The
U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate have completed
their respective versions of the defense authorization bill for
fiscal year 2005 (H.R. 4200 and S. 2400). This important
legislation authorizes defense spending and provides guidance for
the Department of Defense and some other federal agencies that are
vital to national security. It is therefore one of the primary
vehicles through which Congress influences overall defense policy
and national security. Once President George W. Bush signs the
bill, its mandates become the policy of the United States.
Congress's final stage in this process
involves a House-Senate conference committee that will resolve the
differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill. As
in the past, some of the differences between the two versions could
have far-reaching implications for national security, depending on
which provisions are reported out of the conference committee for
final passage by the House and Senate. Some of the most important
differences that must be resolved include the issues of:
- Missile defense,
- Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC),
- The U.N. Oil-for-Food scandal,
- U.S.-Taiwan military-to-military
exchanges,
- Rapid Acquisition Authority (RAA),
and
- "Buy America" and other protectionist
purchasing requirements.
Missile Defense
House
Version
The House version of the defense authorization bill
approves the Bush Administration's request for $10.2 billion for
the overall ballistic missile defense program in FY 2005, including
the Administration's plan to put the necessary elements of the
ballistic missile test bed in place to allow for the declaration of
an operational capability to defend U.S. territory against limited
ballistic missile attacks by later this year.
Senate
Version
The Senate version provides for the ballistic missile
defense program in a way that is generally consistent with the Bush
Administration's request and the House version.
Recommendation
The conference committee's report should authorize full
funding for the Bush Administration's missile defense program
request and express support for the declaration of an operational
capability. Looking ahead, however, the conference report should
also include language that encourages the Administration to pursue
a more aggressive approach to researching and developing
space-based interceptors.
This
is particularly the case regarding those capable of intercepting
ballistic missiles in their boost phase. Space-based interceptors
will prove to be the most capable in defending the U.S. and its
friends and allies against ballistic missile attack, including
attacks with missiles carrying decoys and countermeasures. The Bush
Administration's current approach to researching and developing
space-based interceptors does not match the potential benefit of
fielding these kinds of defensive systems.
Base Realignment and Closure
House
Version
The House version would delay the BRAC process until 2007
by requiring a series of Pentagon reports that will be due between
January 1, 2006 and March 15, 2006.
Senate
Version
The Senate version keeps BRAC on track for a round in
2005.
Recommendation
In order to stay on schedule for a new BRAC round in 2005,
the conference committee should reject the House version. The
Pentagon has been arguing for additional rounds of BRAC since 1998,
and the conference report should reflect that there is no good
reason to delay further. The primary arguments for delaying BRAC
are that:
- More study is needed before cutting
infrastructure;
- Foreign bases should be closed before
closing domestic bases; and
- America needs a larger force and therefore
should not cut infrastructure.
All
of these arguments are false. The Pentagon has been in a state of
continuous review for a number of years and has a sound
understanding of its force requirements. Where America's military
bases are built should depend on how they enhance national
security, not on whether or not they are in the United States.
Furthermore, whether or not the military needs more troops, it
certainly does not need 25 percent more troops, which is the amount
of excess infrastructure that the Pentagon currently maintains.
Before transformation of the military can
fully succeed, the Pentagon must make the best use of its scarce
resources and create an environment that invites and supports
change. BRAC sets a good example in this regard and increases
overall flexibility.
First, BRAC facilitates
joint operations . Restructuring the Department of Defense's
support infrastructure can compel the armed services to work
together more closely. Another emerging problem
for the Pentagon is encroachment. Expanding populations are
encroaching on many of America's bases, and the result will be
reduced training opportunities and reduced readiness. BRAC can help
secure future training opportunities by closing those bases most
affected by encroachment and expanding those that are least
affected. BRAC will also increase efficiency and
save money because maintaining excess base infrastructure
drains much-needed resources.
Although saving money and improving
efficiency should not drive the BRAC process, they should play a
major role. Indeed, a characteristic of a transformed force is that
it is also much more efficient.
