By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, Nov. 16, 2013 – Long-term preparedness and
near-term readiness are being affected by sequestration and America ignores
this rise in risk at its peril, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in
California today.
Hagel spoke at the first Reagan National Security Forum at
the Reagan Library in Simi Valley. The secretary believes it was appropriate to
highlight readiness at the Reagan conference, because Ronald Reagan faced a
military readiness crisis when he took office in 1981. The American military
was a “hollow force” when Reagan became president and changing that became a
priority.
Hagel said military and civilian leaders have made concerted
efforts to inform the President, Congress, and the American people “about the
growing difficulties we face in training, equipping and preparing our forces
under the cloud of budget uncertainty.”
These challenges are cumulative and will become more
apparent as time goes on, the secretary said.
“Since 9/11, our military has grown more professional, more
lethal and more deployable,” Hagel said. “But it has also grown older -- as
measured by the age of our major platforms, particularly our ships and aircraft
-- and far more expensive in every area, including the pay and benefits we
provide our military personnel.”
Service members are under stress from years of repeated
deployments -- and so are the institutions that support, train and equip them.
“The department is currently facing sequester-level cuts on
the order of $500 billion over 10 years,” Hagel said. “This is in addition to
the ten-year, $487 billion reduction in DOD’s budget that is already underway.
That means we are looking at nearly one trillion dollars in DOD cuts over this
10-year period, unless there is a new budget agreement.”
The secretary said the cuts are too steep, too deep and too
abrupt. He called it an irresponsible way to govern, adding that sequestration
forces the department to manage resources poorly.
“Implementing the 10 percent across-the-board cut required
by sequestration, the department has been forced to absorb even steeper reductions
in the budgetary accounts that fund training, maintenance and procurement --
the core of military readiness,” he said.
The cuts have to be uneven because deploying forces must
have the best training and equipment possible. All military services are
feeling these cuts.
The Navy’s average global presence is down 10 percent, with
particularly sharp reductions in regions like South America, the secretary
said. The Army canceled training rotations for seven brigade combat teams. It
now has just two of 43 active-duty brigade combat teams fully ready and
available to execute a major combat operation.
Air Force units lost 25 percent of the annual training
events that keep them qualified for their assigned missions. Marine Corps units
not going to Afghanistan are getting 30 percent less funding, just as the
service is facing demands for more embassy security, Hagel said.
“These are all current readiness realities, and they have
all occurred since the imposition of sequestration in March,” he said. “But the
effects will be felt for a long period of time to come. By continuing to cancel
training for non-deploying personnel, we will create a backlog of training
requirements that could take years to recover from. And inevitably, we are
shrinking the size of the force that is ready and available to meet new
contingencies or respond to crises across the globe.”
Operation Damayan, the U.S. military operation that’s
providing relief to typhoon-ravaged areas of the Philippines, may not be
possible in the future.
To readiness cuts can be added delays in re-orienting the
force to meet new and emerging threats.
“For 12 years, the bulk of U.S. forces have been organized,
manned, trained and equipped to respond to the specific requirements of the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,” Hagel said. “As the demand of the second of
these two wars comes to an end, the military has been re-orienting its training
in order to build into the force a broader set of capabilities across the
spectrum of conflict, particularly at the high-end. These efforts have also
been seriously disrupted by sequester-level cuts.”
If sequestration continues, the military will not be
prepared to perform its missions, Hagel said. It would be a bet that there
would not be a major contingency operation against a capable adversary in the
near-term.
The secretary called on Congress to fix these serious and
deep problems.
“It will require Congress giving the Department of Defense
the time and flexibility to strategically implement budget reductions and make
the difficult choices necessary for the future,” Hagel said. “We must also
rollback sequestration and fully fund the President’s budget request. Leaders
across the Department will continue to give their best and most honest and
clear-eyed assessment to America’s elected leaders about the consequences of
leaving these steep and damaging cuts in place.
“We need the certainty of a budget,” the secretary
continued. “This perpetual dark cloud of uncertainty hanging over this
department further hinders responsible and wise planning and confidence.”
Hagel stressed that all aspects of the DOD budget must be
searched to find savings. DOD leaders need to pare back overhead costs and
eliminate excess infrastructure. They also need to reform personnel and
compensation policy.
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