A Defense Budget Strategy for Winning the Long War

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A Defense Budget Strategy for Winning the Long War

March 2, 2006 23 min read Download Report
Baker Spring
Baker Spring
Former Kirby Research Fellow in National Security Policy
Baker is a former Kirby Research Fellow in National Security Policy

With the stakes no less than the survival of the free world, U.S. leadership is essential to winning the "Long War" now raging against the forces of Islamic fascism. Given the open-ended nature of this conflict, U.S. lead­ership requires a long-term commitment to making the necessary resources available to the military.

On February 6, the Bush Administration submitted its fiscal year (FY) 2007 defense budget request to Congress.[1] The request is for $439.3 billion in budget authority for FY 2007, which represents a $28.5 bil­lion (7 percent) increase over the enacted level for 2006. The FY 2006 enacted level does not include a request for supplemental appropriations for defense, which the Bush Administration sent to Congress on February 16,[2] but the Bush Administration will likely request supplemental funds for FY 2007. Thus, the precise level of increase or decrease in the overall Department of Defense (DOD) budget from FY 2006 is uncertain.

The Administration's request comes at a time when political pressure to reduce defense expenditures is growing. The perception is that the battle in Iraq con­stitutes the entirety of the war effort. With this per­ception comes the expectation that the American people are entitled to a new peace dividend when the battle in Iraq winds down. Furthermore, there are large budget deficits.

Polls show that the American people do not acknowledge that the economy is growing and that they are dissatisfied with economic conditions.[3] The American people continue to demonstrate an insatiable appetite for expanded entitlements. As a result, Congress is tempted to divert federal resources from defense to more generous entitle­ment benefits for health and retirement, despite the fact that even the existing benefits are unsus­tainable in the long term.

Although doing so may be difficult, Congress must resist these pressures and make a strong com­mitment to fund the nation's war requirements well into the future. Generating support for robust defense budgets means that Congress, along with President George W. Bush, must undertake the dif­ficult task of changing public opinion, not following it. This starts with reminding the American people that the ongoing war is not over, regardless of what happens in Iraq, and that the stakes in this war extend to their lives, liberty, and future prosperity.

Congress also needs to recognize that the defense budget faces internal pressures that, if not remedied, could undermine the effective prosecution of the war over the long term. Funding demands for man­power and ongoing operations are weakening the military's ability to arm itself with the new weapons that sustain its position as the world's best fighting force. Further, the appeal of researching and devel­oping new weapons is starting to overwhelm the process of actually fielding them.

Therefore, meeting the resource needs for win­ning the war includes the following requirements:

Maintaining overall defense budgets at 4 per­cent of gross domestic product (GDP);

Recognizing that the projected growth in enti­tlement expenditures (Social Security, Medi­care, and Medicaid) jeopardizes the nation's ability to wage war over the long term and that entitlement reform is a national security issue;

Considering opportunities for increasing the efficiency of the Department of Defense's invest­ment in manpower;

Rebalancing defense expenditures to increase investments in research, development, and pro­curement ("modernization") of weapons and equipment;

Rebalancing the modernization budget to emphasize actually fielding new weapons and equipment.

The Defense Budget: Where It Has Been, Where It Is Now

As a nation at war, the U.S. is spending remarkably little on defense. This is particularly the case when defense spending is measured against the size of the economy or gross domestic product. For example, Department of Defense spending peaked at 34.5 per­cent of GDP during World War II. During the Korean War, it peaked at 11.7 percent of GDP. During Viet­nam, it peaked at over 8.9 percent of GDP. In FY 2005, Department of Defense expenditures were assessed at 3.9 percent of GDP. (See Chart 1.)

Chart 1
Source: Reprinted from U.S. Department of Defense, "FY 2007 Department of Defense Budget," briefing slides, February 6, 2006, p. 25, at /static/reportimages/09F0E5AC83CBFD25319A8BEEFA26F0BB.pdf

It may be argued that comparing today with World War II, Korea, and Vietnam is not appropri­ate as the nation looks at future defense expendi­tures because the current conflict with Islamic fascists is a long-term conflict and the others were discrete, high-intensity conflicts. However, the United States supported higher defense budgets throughout the decades-long Cold War, spending an average of almost 7.5 percent of GDP for national security functions during the period from FY 1948 to FY 1991.[4]

Further, it is important to compare how defense has fared in the budget debates over the years with the major entitlement programs of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. While defense spending has been relatively restrained, expenditures on these three major entitlement programs have been exploding. In FY 1962, these entitlement programs consumed 2.5 percent of GDP. By FY 2003, they consumed 8.3 percent of GDP. (See Chart 2.)

