Should America spend more money on the military?

President Trump is proposing a $54 billion increase in military spending. Trump and his supporters say the 10 percent hike is necessary to bolster the military's capabilities--our forces are stretched thin and we're facing the consequences...

Should America spend more money on the military?

President Trump is proposing a $54 billion increase in military spending. Trump and his supporters say the 10 percent hike is necessary to bolster the military's capabilities--our forces are stretched thin and we're facing the consequences of delayed maintenance. Critics say the U.S. already spends more than a third of what the entire globe spends on defense. Instead of adding more debt, the military needs to be reformed and forced to confront hard questions. What do you think? 

PERSPECTIVES

The U.S. currently spends more on defense than the top six countries combined.

Critics say the military's problems run deeper than money. Force is a means to an end. The U.S. military could be 10 times as powerful as it is today and it would still encounter the same problems.

Fifteen years after launching a worldwide effort to defeat and destroy terrorist organizations, the United States finds itself locked in a pathologically recursive loop; we fight to prevent attacks and defend our values, only to incite further violence against ourselves and allies while destabilizing already chaotic regions. Our forces are competent, professional, and effective. But, no matter how good our forces are, it is irrelevant for the reasons laid out by historian Williamson Murray: "No matter how effective the military institutions might be at the tactical and operational levels, if the strategy and political framework [was] flawed, the result was defeat."

The problem lies with the government and the American people. The military's transition to an all-volunteer force (AVF) changes the dynamics of how the military is used. Politicians and civilians have less to lose with an AVF and thus, are less likely to critically look at the failing policies and strategies.

In this sense the AVF short-circuited America's social contract. It freed national leadership from the grounding reality of public involvement. Today almost all Americans will say they "support the troops" and most will support increased defense budgets. But few senior officials or national leaders -- certainly not the public at large -- will even ask what, exactly, are we doing in Yemen? Moreover, is our policy of targeted killing working? Since we don't ask even the basic questions, we doom ourselves to continue policies that may not work.

We're not winning because we're weak. We're not winning because we don't know what winning looks like. The lack of a coherent political and diplomatic strategy means that even the strongest military in the world can't win.

The solution to our strategic malaise is not funding, equipment or technology. We need a strategy that is sustainable and realistic-- one that evaluates threats and defense needs (engagements, support to allies, etc.) against a harsh assessment of resources available.

America's military doesn't need more money -- what it needs is an engaged public to demand a genuine strategy >>

Military leaders say 26 years of budget cuts and spending caps have hurt the military's preparedness. Years of disfunction in Congress and defense spending caps made it nearly impossible for the military to plan their finances in any real way.

The Navy, said Adm. William Moran, vice chief of Naval Operations, is smaller than it has been in 99 years. About 53 percent of naval aircraft can no longer fly because there isn't enough money to fix them. On Sept. 11, 2001, the U.S. had 316 ships and 400,000 sailors; now it has 275 ships and 90,000 fewer sailors.

The military in its current capacity is stretched thin. If full-scale war were to break out, the U.S. military would not be in a position to decisively push back against large nations like China and Russia.

He said that while the United States can deal with threats from small countries, it is not sufficiently well-equipped to fend off what he called a "high-end adversary," such as Russia or China.

The surprising state of military unreadiness >>


 

OMB Director Mick Mulvaney says that @POTUS is proposing $603 billion in military spending. https://t.co/QhQkUEUWd4 pic.twitter.com/MOKbxUI4Ub

-- Fox News (@FoxNews) February 27, 2017

Trump: No more money for ILLEGALS

Also Trump: Spend the money on our military

Me: BOOM!

-- Eric Spracklen (@EricSpracklen) February 27, 2017

@CLewandowski_ It is so refreshing to see @POTUS supporting and rebuilding our military. The country needs this both for defense and morale

-- Anthony (@hereholdmydrink) February 27, 2017
 

I want a strong US military, but throwing big bags of $ at DoD b4 reforming its utterly broken acquisition & accounting systems is stupid.

-- John Schindler (@20committee) February 27, 2017

Gen. James Mattis, SASC Hearing, March 5, 2013: pic.twitter.com/Ujl1zPwkUU

-- Micah Zenko (@MicahZenko) February 27, 2017

Makes so much sense. As of January, 2016, the US was ONLY spending more on its military than the next 8 nations combined. We better ramp up! https://t.co/EdjFAd2h2L

-- (((Jason Miller ))) (@costlylovewins) February 27, 2017

The Tylt is focused on debates and conversations around news, current events and pop culture. We provide our community with the opportunity to share their opinions and vote on topics that matter most to them. We actively engage the community and present meaningful data on the debates and conversations as they progress. The Tylt is a place where your opinion counts, literally. The Tylt is an Advance Digital, Inc. property. Join us on Twitter @TheTylt or on Facebook, we'd love to hear what you have to say.

Our editors found this article on this site using Google and regenerated it for our readers.