Press Release
Defense Budget Tutorials
January 18, 2006
- What is the real size of the 2006 defense budget? (It’s not what you’ve been told.)
- How can you add up to $12 billion in pork to a defense appropriations bill and simultaneously reduce the bill by over $4 billion? (When Congress said it “saved” the money, what actually happened to it?)
- What is “emergency” spending, and why is Congress addicted to it?
- What is “pork?” How can some of it be a good idea and still be “pork?”
- Congressional defense reform: Is anything actually getting better?
In December 2005, Congress passed “defense spending” legislation
advertised to cost $453 billion. The actual amount for 2006 defense spending is
in reality a very different amount. Among a complex menagerie of gimmicks and
dodges, Congress actually “saved” little, if any, money, and billions of dollars
were diverted away from military readiness to be spent on programs almost no one
in Washington, D.C., understands, let alone monitors.
These are just a few of the findings of a new series of
“Defense Budget Tutorials” to be released by the Straus Military Reform Project
of the Center for Defense Information in Washington. Once each week, between now
and Feb. 6, when President George W. Bush will release his new 2007 defense budget
request, there will be a new “tutorial.” They will be authored by the Director of
the Straus Military Reform Project, Winslow T. Wheeler, who previously spent 31 years
working for U.S. senators, from both political parties, and for the Government
Accountability Office.
The first tutorial, “What is the Actual Size of the 2006
Defense Budget?” will be released on Thursday, Jan. 19, 2006.
Journalists or others interested to receive or discuss these
materials should contact
Winslow T. Wheeler at (202) 797-5271.
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