifies China as the primary challenge to the United States. To confront this threat successfully, our military needs more warships, aircraft and munitions. Now.
But the Biden administration’s spending does not match its defense strategy. The president’s Emergency Supplemental Request made this clear by asking for $61.4 billion for Ukraine, but only $5.4 billion for the Indo-Pacific. In addition, the administration has made no attempt to cut spending elsewhere in the budget to help fund any part of the supplemental.
There are many ways money can be saved within the Department of Defense, from programs that could be cut altogether, to reforms that would make the department spend money more efficiently. Non-defense spending from within research and development, politicized spending on climate change and DEI, and wasteful bureaucratic bloat are all examples of Pentagon funding that needs to be re-allocated toward building actual military capacity.
While some of the money necessary to pay for the military systems we need to deter China be found within the Defense Department’s budget, there’s far more available elsewhere — in the wasteful spending that occurs across the federal budget.
If Congress is serious about funding a military capable of deterring China, plenty of big-ticket items outside the defense budget could be cut and reallocated to real military capacity.
For fiscal year 2024, the Biden administration requested $3.9 billion for the Department of Homeland Security’s climate resilience programs, $10 billion in mandatory funding for a new First Generation Down Payment Assistance program to “help address racial and ethnic home ownership and wealth gaps,” $3 billion for the State Department’s Green Climate Fund and Clean Technology Fund within the President’s Emergency Plan for Adaptation and Resilience (climate change money for foreign countries), $3 billion in Environmental and Climate Justice Block Grants, etc. etc.
This administration’s Department of Homeland Security is paying $2.5 billion to house illegal immigrants, while spending only about $56 million to maintain family housing facilities for military service members.
Within the Defense Department budget itself, for fiscal year 2024 the Biden administration requested $5.1 billion to “mitigate climate risk.” Jamming this sort of non-defense, politicized spending into the defense budget is especially egregious. The department’s mission is to protect American national security interests, and these wasteful initiatives distract the military from carrying out its core mission.
There’s plenty more the U.S. could and should be doing to build a military manifestly capable of safeguarding the security of American citizens. The issue is a lack of political will, seriously misguided priorities and an astounding mismanagement of resources.
Wilson Beaver is a Senior Policy Analyst in the Center for Defense Policy at The Heritage Foundation/Tribune News Service