Chart 2
Source: Heritage Foundation calculation based on data from Congressional Budget Office, "A 125-Year Picture of the Federal Government's Share of the Economy, 1950 to 2075," Long-Range Fiscal Policy Brief, revised July 3, 2002, at http://www.cbagov/ftpdocs/35xx/doc3521/125RevisedJuly3.pdf (February 22, 2006).

Internal Pressures on the Defense Budget

The defense budget has also experienced changes in its internal structure over the past two decades. At this point, these trends raise ques­tions about whether the U.S. military will remain at the cut­ting edge of defense technol­ogy. The following are the three most important trends that increase pressure on the nation's defense capabilities.

TREND #1: Unit man­power costs have been ris­ing.

The account allocated to compensating the men and women in uniform has declined from 28.4 percent of the overall DOD budget in FY 1994 to 24.6 percent in FY 2004. However, this has occurred during a time when overall manpower levels ("endstrength") have been significantly reduced. Endstrength in FY 1994 was over 3.4 million positions across the active and reserve components; in FY 2004, it was less than 2.6 million positions.[5] This is a 24 percent reduc­tion. As a result, compensation per person in the military has gone up dramatically. (See Chart 3.)

Chart 3
Source: Heritage Foundation calculations based on data from U.S. Department of Defense, Selected Manpower Statistics, Fiscal Year 2004, pp.44 and 156, at /static/reportimages/E226A786C006197B9BC9A2448C612B49.pdf (February 22, 2006), and National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2006, April 2005, pp. 132-133, at http://www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2006/fy2006
_greenbook.pdf
(February 22, 2006)

While significant increases should have been expected as the military sought to emphasize qual­ity over quantity in the all-volunteer force, the DOD may be approaching the time when it needs to ask whether it is getting its money's worth for the amount it is investing in military compensation. The problem is compounded by the generous non-cash compensation provided to military personnel. According to a January 2004 report by the Con­gressional Budget Office, non-cash compensation accounts for well over half of all military benefits.[6]

TREND #2: Overall operational and support costs have been outpacing the amounts invested in modernization.

The operations and support budget, which is defined as the sum of the military personnel account and the operations and maintenance account, consumed almost 65 percent of the total DOD budget as of FY 2004. (See Chart 4.) Mean­while, the modernization budget, which is defined as the sum of the account for research and develop­ing new weapons and equipment and the account for procuring new weapons and equipment, fell to roughly 31 percent of the total DOD budget within the same period of time. This trend raises the ques­tion of whether the nation is paying for today's mil­itary at the expense of tomorrow's military.

Chart 4
* Includes foreign contributions to cover the costs of Operation Desert Storm
Source: Heritage Foundation calculations based on data from U.S. Department of Defense, National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2006, April 2005, pp. 131-133 at http://www.defenselink.mil/comptrollet/defbudget/fy2006/
fy2006_greenbook.pdf
 (February 22, 2006)

TREND #3: Funding for research­ing and developing new weapons and equipment has outstripped funding for procurement of the same.

In FY 1985, procurement was 75 per­cent of the overall modernization budget. In FY 2004, procurement stood at 56 per­cent of the modernization budget. (See Chart 5.) This trend raises two questions. The first is whether the procurement budget is too constrained to absorb effec­tively the technology that the research and development budget is producing. The second is whether the defense indus­try now sees research and development as an independent profit center and has been given an incentive to research defense technology to death.

Chart 5
Source: Heritage Foundation calculation based on data from U.S. Department of Defense, National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2006, April 2005, pp. 131-133, at http://www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2006/
fy2006_greenbook.pdf

Accounting for and responding to both the external and internal pressures on the defense budget is necessary to sustain the overall capabilities of the U.S. military throughout what could be a decades-long conflict. Because these pressures, if ignored or other­wise not addressed, will weaken U.S. military capabilities only incremen­tally, Congress is all too likely to ignore the problems until they become undeniable and the U.S. suf­fers a major military setback. Now is the time to start remedying these problems, recognizing that the solu­tions may take years of consistent effort.

