Conclusion

The United States is unlikely to fight a war at home, and a potential great power conflict abroad would likely be a choice rather than an inevitability. Yet Washington demands that Americans make a generational investment in the military without naming the costs or identifying the conditions in which the United States would decrease security spending in the future. Arms industry spokespeople and government officials promote a military buildup in the name of great power competition, but they neglect to define its contours – or make a compelling case for how it advances core national interests.

At this moment, inflating the Pentagon budget appears to be an end itself rather than a means to building an effective national defense. The military is not, in fact, the best or the only way for the United States to address national security threats. So as decisionmakers digest proposals to increase national security spending, expand the defense industrial base, and loosen weapon acquisition, they should consider the strategic and fiscal challenges that might face their successors in thirty years.

In 2024, interest payments on the debt will exceed the Pentagon base budget for the first time. In the next decade, personnel and weapon sustainment costs will exceed the rate of inflation – accounting for nearly 70% of Pentagon budget growth. These problems will only compound with time, with future generations forced to shoulder the economic burden if the United States does not change course.

  • AnIndefiniteArticle
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    1 hour ago

    According to the NDS Commission, the Pentagon should have more than just a bigger budget. Departmental leadership should also have greater ability to advance weapon acquisition programs with more limited oversight. Indeed, NDS commissioners support efforts to replace the Pentagon’s current budgeting and acquisition system with one much less accountable to U.S. taxpayers, but far more accommodating to contractors.[17](javascript:void(0)) A looser budgeting and acquisition system would enable the Pentagon to funnel more money to military contractors, faster.

    Just hand it over to the private contractors as quickly and with as little oversight as possible!

    Looter tactics.