From the Los Angeles Times
Gates warns of layoffs without war
funding
If
Congress doesn't approve $196 billion for the U.S. military in Iraq and
Afghanistan, he says, bases may partly shut down and civilians may lose
jobs. Democrats point out he's said this before.
By Julian E. Barnes and Noam N. Levey
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
November 16, 2007
WASHINGTON —
Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said Thursday that he will have to
lay off 200,000 civilian employees and contractors, terminate military
contracts and partially shut down U.S. military bases unless Congress
acts quickly to approve additional funding for the Iraq war.
Echoing
similar warnings from past funding battles, Gates said the Army and
Marine Corps will develop plans for sharp spending cuts unless Congress
moves to provide $196 billion President Bush has requested.
On
Tuesday, Bush signed a separate $471-billion Defense appropriations
bill. But that spending measure includes little of the money needed to
keep the wars going in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The House has
offered the president $50 billion as a bridge fund for the wars, but it
would require most combat troops to leave Iraq by December 2008.
The White House has vowed to veto the bill if it passes the Senate in a
vote planned for today.
Gates
said he has little ability to move money within the Defense budget to
pay for war expenses, despite new authority contained in the Defense
appropriations bill signed by Bush this week.
Gates said the department was only authorized to move $3.7 billion,
which would fund the wars for about a week.
"There
is a misperception that this department can continue funding our troops
in the field for an indefinite period of time through accounting
maneuvers, that we can shuffle money around the department," Gates
said. "This is a serious misconception."
But congressional
Democrats reacted skeptically, recalling similar warnings from Gates
earlier this year. Defense officials complained in February about
drastic consequences if a funding bill was not passed then; the bleak
scenarios did not come about, even though the bill was not passed until
May.
"We have determined that both peacetime and war operations
can be sustained, with no impact to troop readiness, until at least
March 2008," said Rep. John P. Murtha (D-Pa.), who heads the House
Defense Appropriations subcommittee.
At a Senate hearing
Thursday, top Army leaders also tried to ratchet up pressure to pass
the supplemental funding. Failing to approve the money, said Gen.
George W. Casey Jr., the Army chief of staff, "sends the wrong message
to soldiers."
Army Secretary Pete Geren said furloughs of Army civilians would have
to begin by February.
"This will fall most heavily on . . . home-based troops and their
families," Geren said.
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) said the Congress was "nickeling and
diming" the military by not passing the supplemental funding.
"Those troops are entitled to absolute support," Sessions said.
Democratic Sen. Jim Webb of Virginia dismissed suggestions that his
party was "reluctant to fund people on the battlefield."
Some
Democrats appeared ready for a major confrontation with the White
House. Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San Francisco) said House Democrats
would refuse to send the president a funding bill free of conditions if
Senate Republicans block the House measure.
"We're not going to be taking it up anymore over here," she told
reporters.
In addition to voting on the House's partial funding measure, the
Senate is also likely to vote on a Republican alternative to provide
$70 billion without requiring a troop withdrawal.
Even as
partisan conflict over the Iraq war began to heat up again, Gates
argued Thursday that the administration had moved to address Democratic
demands for a drawdown, a timetable for shrinking the force, and a
change in the mission.
Gates said the main debate in Congress
was over the pace of troop reductions and the change in the mission --
but on those points, Gates said, lawmakers should defer to military
commanders.
"It seems to me that there ought to be some
deference to those who are running the war, the generals, in terms of .
. . the pace at which this drawdown should take place," Gates said.
Gates
offered a positive assessment of the security situation in Iraq and
suggested that withdrawing forces too quickly would erode gains of
recent months.
"However one feels about how we got to this
point, the reality is, we have had some significant success due to the
efforts of our men and women in uniform," Gates said. "We don't want to
sacrifice that success."
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times