Five Goals for Funding Victory in the Long War

The problems currently emerging regarding the defense budget have been years in the making. The solu­tions, therefore, are found in revers­ing long-term trends. The need for this long-term approach is made more apparent by the present cir­cumstance of facing a long-term conflict. Congress needs to sustain the war effort over many years, much as it did during the Cold War.[7] Specifically, Congress needs to commit itself to fulfilling five goals regarding the defense budget.

GOAL #1: Sustain annual defense budgets at an average of 4 percent of GDP.

After accounting for the defense sup­plemental appropriations, the overall defense budget now absorbs roughly 4 percent of GDP. Depending on the mili­tary circumstances in Afghanistan and Iraq, the special supplemental appro­priations to fund the operations in these two countries could shrink dramatically or go away altogether. In the meantime, supplemental appropriations should be used to fund these operations.

By the same token, both the Admin­istration and Congress should look to the day when the operations in Afghan­istan and Iraq become small enough in scope and predictable enough that large-scale defense supplemental appropriations will no longer be neces­sary. However, if the supplemental appropriations become dramatically smaller or disappear, Congress will be tempted to simply subtract an arbi­trarily calculated value of forgone future supplemental appropriations from future defense budgets.

This "subtract out" approach to the defense bud­get would be a serious mistake. Rather, Congress should recognize that the core defense program, which excludes activities not directly related to the conduct of contingency operations, needs increased funding. From this perspective, Congress should recycle the funds "saved" from winding down operations in Afghanistan and Iraq back into the core defense program.

Congress needs to recognize that devoting 4 percent of GDP to defense imposes a reasonable burden on the U.S. economy. This level of com­mitment to defense is not at all like that made by the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Indeed, it is significantly below the mean of roughly 7.5 per­cent of GDP that the United States spent on defense during the Cold War. Spending only 4 percent of GDP will not risk losing the war because of economic collapse brought on by excessive defense spending.

Further, Congress needs to keep in mind the eco­nomic costs of military failure. Military power trumps economic power in the short term. Even a single successful attack on U.S. territory by a nuclear weapon generating electromagnetic pulse (EMP) would have devastating economic consequences.[8] The economic impact of several EMP attacks or direct nuclear strikes would be catastrophic.

GOAL #2: Limit the future growth in spend­ing on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

All of the federal government's other responsibili­ties and programs, including defense, face an uncer­tain future unless the three major entitlement programs- Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid-are re-formed. Comptroller General David M. Walker has calculated that fed­eral spending will consume roughly 40 percent of GDP by 2040 if spending is left uncon­strained and revenue is held constant.[9] Driving this projec­tion is the expected growth in spending on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Walker calculates that spending on each of these three programs will far exceed economic growth between 2005 and 2030.[10] (See Chart 6.)

Chart 6
Note: Social Security and Medicare Projections are based on the intermediate assumptions of the 2005 Trustee's Reports. Medicaid projections are based on CBO's December 2003 long-term projections for federal spending on Medicaid under mid-range assumptions.
Source: GAO analysis based on data from the Office of the Chief Actuary, Social Security Administration, Office of the Actuary, Centers for Medicare and medicaid Services, and the Congressional Budget Office.

While defense specialists should have no particular interest in entitlement pro­grams, their projected spending growth is making the reform of these programs a national security issue. President Bush announced in his State of the Union address that he plans to appoint a commis­sion to consider ways to resolve this daunting prob­lem.[11]

Those who are concerned about the future of the nation's security cannot afford to sit on the sidelines as policymakers begin to address the issue of entitle­ment reform. While defense specialists need not insist on one particular approach to reform over oth­ers, they can and should state that the goal of the reform effort should be to structure Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid such that they leave suffi­cient room to fund national security programs at 4 percent of GDP for both the near and long terms, with total federal outlays not exceeding 20 percent of GDP and taxes not exceeding 18 percent of GDP.

GOAL #3: Find more efficient ways to invest in military manpower.

