another $127-160b for war
[approaching $600b - and Larry Lindsey got fired for saying $100-200b]
USA Today - November 17, 2006
Military may ask $127B for wars Total cost likely to top Vietnam War By Richard Wolf USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The Bush administration is preparing its largest
spending request yet for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, a proposal
that could make the conflict the most expensive since World War II.
The Pentagon is considering $127 billion to $160 billion in requests
from the armed services for the 2007 fiscal year, which began last
month, several lawmakers and congressional staff members said. That’s
on top of $70 billion already approved for 2007.
Since 2001, Congress has approved $502 billion for the war on terror,
roughly two-thirds for Iraq. The latest request, due to reach the
incoming Democratic-controlled Congress next spring, would make the
war on terror more expensive than the Vietnam War.
Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., who will chair the Senate Budget Committee
next year, said the amount under consideration is “$127 billion and
rising.” He said the cost “is going to increasingly become an issue”
because it could prevent Congress from addressing domestic
priorities, such as expanding Medicare prescription drug coverage.
Rep. Jim Cooper, D-Tenn., who put the expected request at $160
billion, said such a sizable increase still “won’t solve the problem”
in Iraq.
Bill Hoagland, a senior budget adviser to Senate Republicans, said:
“At a minimum, they were looking at $130 (billion). If it goes higher
than that, I’m not surprised.”
The new request being considered for the war on terror would be about
one-fourth what the government spends annually on Social Security —
and 10 times what it spends on its space program.
The White House called the figures premature. “They don’t reflect a
decision by the administration,” said budget office spokeswoman
Christin Baker. “It is much too early in the process to make that
determination.”
Before the Iraq war began in 2003, the Bush administration estimated
its cost at $50 billion to $60 billion, though White House economic
adviser Lawrence Lindsey had suggested in 2002 that it could cost as
much as $200 billion.
Growing opposition to the war contributed to Democrats’ takeover of
the House and Senate in this month’s elections. Pennsylvania Rep.
John Murtha, an early critic of the war who lost his bid Thursday to
be the House Democratic leader, vowed to use his clout as chairman of
the House panel that reviews the Pentagon budget “to get these troops
out of Iraq and get back on track and quit spending $8 billion a month.”
“The war’s been an extraordinarily expensive undertaking, both in
lives and in dollars,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Judd
Gregg, R-N.H.
The new request is top-heavy with Army and Air Force costs to replace
and repair equipment and redeploy troops, Hoagland said. That’s why
the 2007 cost is likely to top the war’s average annual price tag.
Overall, he said, “we’re easily headed toward $600 billion.” That
would top the $536 billion cost of Vietnam in today’s dollars. World
War II cost an inflation-adjusted $3.6 trillion.
Leon Panetta, President Clinton’s former chief of staff and a member
of a bipartisan panel studying recommendations on Iraq for President
Bush, said the Pentagon needs $50 billion to $60 billion to “restore
the units that are being brought back here, to re-equip them and get
them back to a combat-readiness status.”