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In a speech May 3 to the Navy League, which advocates for Navy programs and budgets, Gates said the nation must rethink whether it can afford such an enormous naval fleet at a time when the Army and Marine Corps need more money to take care of troops and their families. "Do we really need 11 carrier strike groups for another 30 years when no other country has more than one?" Gates asked. In remarks Friday to officers at the Army's Command and General Staff College at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., Gates said wryly that he gathered from Navy reaction to his speech that "they didn't much like what I had to say." Neither did Sen. Jim Webb, a Virginia Democrat and former Navy secretary whose state is home to some of the Navy's biggest bases and shipbuilding interests. "When someone says that there is a massive overmatch between our Navy and other navies around the world, I think that is a misstatement of why we have navies or how different countries field military forces," Webb told a Senate hearing on Thursday. Gates acknowledges that his efforts have attracted a wide range of critics in Washington and beyond. One is Loren Thompson of the Lexington Institute think tank, who wrote on Wednesday in a review of Gates' Navy League speech that he was "setting the stage for a decline in America's global military power." In an impassioned address in Chicago last July, Gates said the nation's defense spending priorities were increasingly divorced from current and future security threats. He said the time had come to draw the line on doing defense business as usual and to invest in weapons and equipment more fitting the nation's needs.
[Associated
Press;
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