Congress spends considerable effort overseeing defense acquisition programs to ensure that the tax­payers receive their money's worth for the weapons and equipment purchased by the Department of Defense. While it is justly concerned that members of the military receive adequate compensation and enjoy a good quality of life, it is not clear that Con­gress is paying appropriate attention to the question of whether DOD's investment in manpower is as effi­cient and effective as possible.

The House and Senate Armed Services Commit­tees would serve the interests of the military and the nation by holding focused hearings on the effective­ness of the investment in manpower. Left unad­dressed, there is the distinct possibility that the compensation requirements per member of the militarywill force manpower levels lower than currently projected. While the desire for high-quality mili­tary personnel under the all-volunteer force has justified previous and currently planned reductions in manpower, bud­get pressures derived from com­pensation requirements should not become the driver in deter­mining endstrength.

Two issues deserve special attention. The first regards the balance between compensation that service personnel now receive and compensation that they receive on a deferred basis. The second regards the balance between cash compensation and in-kind benefits, such as housing benefits. While it is unclear at this time which would be the best options, Congress needs to examine whether it is better to emphasize current compensation over deferred compensation and cash compensation over in-kind benefits in the future.

Finally, a debate over compensation and man­power levels runs the distinct risk of devolving into an argument that pits the active component against the reserve component of the overall force. Trading off manpower between the active component and the reserve component may be the wrong way to look at this issue. Rather, Congress should consider means for improving the "tooth-to-tail" ratio. From this perspective, manpower tradeoffs should be con­sidered among the combat, combat service, and combat service support elements.

GOAL #4: Set a goal of allocating at least $200 billion annually to the military modern­ization budget by the middle of the next decade.

Buying and fielding new weapons and equip­ment is necessary to keep the U.S. military the best in the world. However, the modernization budget fights an uphill battle within the current budget debates. While it is reasonable to expect that the ongoing requirement to maintain a high opera­tional tempo will temporarily tilt the defense bud­get in favor of operations over modernization, such an imbalance cannot be sustained for an extended period. Congress must rebalance the defense bud­get, support larger overall defense budgets, or pur­sue a combination of both.

However, given the need for meeting current operational demands, simply requiring the allo­cation of higher percentages of established overall defense budgets to the modernization budget is imprudent. The better approach is for Congress to establish a dollar figure as a goal for the mod­ernization budget. This goal must account for the fact that a high operational tempo will itself demand higher modernization funding, particu­larly for procurement. Barring the need for an additional large-scale military operation, this goal for the modernization budget should be at least $200 billion annually by the middle of the next decade.

GOAL #5: Set a goal of allocating 60 percent of the modernization budget to the procurement account.

The Bush Administration's FY 2007 proposal allocates $84.2 billion to procurement, which is $8 billion more than the enacted level for FY 2006. While an $8 billion increase may seem generous, the Bush Administration's FY 2006 budget request projected a procurement account of $91.6 billion for FY 2007. Further, the FY 2006 supplemental request includes over $16 billion in procurement funding.[12] Depending on the size of procurement funding in an expected FY 2007 supplemental funding request, the procurement budget could actually decline in FY 2007 from the FY 2006 level. Without the expected supplemental appropria­tions, the current request will reduce procurement's share of the overall modernization budget to less than 54 percent.

In this case, Congress should look to set a goal that allocates a specific share of the modernization budget to procurement. The goal should be a min­imum of 60 percent of modernization funds allo­cated to the procurement account. Since this goal will take years to achieve, Congress needs to get started by establishing the goal now.

Some may argue that this goal is unwise for two reasons. The first argument is that the military should favor quality over quantity in moderniza­tion and adjust to buying smaller quantities of weapons. The second argument is that large-scale buys will drive defense contractors to offer artifi­cially low bids on research and development projects in the expectation that they will profit from large-scale procurements at a later time. While these arguments have some merit and considerable surface appeal, they point the Department of Defense in the wrong direction at this time.

A modernization budget that is unbalanced in the direction of research and development over procurement will not absorb technology efficiently and effectively. An indicator of this inefficiency is higher unit costs for the weapons and equipment that ultimately are procured and fielded.

