The Department of Defense (DoD) budget is set to
absorb the lion's share of the New Year's cuts, which will go into effect if
steps are not taken to stop them. DoD makes up about 11 percent of federal
spending, but will eat 47 percent of the cuts. That's a pretty sizable chunk.
Several concerned congressmen and senators have
begun to do "road shows" to raise awareness of the issue. Their main
focus is on the communities that will be most directly hit, those around the
big federal military facilities. Think Fayetteville, N.C., San Diego and
Norfolk, Va. The message to these folks is primarily an economic one, and one
that focuses on the dangerous effects on the defense industrial base.
What about you? What about all those Americans who
don't live near a fort or a base, or have jobs that support defense? No big
deal, right? Unfortunately, you would be dead wrong.
Two prominent experts in the field of homeland
security - one a former assistant secretary of defense, the other a retired
three-star general from the National Guard - discussed this issue recently at
The Heritage Foundation. They pointed out an overlooked effect of the cuts.
That would be the ability of DoD to fund the National Guard when they're under
the command and control of their state governors.
The Guard (Air and Army) can serve in three
different manners under present law. One is State Active Duty (funded by the
state, and under command of the state). The next is Federal Duty (funded by DoD,
under DoD command - called Title 10, the equivalent of the regular federal
military).
The third one is called Title 32. This is funded by
DoD, but still under the command of the state to which the troops belong. This
is currently the most prevalent way to use the Guard when you have a problem.
It allows the cash-strapped states to use their assets as they see fit (which
is normally the most effective way), but to allow DoD to pay the salaries of
the troops.
Wildfires? Call out the Guard, ask for Title 32.
Floods? Title 32 again. Major catastrophic event across multiple states (such
as a big earthquake in the Midwest, or a series of coordinated terrorist
events)? Title 32 is still the way to go. It leverages the local know-how and
connections with key local assets, but allows the cost to be handled by the
feds.
If sequestration hits, the ability of DoD to provide
these Title 32 funds will go away. All that discretionary ability to help your
governor to use your state's National Guard assets will evaporate. The governor
will be forced to make the call to send help or not, based on his or her own
very limited budget. You could be left waiting a long time before help arrives.
Sequestration is not a "Washington" issue.
It will hit any one of us, regardless of where we live or what we do, and it
will hurt. These cuts must be reversed. This is no longer an academic or
theoretical discussion, but one that will have potentially devastating effects
on every American.
About the author: Steven P. Bucci is senior research
fellow for defense and homeland security at The Heritage Foundation.
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