Hagel said a congressional budget deal late last year had helped
to stabilize defense spending and enabled the Army to devote more
resources to maintenance and training. But he warned that the gains
could be reversed unless lawmakers act to avert a return to the deep
spending cuts in October of next year.
"Our soldiers deserve ... a stable and predictable budget that gives
them and their families the training and support they need," Hagel
said in a speech at an Army convention.
"But sequestration (budget cuts) remains the law of the land. If
Congress does not act, it will return in 2016, stunting and
reversing Army readiness just as we have begun to recover," he
added.
The Pentagon is currently under orders to cut nearly $1 trillion in
projected spending over a decade, despite a series of new security
issues since the administration and Congress agreed on the
reductions in 2011.
Hagel said only two Army active-duty combat brigade teams were
trained and ready for major combat a year ago after across-the-board
cuts. But a two-year budget deal in Congress gave the Pentagon
funding stability and let the Army increase training, bringing fully
prepared combat brigades to 12 out of a total 37.
"While this is a direct result of the Army's ability to adapt to
unreasonable budget constraints, it falls short of what I believe is
sufficient to defend our nation and our allies with minimum risk,"
Hagel told the Army convention.
The Pentagon chief said unless Congress takes reverses the budget
cuts or agrees to the department's proposals for spending reform,
the military will have little choice but to cut funds for
maintenance and training or further slash the size of the military
force.
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General Ray Odierno, the Army chief of staff, told the Army
conference on Tuesday that continued reductions in the size of the
military force would reduce its flexibility and ability to respond
to strategic surprises.
Since the United States began cutting military spending, U.S. forces
have had to respond to the crisis in Ukraine, the rise of Islamic
State militants in Iraq and Syria and the outbreak of Ebola in West
Africa while continuing to help Afghan troops fight the Taliban.
"We are witnessing first hand mistaken assumptions about the number,
duration, location and size of future force conflicts. ... These
miscalculations translate directly into increased military risk,"
said Odierno, who said military risk was "accumulating
exponentially."
(Reporting by David Alexander; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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