Pentagon to transfer $1.5 billion to
border wall from Afghan forces, other areas
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[May 11, 2019]
By Idrees Ali
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Acting U.S. Defense
Secretary Patrick Shanahan has approved the transfer of $1.5 billion to
build more than 80 miles (130 km)of barriers on the border with Mexico,
U.S. officials said on Friday, including taking about $600 million from
an account meant for Afghan security forces.
The latest move was opposed by congressional Democrats, who also
criticized a March transfer of $1 billion in military money to fund
Republican President Donald Trump's wall.
"The funds were drawn from a variety of sources, including cost savings,
programmatic changes and revised requirements, and therefore will have
minimal impact on force readiness," Shanahan said in a statement.
Shanahan said that the U.S. military had more than 4,000 service members
on the border, along with 19 aircraft.
All 10 Democrats on Senate appropriations subcommittees that handle
defense, veterans affairs and related spending, wrote to Shanahan to
oppose the decision. "We are dismayed that the Department has chosen to
prioritize a political campaign promise over the disaster relief needs
of our service members," they said.
A U.S. official said the latest transfer would include $604 million from
funds for the Afghan security forces, which are struggling to hold
territory against Taliban militants.
The United States had appropriated $4.9 billion in support for those
forces this year. The official said the money was taken from that
account because they found savings in contracts.
"It took less money to meet the policy commitment than we thought,"
another U.S. official said, adding this was not the first time money had
been reprogrammed from the account.
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Acting U.S. Secretary of Defense Patrick Shanahan speak to the media
at the State Department in Washington, U.S., April 19, 2019.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
The United States is in talks with the Taliban to end the
17-year-long war. U.S. and Taliban negotiators wrapped up their
sixth round of peace talks on Thursday with "some progress" on a
draft agreement for when foreign troops might withdraw.
But there is concern that overstretched Afghan forces could crumble
if U.S. troops leave.
The remainder of the money will come from a chemical
demilitarization program, a retirement account, funds for Pakistan
and Air Force programs.
Lawmakers have hinted they may respond by putting new restrictions
on the Pentagon's authority to move money around, as it has done in
the past to deal with natural disasters.
Immigration is a signature issue of Trump's presidency and
re-election campaign. He declared a national emergency in order to
redirect funding to build a border wall without Congress' approval,
and his fellow Republicans in Congress sustained his veto of
legislation that would have stopped it.
(Reporting by Idrees Ali, additional reporting by Patricia Zengerle;
Editing by David Gregorio, James Dalgleish and Jonathan Oatis)
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