[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 74 (Thursday, May 14, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H2961]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LOOKING AT THE BIG PICTURE
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, as we are dealing with the defense
authorization legislation, we should step back and look at the big
picture. Are we taking tough stands dealing with escalating personnel
costs, procurement issues, excess facilities? Are we honoring the
responsibility of the military to clean up after itself? One of the
best examples is a failure to deal with the rightsizing of our military
facilities.
It is no secret that our nuclear triad, which includes our land-based
missiles, nuclear submarines, and bombers, are wildly in excess of
anything we need for deterrence.
The Pentagon's 2013 report on nuclear employment strategy declared
that ``we can ensure the security of the United States and our allies
and maintain a strong and credible strategic deterrence while safely
pursuing up to a one-third reduction in deployed nuclear weapons from
the level established in the New START Treaty.''
Other experts, including a commission chaired by former Vice Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General James Cartwright, suggest we could
go even lower without jeopardizing security.
Yet we are on a trajectory to spend over a trillion dollars in the
decades to come on weapons that are largely irrelevant to the
challenges of today: ISIS, 9/11-type attacks, military activities in
Iraq and Afghanistan, Russian aggression in the Ukraine.
We should be addressing what is an appropriate level for the nuclear
deterrence. But until we face up to the fact that we ought to at least
know what we are getting into, one simple step would have been to tell
Congress what the longer term costs are going to be.
In the last legislation, I had an amendment that was successfully
approved to require the CBO to publish every 2 years a 10-year cost
estimate of our nuclear modernization. It has already proven extremely
valuable to provide a set of numbers we can compare to the Pentagon's
estimates. Unfortunately, more and more of these expenses are being
pushed outside the 10-year window.
I had an amendment that would have at least required our being able
to have a 25-year cost of modernization, an estimate the Pentagon said
they can do and one that we already have for the National Nuclear
Security Administration.
One other area that was equally puzzling was the failure to allow a
bipartisan, fully offset amendment to upgrade our Air National Guard F-
15s. The radar they are using dates to the 1970s. In fact, it went out
of production 30 years ago. We had a simple, bipartisan, fully offset
amendment to allow the Air Guard to at least get 10 planes modernized
on an ongoing basis.
It is frustrating. We are failing to tackle the big issues. We are
not even given an opportunity to guarantee Congress knows what the
longer term costs are, and we are shortchanging small investments that
would make a big difference for our Air National Guard.
I hope we are going to have an opportunity as the legislation moves
forward for Congress to do a better job balancing our priorities,
meeting the needs of our men and women in uniform, and protecting our
long-term budget.
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