The thrills will start in a few weeks when the congressional Super Committee will unveil its recommendations to cut at least $1.2 trillion from the federal budget or to do less and, according to the Budget Control Act, pull the trigger on $500 billion in defense cuts.
The trigger won't be pulled.But don't expect a happy ending, either.
The defense budget will probably not have to absorb another half trillion-dollar cut as part of the trigger scenario. But it will be raided to a still significant extent as policymakers ignore the elephant in the room (out-of-control entitlement spending) and push real spending reform off until next fall -- after the elections.
At a September "Defending Defense" event sponsored by The Heritage Foundation, American Enterprise Institute, and Foreign Policy Initiative, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) told the audience the spending cuts trigger would never be pulled and result in a half trillion more of defense cuts. Before that could happen, he suggested, he would draft a bill to repeal and replace the trigger.
In their first joint appearance before Congress this month, the new Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff both outlined the devastating impact of piling on another half trillion dollars of defense budget cuts on top of those already under way.
Meanwhile, Congress is barreling down the tracks with versions of the 2012 defense spending bills that cut the President's already parsimonious request. Major plans and programs of the armed forces are at risk.
All year long, politicians have taken to the airwaves to insist that the defense budget must be "on the table" in efforts to reduce federal spending and America's debt.
Today, the military is absorbing cuts set forth by the Budget Control Act of 2011 and confronting the specter of many more over the next ten years.
First appeared in AOL News