U.N. Oil-for-Food Scandal
The
Oil-for-Food fraud has become an issue of well-founded, serious
concern on Capitol Hill. It is potentially the biggest scandal in
the history of the United Nations and one of the greatest financial
scandals of modern times. The U.S. General Accounting Office
estimates that the Saddam Hussein regime generated $10.1 billion in
illegal revenues by exploiting the Oil-for-Food program.
House
Version
The House version does not address the U.N. Oil-for-Food
scandal.
Senate
Version
The Senate version includes Amendment 3440, which
addresses the U.N. Oil-for-Food scandal.
Recommendations
Senate Amendment 3440, introduced by Senator John Ensign
(R-NV), was unanimously adopted following bipartisan consultations
and modifications. It is critical that the conference committee
include the language of Amendment 3440 in its report.
Amendment 3440 requires key departments
within the Administration to take steps to ensure that all
documents needed to conduct Oil-for-Food investigations are
collected and secured. Specifically, Amendment 3440:
- Requires the Department of Defense to
secure documents previously held by the dissolved Coalition
Provisional Authority;
- Requires heads of U.S. executive agencies
to provide prompt access to documents and information to
congressional committees with relevant jurisdiction;
- Directs the Secretary of State to use
American power at the U.N. to provide the U.S. with audits and
vital documents related to the Oil-for-Food program; and
- Requires the Comptroller General to review
U.S. oversight of the Oil-for-Food program, underscoring that the
Comptroller General should have full and complete access to U.N.
documents and financial data.
Furthermore, recent developments may
necessitate that the conference committee revise and update the
amendment's language. The conference committee may also want to
consider strengthening the language to increase the likelihood that
the amendment's intent will be successfully achieved.
U.S.-Taiwan Military-to-Military
Exchanges
House
Version
Section 1215 of the House version mandates that the
Secretary of Defense inaugurate an exchange program between the
United States and Taiwan for senior military officers and senior
civilian defense officials. It defines "senior military officer" as
a general or flag officer on active duty and "senior official" as a
civilian official at the level of Deputy Assistant Secretary of
Defense or above. The House version would require that the
exchanges focus on defending Taiwan against potential submarine
missile attacks; threat analysis; military doctrine; force
planning; logistical support; intelligence collection and analysis;
and operational tactics, techniques, and procedures.
Senate
Version
The Senate version does not address U.S.-Taiwan
military-to-military exchanges.
Recommendations
The conference committee should adopt the language of
Section 1215 of H.R. 4200. There is an urgent need to regularize
command-level contacts between U.S. and Taiwan military
headquarters and to improve access in Taiwan's high command for
senior Pentagon operations and planning officers. Section 1215 is a
responsible way to do this.
After 1999, when Chinese air and naval
forces began regular and aggressive challenges to Taiwan's ships
and aircraft, the Pentagon significantly stepped up its contacts
with Taiwan counterparts. Although Taiwan and U.S.
military-to-military exchanges have expanded dramatically since
1999, they are arbitrarily limited to contacts at and below the 0-6
level (GS-15) under self-imposed restraints drafted 25 years ago by
the Department of State. U.S. theater commanders and senior
Pentagon planners are banned from visiting Taiwan, despite
universal concern that the Taiwan Strait is one of the world's
crisis "flashpoints." Moreover, there are concerns in the Pentagon
that U.S. military teams do not have adequate access to Taiwan's
civilian defense and national security leaders and cannot
communicate the urgency and importance of critical intelligence on
China's rapidly modernizing military force.
High-level U.S.-Taiwan military exchanges
and dialogue about contingencies serve two purposes: They are a
political signal to Beijing that a military adventure against
Taiwan could have the most severe consequences; and, in the event
that U.S. intervention does become necessary, they provide a
mechanism for success. The conference report should include the
House language, and the Administration should use it as leverage to
persuade the Chinese that there are serious consequences to their
increasingly provocative military challenges in the Taiwan
Strait.
