The $650 Billion Bargain: The Case for Modest Growth in America's Defense Budget
By (Author) Michael E. O'Hanlon
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Brookings Institution
23rd August 2016
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
355.622973
Paperback
160
Width 127mm, Height 203mm, Spine 11mm
204g
"U.S. defense spending isnt excessive and, in fact, should continue to grow because its both affordable and necessary in today's challenging world.
The United States spends a lot of money on defense$607 billion in the current fiscal year. But Brookings national security scholar Michael O'Hanlon argues that is roughly the right amount given the overall size of the national economy and continuing U.S. responsibilities around the world. If anything, he says spending should increase modestly under the next president, remaining near 3 percent of gross domestic product.
Recommendations in this book differ from the president's budget plan in two key ways. First, the author sees a mismatch in the Pentagons current plans between ends and means. The country needs to spend enough money to carry out its military missions and commitments. Second, O'Hanlon recommends dropping a plan to cut the size of the Army from the current 475,000 active-duty soldiers to 450,000.
The U.S. national defense budget is entirely affordablerelative to the size of the economy, relative to past levels of effort by this country in the national security domain, and relative, especially, to the costs of failing to uphold a stable international order. Even at a modestly higher price, it will be the best $650 billion bargain going, and a worthy investment in this countrys security and its long-term national power."
"Michael E. OHanlon is research director for the Foreign Policy program at Brookings, where he specializes in defense policy. He has written extensively on Northeast Asian security and has traveled frequently to the war zones of the broader Middle East on research trips over the past decade."