An all-american agenda II: a financially realistic national defense
Perhaps the best thing that happened to America last week was Congress abandoning Washington for a five-week break deferring all the major issues and problems. Will anything improve when Congress returns? The answer is not reassuring. Prior to the break, the Defense Department sketched out the impact of budget sequestration on the nation’s military strength to Congress. Disastrous is not an unsuitable description. But, in addition to the lack of specifics about the looming dilution of American military power, other flaws in our national security posture have been ignored. First, within a broken government, America’s national security organization is based on the obsolete National Security Act first passed in 1947. [...]