[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 153 (Wednesday, October 30, 2013)]
[House]
[Page H6905]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MILITARY BUDGET WOES
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Texas (Mr. Williams) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WILLIAMS. Mr. Speaker, it is a sad day in America when Army
Secretary John McHugh says that, in today's fiscal environment, the
best case scenario for our military's budget is treacherous. Army Chief
of Staff Ray Odierno said budget cuts hamper the military's ability to
train its own troops.
While there is waste and overlap in every Federal agency--the
Pentagon's budget not excluded--there is much to be said for Congress'
doing its primary job of governing: passing a budget. For the last 4
years, we have seen the constraints that continuing resolution after
continuing resolution have placed on our military.
Earlier this year, we saw the rigid requirements that harmed the
Department of Defense when President Obama's sequester took place.
Before these cuts, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said our
defense program was already underfunded by 5 percent with modernization
underfunded by 10 percent. Thankfully, Congress took quick action that
allowed the DOD to operate under a budget in order to meet all of their
fiscal requirements and have more flexibility as they absorbed the
across-the-board sequester cuts.
General Odierno revealed this week that just two Army brigades are
combat-ready and that training has come to a halt. This is a terrifying
reality given that only 2 months ago President Obama addressed Congress
and the public, asking for support for a military attack on Syria. We
absolutely cannot send our troops who are not trained, not equipped,
and not prepared into harm's way. Our military readiness should never,
ever be threatened like this. As the world's superpower, our Armed
Forces must be ready to deploy thousands of troops should the need
arise.
As the military continues finding ways to operate under current
spending levels, it is also downsizing in Afghanistan and is preparing
for future programs with no certainty of any financial stability. Our
Nation has serious financial problems. Our deficit is growing; our
spending is increasing; and it seems that, in nearly every budget
battle, our military is thrown in as a bargaining chip. This is not the
American way, and it must become a thing of the past. Other government
agencies have bloated budgets with wasteful, overlapping programs,
fraudulent spending, and blatant abuse of taxpayer dollars. All the
while, our military budget is being stripped to its bare bones.
The last time I checked, Mr. Speaker, we were still a Nation at war.
Now is not the time to gut essential programs for our warriors and
their families. We owe it to our military to have them operate under
regular order, pass and conference our appropriations bills so our
fighters can continue to be the best and the most prepared in the
world.
Texas' 25th District is home to Fort Hood, the Army's premier
installation to train and deploy heavy forces, and it is one of the
largest military installations in the world. Fort Hood ranks highest in
terms of future capability and support, and it can sustain more than
50,000 soldiers and their families.
I urge my colleagues in Congress to honor our commitment to these
troops and to put an end to the financial uncertainty in the military.
Let's simply do just the right thing.
May God bless our troops. May God bless America.
And always in God we trust.
____________________