Rapid Acquisition Authority
House
Version
The House version includes the Rapid Acquisition Authority
provision, which would authorize the Secretary of Defense to
establish an efficient and timely acquisition process for
battlefield-related items during times of emergency.
Senate
Version
The Senate version does not address Rapid Acquisition
Authority.
Recommendations
The conference report should include Rapid Acquisition
Authority for the Secretary of Defense. Cumbersome and
time-consuming bureaucracy should not prevent the Secretary of
Defense from providing urgent supplies to war fighters in a timely
manner. The result would be a better supplied fighting force and
fewer casualties.
Equipment would be relevant under this
authority only when there had already been a capability deficiency
resulting in combat fatalities. It would be used only to attain the
minimum amount of material necessary until existing acquisition
statutes could fulfill the needs. If the authority were invoked,
the goal would be to award a contract within 15 days of a
commander's request. Upon implementation of the RAA, the Secretary
of Defense could obtain items outside of the normal procurement
bureaucracy when, if not fulfilled immediately, a combatant
commander's unfulfilled requests for equipment would result in
additional combat fatalities.
Rapidly acquiring time-sensitive, critical
material would clearly minimize combat casualties in future combat
scenarios. The reality is that the lengthy, bureaucratic
procurement process that impedes procurement during peacetime is
unacceptable in times of war. The House proposal would also be
funded from existing military budgets. It is vital to America's
troops and to the war on terrorism that the conference report
include this measure.
"Buy America"
"Buy
America" and other protectionist provisions prohibit the Pentagon,
subject to certain caveats, from purchasing foreign goods and
services if these are also grown, reprocessed, reused, or produced
in the U.S.
House
Version
The House bill tightens current Buy America restrictions
by requiring notifications of exemptions, creates a $50 million
subsidy program for American defense contractors to prevent
outsourcing, and instructs the Pentagon to weigh job creation in
the United States as a factor in the competitive bid process. The
House bill also prohibits the Pentagon from procuring any defense
article or service from a foreign firm unless the country in which
that company conducts substantially all of its manufacturing,
research, and production conforms its "offset" requirements to
those of the United States.
Senate
Version
The Senate version would permit the Secretary of Defense
to waive domestic source requirements for six or seven countries
(the United Kingdom, Sweden, Spain, Australia, the Netherlands,
Norway, and possibly, Italy) that have a "declaration of
principles" committing them to purchase equipment to increase
interoperability with U.S. forces.
Recommendations
Of the two versions, the Senate language is superior and
should be adopted by the conferees. Instead of protecting U.S.
national security, protectionism impedes the ability of the
Department of Defense to field the best forces, equipment,
policies, and programs by restricting the technology and products
available to American forces.
Moreover, the legislation would anger
America's allies by running counter to current rules and
understandings. Adopting additional restrictions on defense
procurement could lead to retaliatory measures and undermine
interoperability by exacerbating the growing gaps between U.S.
forces and their allies.
It
would also increase costs. Current restrictions already obligate
the Pentagon to purchase defense goods from American sources,
subject to specific exemptions. Increasing restrictions on those
purchases will drive up the cost of already expensive military
equipment and limit access to global goods and services. Limiting
America's ability to tap into global resources puts undue restraint
on the Pentagon's ability to acquire the best military
equipment.
Prudence dictates that the U.S. ensure
that foreign suppliers are contractually obligated to meet their
obligations, regardless of circumstance, and that any cooperative
program must include commitments not to violate U.S. export control
standards. Subject to these caveats, a global defense industrial
base (based on free trade) is the best way to secure America's
future.
Jack Spencer
is Senior Policy Analyst for Defense and National Security, Baker Spring is F.
M. Kirby Research Fellow in National Security Policy, and Nile Gardiner,
Ph.D., is Fellow in Anglo-American Security Policy in the
Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies
at The Heritage Foundation. Brett D. Schaefer
is Jay Kingham Fellow in International Regulatory Affairs in the
Center for International Trade and Economics and John J. Tkacik, Jr.,
is Research Fellow in China Policy in the Asian Studies Center at
The Heritage Foundation.