E-Newsletter Sign Up

Media Advance Copy: Analysis of Obama's Defense Budget Set for Release Thursday

EmailPrint

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: February 25, 2009
CONTACT: Travis Sharp

Washington, D.C. -- With the Obama administration set to submit a preliminary outline of its spending priorities and agency budgets on Thursday, the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation today released a report that analyzes the enormous and unprecedented growth in U.S. defense spending over the past decade.

Read an advance copy of the full report online.

Press reports indicate that Thursday’s budget outline may request as much as $537 billion for the Department of Defense “base” budget, which excludes funding for both Iraq and Afghanistan and nuclear weapons programs. Congress approved $513 billion in Pentagon base budget funding for the current fiscal year.

If Thursday’s budget is indeed approximately $537 billion, “President Obama’s first Pentagon budget will be bigger than both the Bush administration’s future plan and the rate of inflation,” said Travis Sharp, who prepared the report and serves as military policy analyst at the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation. “However, President Obama’s budget this year would increase Pentagon spending by less than was the annual average during the Bush era.”

President Obama wants to increase personnel benefits for the troops, which may explain the overall increase and may result in cuts to expensive weapons systems.

As detailed in the Center’s report, the Department of Defense’s base budget grew steadily over the last decade, increasing from $370 billion in fiscal year 2000 to $513 billion in fiscal year 2009, an inflation-adjusted total increase of $143 billion (39 percent) or an average increase of $16 billion per year.

When including funding for Iraq, Afghanistan, and nuclear weapons activities, national defense budgets have grown in inflation-adjusted dollars from $387 billion in fiscal year 2000 to approximately $694 billion in fiscal year 2009, a real increase of 79 percent. President Obama plans to include future war costs in Thursday’s budget blueprint.

The Center’s report includes the following sections:

  • Recap of the FY 2009 Defense Budget
  • Growth in U.S. Defense Spending Over the Last Decade and Since 1948
  • U.S. Defense Spending vs. Global Defense Spending
  • Selected Weapons Systems – Program Costs and FY 2009 Funding
  • Three Weapons Systems to Watch in 2009: F-22 Raptor, DDG-100 destroyer, Future Combat Systems
  • Recommendations for Action in 2009: Cut missile defense, reduce nuclear weapons, oversee arms sales to Iraq, reform Pentagon procurement

Read an advance copy of the full report online.

Contribute || Stay Informed