[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 91 (Tuesday, June 9, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Page S3895]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT
Mr. NELSON. Mr. President, I rise to give my overall support for the
content of the Defense authorization bill, but my considerable concern
and, therefore, my ``no'' vote on final passage in the Committee on
Armed Services was because the bill, as crafted by the majority in the
committee, is a travesty, using an artificial budget to authorize the
necessary operations and troop readiness of our military establishment.
Now, that is what the bill does. It is an artificial budget. That may
not sound particularly offensive, particularly when as a policy bill
there are many good things in this Defense bill; things such as
providing for the increase of our military services; things such as
certain weapons systems that are authorized.
Historically, this bill has been recognized as being bipartisan, and
it addresses the problems posed by an increasingly dangerous world. The
Defense authorization bill has historically provided the military with
the resources our Nation needs. But the ranking Democrat, the Senator
from Rhode Island, and I are compelled to oppose this bill because it
addresses these problems with an artificial budget that treats an
essential part of our military, which is preparedness--the necessary
operations training and maintenance, preparedness of our military--in
an unplanned way. They are treating it as an expense by sending it over
to an account that is not even on the budget--an account called
overseas contingency operations or the funds for what used to be the
Iraq war and is now the winding down of the Afghanistan war. This is an
unbudgeted item--operations readiness, training--necessary for our
military to be ready, and they are taking it out of the Defense
Department budget and sticking it over here. Now, that doesn't make
sense.
Some might say: Well, why in the world would they do that? Because
folks around here are concerned about something called the sequester,
which is supposedly an artificial limit on keeping expenditures of the
Federal Government below a certain level. That may sound like a good
thing, if it is done with legitimate numbers, but when in fact you are
creating that artificial limit pressing down on Federal spending, but
you take a major part of that Federal spending out and put it over here
in an unaccounted-for account that doesn't reach those budgetary caps,
that is nothing more than--I will put it politely--budgetary sleight of
hand. I will put it more directly: That is budgetary fakery. Therefore,
this Senator is going to oppose the bill.
The Senate Committee on Armed Services has received testimony from
military leader after military leader--chief master sergeants,
generals, admirals--who have said the policy of this arbitrary budget
cap called sequestration is harming our national security and is
putting our military strategy at risk.
Our strategy is not just dependent on defense spending, but it is
very dependent upon nondefense spending, which in this bill is not even
being addressed because that artificial ceiling--the sequestration--is
like a meat ax right across the Federal budget. That is affecting--and
every one of those military leaders will tell you--that is affecting
our military preparedness.
These arbitrary budget caps impact this nondefense spending. It keeps
us from providing funds for other agencies that are so essential to the
national security. The Coast Guard, they are out there in the war zone.
They are in another war zone down in the Caribbean as they are
interdicting all kinds of drug smugglers. What about the FBI, the CIA,
the DEA, Customs, Border Patrol, Air Traffic Control, TSA? All of those
are affected and affect national security.
So if we are going to continue to budget like this, the result is
going to be more budget uncertainty for our military, and it is going
to end up bleeding funds away from our military readiness.
What we are doing is we are avoiding the obvious. The obvious is
working around to bring those numbers down under those artificial
budget caps. So it is time for us to get rid of the sequester. We did
it before, 2 years ago, with a bipartisan budget--the one known as
Murray-Ryan. We need to do it again. Otherwise, right now, we are
wasting our time working on bills that have no chance of becoming law.
We need to fix the budget caps for defense and nondefense spending. You
do not use a bandaid when you have an artery that is gushing blood.
Now, it is not just this. There are other examples. Take, for
example, a program that I have some familiarity with--our Nation's
space program. We have been trying since 2010, since Senator Kay Bailey
Hutchison, a Republican from Texas, and I passed a NASA authorization
bill that put us on the course that will ultimately, as the President
has now announced, take us to Mars. But we can't get the policy updated
because we can't pass another NASA authorization bill. So what happens?
It goes to the Committee on Appropriations. Thank goodness we have
folks such as Senator Shelby and Senator Mikulski who direct that.
But now what is happening to appropriations bills? They are being put
under this sequester, and, because of that, it is going to be hard in
this Chamber to get 60 votes to pass appropriations bills. As a result,
we are going to be in near cardiac arrest right at the end of the time,
during a continuing resolution, which is no way to run a railroad when
you appropriate money. We have to come to the altar and realize what we
are facing, and that is this artificial budgetary cap.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Hawaii.
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