The same imbalance will drive both DOD acqui­sition authorities and defense contractors to adopt an approach that is just as counterproductive as adopting unrealistically low cost projections at the outset of a program in order to make up the differ­ence in procurement. This approach is to search for technological silver bullets, which provides an incentive to research programs to death. One such example is the Space-Based Infrared-High early warning satellite, which seems stuck in the devel­opment phase and has repeatedly generated cost overruns.[13]

As research and development becomes an inde­pendent profit center for defense contractors, a dif­ferent perverse incentive emerges. Put crassly, the military and acquisition executives use the require­ments process to set performance requirements at the outer reaches of what is possible. The contrac­tor responds by "promising the moon." The con­tractor profits by performing the research and development and has little incentive to push the system into the field. The program may be canceled in the end, but the contractor earns a nice profit. In the end, the military and the taxpayers get the ben­efit of some neat research but no fielded military capability.

Conclusion

In human, political, and economic terms, the price of losing a major war is steep. One can only speculate as to what would have happened to the United States if it had lost the Cold War. It is clear what happened to the Soviet Union, however: It ceased to exist. The stakes in the current war, another open-ended conflict, are equally high.

Today, American civilians are very much on the front line. This means that their lives, liberty, and prosperity are directly at stake in this conflict. It is very much in the interest of the American people to make the investments that are necessary to pre­vail. Given that this will be the Long War, these investments must be sustained. The American people are depending on Congress to make the right choice and allocate the necessary resources to the military.

Baker Spring is F. M. Kirby Research Fellow in National Security Policy in the Douglas and Sarah Alli­son Center for Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for Inter­national Studies, at The Heritage Foundation.






[1]For a detailed description of the defense budget request, see U.S. Department of Defense, "Fiscal 2007 Department of Defense Budget Is Released" and attached documents, February 6, 2006, at http://www.defenselink.mil/releases/2006/nr20060206-12435.html
(February 6, 2006).

[2]For a detailed description of the supplemental request, see George W. Bush, letter to J. Dennis Hastert and attached docu­ments, February 16, 2006, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/amendments/
supplemental2_2_16_06.pdf
(February 23, 2006).

[3]Robert J. Samuelson, "Worry While You Spend," The Washington Post, November 9, 2005, p. A31.

[4]Heritage Foundation calculation based on DOD data. U.S. Department of Defense, National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2006,April 2005, pp. 216-217, at http://www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2006/
fy2006_greenbook.pdf
(January 30, 2006).

[5]U.S. Department of Defense, Selected Manpower Statistics, Fiscal Year 2004 (Washington, D.C.: Department of Defense, 2005), pp. 37-45, Table 2-11, and p. 156, Table 5-2, at http://www.dior.whs.mil/mmid/M01/fy04/m01fy04.pdf (February 21, 2006).

[6]Congressional Budget Office, "Military Compensation: Balancing Cash and Noncash Benefits," January 16, 2004, p. 2.

[7]For a general description of the balanced approach to defense spending during the Cold War, see James Jay Carafano and Paul Rosenzweig, Winning the Long War: Lessons from the Cold War for Defeating Terrorism and Preserving Freedom (Washing­ton, D.C.: The Heritage Foundation, 2005), pp. 128-151.

[8]William R. Graham, Ph.D., et al., Executive Report, vol. 1 in Report of the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attack, 2004, at http://armedservices.house.gov/openingstatementsandpressreleases/
108thcongress/04-07-22emp.pdf
(February 8, 2006).

[9]David M. Walker, "Saving Our Future Requires Tough Choices Today," October 31, 2005, p. 7.

[10]Ibid., p. 8. Heritage analysis has reached the same conclusion as David Walker. See Brian M. Riedl, "Entitlement-Driven Long-Term Budget Substantially Worse Than Previously Projected," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 1897, Novem­ber 30, 2005, at http://www.heritage.org/Research/Budget/bg1897.cfm.

[11]George W. Bush, "State of the Union Address," January 31, 2006, at http://www.whitehouse.gov/stateoftheunion/2006 (February 8, 2006).

[12]Bush, letter to J. Dennis Hastert.

[13]Michael Sirak, "Air Force Begins Search for SBIRS Alternative, Decision Planned by '08," Defense Daily, January 10, 2006, at http://www.defensedaily.com/VIP/common/pub/dd/dd01100602.html
(February 9, 2006; subscription required).

Authors

Baker Spring
Baker Spring

Former Kirby Research Fellow in National Security Policy