Pork or Defense
By Alan Caruba

Alan CarubaEvery patriotic American simply must read Winslow T. Wheeler's new book, The Wastrels of Defense: How Congress Sabotages U.S. Security ($28.95, Naval Institute Press.) Even the Washington Post has published some of his views, such as his August 22, 2004 analysis of the gigantic $416 billion appropriations bill for the Department of Defense in July, which included a mind-boggling $8.9 billion in pork, that is, non-military related spending under cover of helping our fine armed forces.

Wheeler has worked on national security issues for over thirty years, serving members in both the Senate and the House. He also worked nine years in the General Accounting Office, the Congressional watchdog agency. In 2002, he was pressured to resign from the Senate Budget Committee staff because of a commentary he wrote that revealed the extent of self-serving budget-busting going on. He is currently a visiting senior fellow at the Center for Defense Information.

His book is a devastating expose. For example, he writes that, after the September 11, 2001 terror attacks, Senators added $4 billion in "irrelevant and useless projects for their home states to the defense budget. At the same time, they stripped $2.4 billion out of the bill from accounts "that supported military training, weapons maintenance, spare parts, and other military 'readiness' items (just the things soldiers need most) to help pay for the pork. This was done just as the first American casualties were coming home from the fighting in Afghanistan, some of them in boxes."

Wheeler is particularly damning in his description of Sen. John McCain, a former Vietnam war prisoner and hero, who, while loudly decrying the waste, has done nothing to stop or even slow it. Another Senator, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, the ranking Republican on the Senate Appropriations Committee, and Wheeler's former boss, Sen. Pete V. Domenici (R-NM), but it is every member of Congress that is involved. "Congress is not just dithering with national security," writes Wheeler, "it is trashing it."

Can you imagine a defense appropriation bill stuffed with money for parking garages, fisheries, and gymnasiums? And this was but a small part of the more than 100 amendments added to the 2002 bill to fund the Department of Defense. "Members of Congress add hundreds, nay thousands, of these home state additions, variously called 'member adds', "congressional' or 'line-items', 'state impacts', or just 'pork' to defense-related legislation each year."

In the process, "a grand total of $1.1 billion in the FY 2003 O&M budget" was added!
And, to be fair, this bill was signed by the President. This isn't just politics as usual. This is politics run amuck! It is the wholesale fleecing of the money taxpayers send the federal government in the belief that it will be wisely and carefully allocated to our defense needs.
Nor can Wheeler be accused of partisan politics. As noted, he has worked for members of Congress on both sides of the aisle and his book meticulously documents this mindless spending on projects that have nothing to do with defense and everything to do with being reelected.

The nation's press has completely failed Americans in its reporting of this grand theft. "Journalists are missing a fundamental story that has far more serious consequences than they appreciate; most do not even understand the process," says Wheeler.

Both the politicians opposing the current war effort and those supporting it are putting the lives of our military personnel in jeopardy along with the successful outcome of the war. The voters returned most of them to office based on their self-serving news releases trumpeting what they are doing for their constituents.

We have found where the real "quagmire" is located. It is in the Congress of the United States of America. What can be done about it? It can be exposed as Wheeler is trying to do and it can be opposed by bringing pressure -- letters, faxes, and emails -- on the members of Congress to stop this highway robbery of the taxpayers money!

Alan Caruba writes a weekly commentary, "Warning Signs", posted on the Internet site of The National Anxiety Center (www.anxietycenter.com).


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