Why Hagel Was Picked - As the federal government becomes a health care state, there will have to be a generation of defense cuts that overwhelm anything in recent history.
David Brooks writes in The New York Times:
Americans don’t particularly like government, but they
do want government to subsidize their health care. They believe that health care
spending improves their lives more than any other public good. In a Quinnipiac
poll, typical of many others, Americans opposed any cuts to Medicare by a margin
of 70 percent to 25 percent.
In a democracy, voters get what they want, so the line
tracing federal health care spending looks like the slope of a jet taking off
from LaGuardia. Medicare spending is set to nearly double over the next decade.
This is the crucial element driving all federal spending over the next few
decades and pushing federal debt to about 250 percent of G.D.P. in 30 years.
There are no conceivable tax increases that can keep
up with this spending rise. The Democrats had their best chance in a generation
to raise revenue just now, and all they got was a measly $600 billion over 10
years. This is barely a wiggle on the revenue line and does nothing to change
the overall fiscal picture.
As a result, health care spending, which people really
appreciate, is squeezing out all other spending, which they value far less.
Spending on domestic programs — for education, science, infrastructure and
poverty relief — has already faced the squeeze and will take a huge hit in the
years ahead. President Obama excoriated Paul Ryan for offering a budget that
would cut spending on domestic programs from its historical norm of 3 or 4
percent of G.D.P. all the way back to 1.8 percent. But the Obama budget is the
Ryan budget. According to the Office of Management and Budget, Obama will cut
domestic discretionary spending back to 1.8 percent of G.D.P. in six years.
Advocates for children, education and the poor don’t
even try to defend their programs by lobbying for cutbacks in Medicare. They
know that given the choice, voters and politicians care more about middle-class
seniors than about poor children.
So far, defense budgets have not been squeezed by the
Medicare vice. But that is about to change. Oswald Spengler didn’t get much
right, but he was certainly correct when he told European leaders that they
could either be global military powers or pay for their welfare states, but they
couldn’t do both.
Europeans, who are ahead of us in confronting that
decision, have chosen welfare over global power. European nations can no longer
perform many elemental tasks of moving troops and fighting. As late as the
1990s, Europeans were still spending 2.5 percent of G.D.P. on defense. Now that
spending is closer to 1.5 percent, and, amid European malaise, it is bound to
sink further.
The United States will undergo a similar process. The
current budget calls for a steep but possibly appropriate decline in defense
spending, from 4.3 percent of G.D.P. to 3 percent, according to the
Congressional Budget Office.
But defense planners are notoriously bad at estimating
how fast postwar military cuts actually come. After Vietnam, the cold war and
the 1991 gulf war, they vastly underestimated the size of the cuts that
eventually materialized. And those cuts weren’t forced by the Medicare vice. The
coming cuts are.
As the federal government becomes a health care state,
there will have to be a generation of defense cuts that overwhelm anything in
recent history. Keep in mind how brutal the budget pressure is going to be.
According to the Government Accountability Office, if we act on entitlements
today, we will still have to cut federal spending by 32 percent and raise taxes
by 46 percent over the next 75 years to meet current obligations. If we postpone
action for another decade, then we have to cut all non-interest federal spending
by 37 percent and raise all taxes by 54 percent.
As this sort of crunch gradually tightens, Medicare
will be the last to go. Spending on things like Head Start, scientific research
and defense will go quicker. These spending cuts will transform America’s
stature in the world, making us look a lot more like Europe today. This is why
Adm. Mike Mullen called the national debt the country’s biggest security threat.
Chuck Hagel has been nominated to supervise the
beginning of this generation-long process of defense cutbacks. If a Democratic
president is going to slash defense, he probably wants a Republican at the
Pentagon to give him political cover, and he probably wants a decorated war hero
to boot.
All the charges about Hagel’s views on Israel or Iran
are secondary. The real question is, how will he begin this long cutting
process? How will he balance modernizing the military and paying current
personnel? How will he recalibrate American defense strategy with, say, 455,000
fewer service members?
How, in short, will Hagel supervise the beginning of
America’s military decline? If members of Congress don’t want America to decline
militarily, well, they have no one to blame but the voters and themselves.
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