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Politics

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Senate Passes $631 Billion Defense Bill

December 4th, 2012 11:59 pm Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate overwhelmingly approved a sweeping, $631 billion defense bill Tuesday that sends a clear signal to President Barack Obama to move quickly to get U.S. combat troops out of Afghanistan, tightens sanctions on Iran and limits the president’s authority in handling terror suspects.

Ignoring a veto threat, the Senate voted 98-0 for the legislation that authorizes money for weapons, aircraft and ships and provides a 1.7 percent pay raise for military personnel. After a decade of increasing Pentagon budgets, the vote came against the backdrop of significant reductions in projected military spending and the threat of deeper cuts from the looming “fiscal cliff” of automatic spending cuts and tax increases.

The bill reflects the nation’s war-weariness after more than a decade of fighting in Afghanistan, the messy uncertainty about new threats to U.S. security and Washington belt-tightening in times of trillion-dollar-plus deficits. Spending solely on the base defense budget has nearly doubled in the past 10 years, but the latest blueprint reins in the projected growth in military dollars.

The bill would provide some $526 billion for the base defense budget, $17 billion for defense programs in the Energy Department and about $88 billion for the war in Afghanistan. House and Senate negotiators must reconcile their competing versions of the bill in the next few weeks.

“The major challenge is time,” Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin, D-Mich., told reporters after the vote.

Reacting to the relentless violence in Syria, the Senate voted 92-6 to require the Pentagon to report to Congress on the ability of the U.S. military to impose a no-fly zone over Syria.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who has pushed for greater U.S. military involvement to end the Syrian civil war, sponsored the amendment. Obama on Monday warned Syrian President Bashar Assad not to use chemical and/or biological weapons against his people as the U.S. and its allies weigh military options.

“If military action has to be taken to prevent sarin gas to be used, Congress has to be involved,” McCain said.

But Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., said it was a “bad idea to discuss contingency plans for war.”

The amendment specified that it should not be construed as a declaration of war or an authorization to use force.

Last year, Obama and congressional Republicans agreed on nearly $500 billion in defense cuts over 10 years. If the two sides fail in the next month to avert the “fiscal cliff” the Pentagon would face an additional $55 billion in automatic, across-the-board cuts after the first of the year.

Not far from the Capitol, a coalition of retired military leaders, administration officials and lawmakers pleaded with the president and Congress to address the nation’s debt, calling it the greatest threat to national security. The group of prominent Republicans and Democrats said the United States can spend less on defense while still maintaining its military superiority.

“A strong economy and strong national security are inextricably linked,” said retired Adm. Mike Mullen, the former chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The administration has threatened to veto the Senate bill, strongly objecting to a provision restricting the president’s authority to transfer terror suspects from the U.S. prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, to foreign countries. The provision is in current law.

The Senate also voted to restrict the transfer of detainees held at Guantanamo to prisons in the United States.

Further stoking the debate over U.S. detention policy — and setting up a fight with the House — the Senate also added a provision saying the government may not detain a U.S. citizen or legal resident indefinitely without charge or trial even if there is a declaration of war or the authorization to use military force.

Current law denies suspected terrorists, including U.S. citizens seized within the nation’s borders, the right to trial and subjects them to the possibility they would be held indefinitely. It reaffirms the post-Sept. 11 authorization for the use of military force that allows indefinite detention of enemy combatants.

That provision had created a conservative backlash, and a coalition of liberal Democrats and libertarian Republicans pushed for the new provision.

The bill sends a clear message to Obama and the military to accelerate the withdrawal of U.S. combat forces from Afghanistan. On a strong bipartisan vote of 62-33 last week, the Senate endorsed Obama’s timetable to withdraw all combat troops by the end of 2014 but pressed for a quicker pace, without specifying how that would be achieved.

Obama and the military are engaged in high-stakes talks about the pace of drawing down the 66,000 U.S. combat troops there now.

The bill added stringent new sanctions on Iran’s energy and shipping sectors in a fresh attempt to hobble the Islamic Republic’s economy and hamper its nuclear ambitions.

The sanctions build upon penalties that Congress has passed — and Obama has implemented — that target Tehran’s financial and energy sectors.

Officials in Washington argue that the sanctions have undermined Tehran’s economy and robust oil sales, thwarting its suspected pursuit of a nuclear weapon. Iran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

Sens. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., and Mark Kirk, R-Ill., who have shepherded sanctions bills through Congress, sponsored the latest package that also would close a major loophole — the ability of Iran to circumvent sanctions and barter oil for precious metals. Turkey has been bartering gold for oil.

The sanctions would designate Iran’s energy, port, shipping and ship-building sectors as “entities of proliferation” and prohibit transactions with these areas. The legislation also would penalize individuals selling or supplying commodities such as graphite, aluminum and steel to Iran, all products that are crucial to Tehran’s ship-building and nuclear operations.

The administration had complained that the new sanctions were duplicative and unnecessary.



  • Sand_Cat

    I thought they were worried about the deficit!
    If sane and rational people went through this budget, I’m sure they could find more to cut there than almost all of the planned savings from cutting “social programs.”

  • Michael Kollmorgen

    From 2012 Military Budget of $664.84 Billion, they cut it down to $631 Billion?

    That’s only a $33 Billion reduction. Not nearly enough.

    With the current cost of Iraq and Afganestan being totaled, its roughly $3.7 Trillion as of today.

    We need to stop this crap before this country goes totally broke.

  • http://www.facebook.com/dominick.vila.1 Dominick Vila

    Incredible! Congress passes a $631B “Defense” bill designed to maintain a military force capable of fighting – and defeating – the armies of the rest of the world combined, while considering to “adjust” the Consumer Price Index to deny seniors trying to make ends meet on a $900 a month Social Security check a 2% pay raise. These people are sickening.
    We don’t need 13 carrier groups to match the 13 carrier groups the rest of the world has. We don’t new dozens of obsolete military bases in Europe and Asia. We don’t need NATO, an organization created to confront a non-existant Soviet threat. We don’t need sophisticated jets to fight terrorists shooting AK47s from the beds of TOYOTA pickup trucks.
    If these idiots are serious about reducing spending to balance the budget and, eventually, reduce the national debt they should demonstrate their commitment by eliminating military programs that are no longer needed. The last thing they should look at is the so called entitlements, if nothing else because SS is funded with our FICA contributions, and our contributions cover most MEDICARE expenditures.

    • Michael Kollmorgen

      Haven’t you figured out that the US is a War-Mongering Nation and LOVES its military above all else.

      Keeping the Military Complex well funded keeps money circulating through the economy, using of course Trickle Down Economics. Our country would collapse if we didn’t have high military spending.

      This country has never lived in peace for not even one generation throughout our entire history. Our economy is military-based, not peace-based. Out National Product is dead bodies and not only ours.

      Besides, what would we do with all these soldiers that came back from all these bases overseas if they were closed up? Our “Official” Unemployment Figure would double.