Date: July 12th, 2025 7:30 PM
Author: cannon
This is insane
https://www.wsj.com/opinion/trump-isnt-rebuilding-the-u-s-military-national-security-defense-spending-266b41e6
Trump Isn’t Rebuilding the U.S. Military
β
β
The President’s 2026 budget, like Biden’s, is an after-inflation cut in defense.
The Editorial BoardJuly 11, 2025 at 5:36 pm
Review & Outlook: The President reverses a Pentagon decision from last week and says he'll deliver weapons to Ukraine.
The U.S. bombing raid on Iran’s nuclear sites was an impressive military feat, but don’t let that success fool you. The B-2 bombers are nearly 30 years old, and the U.S. has only 19 of them in service. The military is in worse shape than President Trump claims, and he’s ducking the second-term rearmament he promised.
But the U.S. isn’t meeting that NATO target. It’s spending roughly half the 6% of GDP it devoted to defense at the height of Ronald Reagan’s military buildup. Even the $1 trillion is a game of three-card monte. The Administration counts in that total about $113 billion for defense in the GOP’s budget reconciliation bill. That money was supposed to turbocharge purchases of ships, aircraft and unmanned technology—above normal defense spending.
Yet when the budget bill is excluded, the Administration has proposed a cut after inflation for 2026. Absent more annual GOP bills, which may not be possible if Republicans lose Congress, defense spending could fall to about 2.65% of the economy by 2029 at the end of Mr. Trump’s term. That’s comparable to the European levels that Mr. Trump thinks are so pathetic.
Take shipbuilding. The 2026 request asks for a mere three U.S. Navy ships, though the fleet is 60 short of its goal to deter China. Funding for 16 more ships is included in the GOP budget bill. But no contractor puts up long-term capital to expand production for a one-year plan.
Unstable demand from government helped produce the current shipbuilding crisis. Mr. Trump cares about restoring U.S. naval power, but what matters is the scoreboard. America needs to build 2.33 attack submarines a year to meet our own requirements and a commitment to sell hulls to the Australians. The current rate is 1.1.
Where is the Navy’s 30-year shipbuilding plan that would set a strategic direction for the fleet? “We’re still looking at that,” a Navy official told reporters last month.
The White House argues that the bifurcated defense budget is merely a maneuver to push more defense money through Congress without Democratic votes. But the President can ask Congress for what he wants, and the budget request reflects his priorities.
The budget is inadequate even on Mr. Trump’s ideas. A Golden Dome missile shield, a crucial project for better protecting the U.S. homeland, receives a one-time $25 billion in the GOP budget bill. What’s the plan to fund this enormous undertaking, which includes space-based interceptors, for decades to come? Ask again later.
Why this mismatch between Mr. Trump’s rhetoric and budget reality? The fiscal hawks at the Office of Management and Budget have made common cause with the isolationists at Defense and the White House. The former want the U.S. military to do more with less, and the latter prefer to do less with less.
Buried in the budget proposal are bad trade-offs driven in part by the lack of money. The Air Force is dumping a command and control plane in favor of a space system that isn’t yet ready for prime time, a risk if war arrives before the new tech. The Navy’s dysfunctional new frigate is in limbo, but the fleet will shrink without these small combatants coming online on time.
The budget pours $3.5 billion into the new F-47 fighter jet, which is needed. Yet F-35 buys are cut to 47 from 74, and a new fighter for the U.S. Navy is on hold. The latter is especially absurd: U.S. aircraft carrier vulnerability in the Pacific is the most discussed military weakness of the decade, and longer-range aircraft on carriers would be a big counter.
Mr. Trump likes to invoke Reagan’s peace through strength worldview. But the Gipper made a sustained case about the threats the U.S. faced and the forces required to keep the peace. He explicitly rejected making “defense once again the scapegoat of the federal budget.”
The threats to U.S. security today are arguably greater than during the Cold War: A peer competitor in China, an imperial Russia, the risk of proliferating nuclear weapons, and new technology that empowers lesser powers and threatens the U.S. homeland.
Congress can fill some of the Trump defense potholes, but reinvigorating the U.S. military requires White House leadership. So far Mr. Trump isn’t providing it.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5749645&forum_id=2#49096560)