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Analysis

The Sequester Noise

The Hill is today publishing a raft of commentaries on the defense budget sequester. They include pieces by myself, Gordon Adams and Mackenzie Eaglen. Wheeler and Adams separately argue that what we are hearing now about the defense budget sequester is mostly elections campaign noise; we differ in thinking the lame duck will address it effectively (I don't) and some other mostly technical but important issues. Eaglen makes some interesting concessions--that defense spending is on the way down. There are also some highly predicable pieces from the usual suspects. They all are at Congress Blog.

Follow the link to my own piece, "No End in Sight to Squawking over Impending Defense Sequestration." You may find the text of it below interesting as it contains the references (and links to reports, articles, etc.) for my various assertions. See the endnotes.

Original text with endnotes:

The defense budget politicians are going ga-ga over a monster they helped to create: the "sequester" of $492 billion out of the defense budget over the next nine years-the broadly undesired effect of the Budget Control Act and the failed Super Committee of 2011. The most palpably political Secretary of Defense in decades, Leon Panetta, says it's "doomsday" but has instructed his staff to do nothing about it-at least visibly. The capital's self-anointed Pentagon money huckster, Congressman Buck McKeon (R-Calif.), the Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, provides new hyperbole every few days, and senators from both parties busy themselves, as recently as last week, demanding reports whose only real effect will be to help them write more speeches.

All this "Brownian Motion"[1] is the embodiment of the dysfunction in Washington. It's not that they can't do anything about something they all profess to be horrible; it's that they don't want to.

That the Department of Defense (DOD) must be defended from sequester is one of the few unifying beliefs in Washington, even if it is quite poorly informed. Maneuvering for the elections is more important to the actors in an elections spectacle. The Republicans want to label Democrats as "anti-defense," idly standing by as the defense budget is cut, and the Democrats paint the Republicans as wantonly obstructionist. Both sides think they'll leverage more votes in November and are avidly sticking to their game plan.

Their opposing motivations resulted in typically dysfunctional legislation last week: an amendment to tell them something they already think they know-a report from the executive branch that says sequester means too many cuts too deep, administered in a mindless, automatic fashion.[2] The only real purpose to be served is providing fodder for newly elevated bombast. Yet, the authors of the amendment preen themselves play-acting they secured a meaningful step forward.[3]

But, they may not even want that report from the executive brand. It would mean an end to the endless games Washington has been playing with the numbers sequester can mean.

For example, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has repeatedly testified the sequester would cause the national defense budget function to lose $492 billion over nine years,[4] but as late as last week[5] politicians, and even journalists,[6] were saying the cuts would be $600 billion.

The games hardly end there. CBO has further explained that sequester would impose a $55 billion reduction in the 2013 defense budget;[7] others say it would be $60 billion;[8] still others say more. It depends on what "baseline" you work from: CBO's; the larger amount of the Obama defense budget request for 2013, or still higher projections for 2013-such as what House Republicans are seeking. Carefully selected baselines are useful things.

Think tanks, budget analysts and reporters are having a field day with the numbers expressed as percentages. Two different think tanks separately reported 15 percent[9] or 7.5 percent[10] reductions in the defense budget in 2013 from sequester. CBO estimates it at 10 percent;[11] CRS says 11.5 percent.[12] Bloomberg at BDOV Insight says 13%.[13] They all-well most-make a plausible argument; some seek to justify words like "indefensible," "catastrophic," or-of course-"doomsday."

One of the more intriguing things about sequester is a rumored subterranean debate about whether or not the sequester cuts must occur as a mindlessly automatic, across the board cutting operation in every separate "program, project and activity" in the defense budget, as most believe and expect.[14] There have been hints, [15] off-hand remarks, [16] and rumors[17] that the White House's agent, the Office of Management and Budget, has something different in store.[18] OMB might even attempt to make it rational.

But that would imply additional cuts in the defense budget are both feasible and appropriate. To propose that before the elections would be for the Democrats to jump into the Republicans' "anti-defense" trap. That's not going to happen.

As a result, the noise will continue.

________________________________

[1] Wikipedia, “Brownian Motion.” (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[2] David Dayen, “Murray Amendment to Request Study on Trigger Cuts Passes in Farm Bills,” Firedoglake, June 22, 2012. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[3] Senator John McCain, “McCain-Murray Amendment Calls for Study of Impact of Sequester,” June 21, 2012. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[4] Congressional Budget Office, "The Budget and Economical Outlook: Fiscal Years 2012-2022," January 2012, p. 13. (Downloaded July 10, 2012) (Hereinafter The Budget and Economical Outlook: Fiscal Years 2012-2022)

[5] Spencer Ackerman, "House Defense Chief to Boehner, Pentagon: You Suck,” Defense Room, June 21, 2012. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[6] Rowan Scarborough, “Pentagon planners ordered to keep potential budget cuts from Congress,” The Washington Times, May 20, 2012, pp. 1-2. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)(Hereinafter “Pentagon planners ordered to keep potential budget cuts from Congress”)

[7] The Budget and Economical Outlook: Fiscal Years 2012-2022 p. 12.

[8] Loren B. Thompson, Viewpoint: Five Things You Probably Didn’t Know About Sequestration of the Defense Budget: Plus one thing you probably did know: There is a universal agreement that sequestration is a bad idea.,” Industry Week, June 14, 2012. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[9] Bipartisan Policy Center, Indefensible: The Sequester’s Mechanics and Adverse Effects on National and Economic Security, June 2012, p. 5. (Downloaded July 10, 2012) (Hereinafter Indefensible: The Sequester’s Mechanics and Adverse Effects on National and Economic Security)

[10] Winslow Wheeler, The Sequester Noise, June 26, 2012.

[11] The Budget and Economical Outlook: Fiscal Years 2012-2022, p. 12.

[12] Congressional Research Service, The Budget Control Act of 2011: The Effects on Spending and the Budget Deficit When the Automatic Spending Cuts Are Implemented, May 4, 2012, p. 7. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[13] New Priorities Network, “Pentagon May Sequester 13% of $432 Billion.” (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[14] Indefensible: The Sequester’s Mechanics and Adverse Effects on National and Economic Security, p. 5.

[15] Gordon Adams, “Sequester Rules; or Does It?The Will and the Wallet, March 13, 2012. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[16] Bureau of Food and Drugs, “The Plan is No Plan,” The Will and the Wallet, March 9, 2012. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[17]“Pentagon planners ordered to keep potential budget cuts from Congress”, pp. 1-2.

[18] Emelie Rutherford, “Admin Would Have Flexibility in Applying DoD Sequestration Cuts,” Defense Daily, January 18, 2012.(Downloaded July 10, 2012); or Emelie Rutherford, “Sequester Not All It’s Cracked Up to Be: Admin Would Have Flexibility in Applying DoD Sequestration Cuts,” The Kitchen Sink. (Downloaded July 10, 2012)

[19] Project on Government Oversight, “The Pentagon Labyrinth: 10 Short essays to Help You Through It,” Defense and the National Interest, August 16, 2010.(Downloaded July 10, 2012)