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Defense spending up 5 percent in Trump's 2020 budget plan
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) March 12, 2019

President Donald Trump's 2020 budget provides for a five percent increase in defense spending, notably to finance building his controversial border wall, while slashing funds for diplomacy by 23 percent.

If approved as is -- an unlikely scenario given opposition in Congress -- military spending would increase to $750 billion for fiscal year 2020, which begins in October 2019.

This figure includes $718.3 billion for the Pentagon and $32 billion for the Energy Department to maintain and provide fuel for America's nuclear arsenal.

By comparison, proposed funding for the State Department and the US Agency for International Development (USAID) amounts to $42.8 billion, a decrease from the $55.8 billion granted by Congress the previous year.

The proposed budget allocates $66.7 billion for ongoing external operations such as those in Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia and Syria, a three percent decrease from the previous year, according to military officials who spoke on condition of anonymity.

"Emergency" funds amount to $9.2 billion, $2 billion of which is for reconstruction of hurricane-ravaged military facilities, officials said.

The remainder is for the construction of the wall that Trump has pledged to build on the border with Mexico -- a country he repeatedly promised would pay for the barrier itself.

Some $3.6 billion would serve to build a "border barrier" while another $3.6 billion would refund money from the 2019 defense budget that was intended for military construction but was redirected by Trump after he declared a "national emergency" to fund the border wall, a military official said.

Trump also wants to redirect $5 billion from the Department of Homeland Security's budget, bringing the total amount devoted to his wall to $8.6 billion, or more than $12 billion if the requested 2019 funding reimbursement is included.

The budget also confirms Trump's desire to create a "Space Force" with a 15 percent jump in funds for space exploration, at $14.1 billion. Cyberdefense sees its budget increase by 10 percent to $9.6 billion.

The proposal also provides for a 3.1 percent augmentation in the salaries of members of the armed forces, which would be their largest pay increase in a decade.


Related Links
The Military Industrial Complex at SpaceWar.com
Learn about the Superpowers of the 21st Century at SpaceWar.com


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Pentagon outlines Tenant Bill of Rights for troops, families
Washington (UPI) Mar 7, 2019
All four military branches of the U.S. Department of Defense put together a joint Tenant Bill of Rights designed to prevent substandard housing and clarify rights for service members and their families. The document was released on Wednesday night, one day before a hearing Thursday for the service chiefs before the Senate Armed Services Committee amid reports of housing problems. "It is intended to increase the accountability of privatized housing companies by putting more oversight auth ... read more

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