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Obama Increases Military Budget, Ignoring Frank's Criticisms
On Tuesday, Rep. Barney Frank said that "To accomplish his goals of expanding health care and other important quality of life services without ballooning the deficit," President Barack Obama had to cut the military budget. Apparently, Obama didn't get the message. The White House released its proposed budget on Thursday morning. The very first page of the Department of Defense section of the budget (PDF) proposal trumpets: "$533.7 billion for the Department of Defense base budget in 2010, a four-percent increase over 2009." (Obama's budget is for fiscal year 2010, which runs from October 1, 2009 through September 30, 2010.)
There is some good news for Frank and his cohorts. According to McClatchy, Obama may target the air force's F-22 fighter plane—a program Frank had mentioned as particularly wasteful—for cuts. (Defense Secretary Robert Gates has also criticized the program.) But even if the F-22 program is slashed, or even halted altogether, the military budget is still going up. That's a far cry from what Frank and other Congressional Dems called for on Tuesday. Will they make a fuss?





























We asked for it..., we got it
Voted for Bush Lite, and we got Bush Lite.
Where's the surprise?
Details?
Wait for the details. For one thing, Obama's budget provides for a pay increase for active-duty military and an increase in the number of personnel. It also provides some additional medical benefits (especially psychological care) for military members and does not (apparently) dramatically increase copayments for TriCare, the system that pays for civilian care for military members, retirees and their families, as the Bush administration was planning to do.