DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Dec. 19, 2014 – Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel
welcomed the fiscal year 2015 National Defense Authorization Act in a statement
issued today, but he called on Congress to work with the department on several
fronts.
“I remain concerned that Congress continues to prevent the
Defense Department from pursuing many cost-savings measures that are essential
to fielding a ready and capable force to meet today's challenges and prepare
for tomorrow's threats,” Hagel said.
The secretary noted that sequestration remains law. The
budget mechanism that enacts across-the-board government spending cuts
threatens the defense budget as well. Hagel warned that “if Congress allows
sequestration to return in 2016, it will damage our military's readiness and
threaten our ability to execute our nation's defense strategy.”
The full text of the secretary’s statement follows:
I want to thank members of Congress -- and particularly the
chairmen of the Senate and House Armed Services committees, Carl Levin and Buck
McKeon -- for their bipartisan work to pass the National Defense Authorization
Act for the 53rd consecutive year. The fiscal year 2015 NDAA extends critical
pay and benefits for our troops; strengthens our efforts to eliminate sexual
assault in the military; and authorizes critical funding for operations to
reinforce our NATO allies and European partners in the face of Russia's
aggression, and to fight the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in the Middle
East -- including the training and equipping of moderate Syrian opposition
forces to combat ISIL on the ground. However, I remain concerned that Congress
continues to prevent the Defense Department from pursuing many cost-savings
measures that are essential to fielding a ready and capable force to meet
today's challenges and prepare for tomorrow's threats. We also need more
predictable budgets. Sequestration remains the law of the land, and if Congress
allows sequestration to return in 2016, it will damage our military's readiness
and threaten our ability to execute our nation's defense strategy.
The longer we defer tough choices, the more difficult they
will become down the road. Congress must partner with DoD leaders in the new
year to provide our military with the budget flexibility and predictability it
needs, and the resources that our men and women in uniform deserve.
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