By Jim Garamone
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, March 4, 2015 – Internal reforms are just as
important to the Defense Department as an increase to its budget, the chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff told the House Appropriations Committee’s defense
subcommittee today.
Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey told the subcommittee that the
department requires the flexibility to trim its excess infrastructure; re-examine
its pay, benefits and retirement systems; and retire unneeded weapon systems in
this fiscally constrained time.
All members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, he said, are
convinced that this flexibility is crucial to the long-term health of the force.
Budget Increase, Reforms Required
“It’s been difficult to communicate to our men and women
serving why we have to do it,” Dempsey said. “But we’ve taken that
responsibility on and have made several recommendations to you on internal
reforms and we certainly need both the topline [budget] increase that the
president has provided, but just as importantly, the reforms that we’ve
requested.”
If Congress does not approve the president’s fiscal year
2016 budget request -- which is $33 billion above sequester caps -- or if
Congress does not give the department flexibility, “we’ll have to change our
strategy,” the chairman said.
The strategy addresses the threats of today and puts in
place the force of the future, he said.
“And if we can’t execute it, what I’ll be saying to you is
that we're not doing what the nation needs us to do,” the chairman said.
For the past 25 years, he said, the U.S. military has
secured the global commons and deterred adversaries.
“We’ve reassured our allies and we’ve responded to conflict
and crises by maintaining our presence abroad,” Dempsey said. “It has been our
strategy to shape the international security environment by our forward
presence and by building relationships with regional partners.”
He explained that under the strategy, one-third of U.S.
forces are deployed, one-third returned from deployment, and one-third getting
ready to go.
Sequestration Harms Readiness
“Sequestration will fundamentally and significantly change
the way we deploy the force and shape the environment,” he said. “We’ll be
almost 20 percent smaller when all is said and done, from where we started. And
our forward presence will be reduced by about a third.”
This would mean the United States would be less influential
and less responsive, the chairman said.
“Conflicts will take longer to resolve and will be more
costly in both dollars and in casualties,” the general said.
The global security environment is as uncertain as he has
ever seen it, Dempsey said. A resurgent Russia, the Islamic State of Iraq and
the Levant, al-Qaida, China modernizing its military, Iran, North Korea and
more are of concern to U.S. national security officials, he said.
“We’re at a point where our national aspirations are at
genuine risk of exceeding our available resources,” Dempsey said.
The president’s fiscal year 2016 budget request would allow
officials to follow the defense strategy, he said.
“It’s what we need to remain at the bottom edge of
manageable risk to our national defense,” Dempsey said. “There is no slack
left.”
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