Politics > Politics-USA > us.politics, us.military.army, soc.culture.iraq, alt.war.vietnam, free.christians
| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"zoro robin hood" |
| Date: |
20 May 2006 03:23:05 PM |
| Object: |
us.politics, us.military.army, soc.culture.iraq, alt.war.vietnam, free.christians |
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_8667.shtml
Pentagon spends billions in secret programs
By Staff and Wire Reports
May 20, 2006
The Pentagon's spending on secret programs has hit its highest point
since the end of the Cold War, a Washington-based research group said
in a report released this week.
Classified programs appear to account for about $30.1 billion, or 19
percent, of the acquisition funds sought in the Defense Department
budget for fiscal 2007, according to the report by the Center for
Strategic and Budgetary Assessment.
In real terms, the 2007 request was for more classified spending than
in any defense budget since 1988, near the Cold War's end, when the
Pentagon received an inflation-adjusted $29.4 billion for such
projects, it said.
Classifying Pentagon programs means they get less oversight by
Congress, watchdog groups and the media.
The record of such programs has been mixed, said Steven Kosiak, the
report's author, noting that the F-117 "Stealth" fighter jet and the
radar-evading B-2 bomber were among the successes.
But reduced oversight has contributed to failures like the U.S. Navy's
A-12 attack aircraft, canceled in 1991, Kosiak noted.
Secret programs also have tended to spawn "fringe science" -- like
antimatter weapons, psychics and telepathy -- because they were
protected from outside scrutiny, said Sharon Weinberger, author of
"Imaginary Weapons: A Journey through the Pentagon's Scientific
Underworld."
She contends that the Defense Department, citing a need for secrecy to
protect national security, is in effect shielding "bad science" from
peer review at a net loss to taxpayers.
In his study, Kosiak said classified funding sought for Pentagon
purchases had more than doubled in real terms since fiscal 1995, when
it reached a post-Cold War low.
Since 1995, funding for classified acquisition programs has grown at a
faster rate than funding for acquisition programs overall -- up 64
percent in real terms, the report said.
The Air Force's fiscal 2007 budget request contained the biggest share
of the Pentagon's classified acquisition funding -- more than
three-quarters of the total.
Classified programs account for about 44 percent, or $14.1 billion, of
the Air Force's procurement request and 39 percent, or $9.6 billion, of
its research and development request, Kosiak said, citing Pentagon
budget documents.
__________________________________________________________
What are these screwballs spending your dough on? None of yer business.
Harry
(see all of Harry Hope's excellent posts as they break, put this link
in your browser, use it, this is a search on google groups, on the
author Harry Hope sorted by date... nothing fancy):
http://groups.google.com/groups?q=&start=0&scoring=d&enc_author=-nIhFBQAAACtBOUGAhN9cSve8yYdFJBuOPANdqfI6prRsqjc7uCt1A&
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| User: "stewart_connor" |
|
| Title: Bush's screwball Pentagon spends billions in secret programs -- GOP <-- hate-mongering, WAR-PROFITEERING-TRAITORS -- controlled by Insane Bush Crime Family |
20 May 2006 03:27:17 PM |
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zoro robin hood wrote:
http://www.capitolhillblue.com/artman/publish/article_8667.shtml
Pentagon spends billions in secret programs
By Staff and Wire Reports
May 20, 2006
The Pentagon's spending on secret programs has hit its highest point
since the end of the Cold War, a Washington-based research group said
in a report released this week.
Classified programs appear to account for about $30.1 billion, or 19
percent, of the acquisition funds sought in the Defense Department
budget for fiscal 2007, according to the report by the Center for
Strategic and Budgetary Assessment.
In real terms, the 2007 request was for more classified spending than
in any defense budget since 1988, near the Cold War's end, when the
Pentagon received an inflation-adjusted $29.4 billion for such
projects, it said.
Classifying Pentagon programs means they get less oversight by
Congress, watchdog groups and the media.
The record of such programs has been mixed, said Steven Kosiak, the
report's author, noting that the F-117 "Stealth" fighter jet and the
radar-evading B-2 bomber were among the successes.
But reduced oversight has contributed to failures like the U.S. Navy's
A-12 attack aircraft, canceled in 1991, Kosiak noted.
Secret programs also have tended to spawn "fringe science" -- like
antimatter weapons, psychics and telepathy -- because they were
protected from outside scrutiny, said Sharon Weinberger, author of
"Imaginary Weapons: A Journey through the Pentagon's Scientific
Underworld."
She contends that the Defense Department, citing a need for secrecy to
protect national security, is in effect shielding "bad science" from
peer review at a net loss to taxpayers.
In his study, Kosiak said classified funding sought for Pentagon
purchases had more than doubled in real terms since fiscal 1995, when
it reached a post-Cold War low.
Since 1995, funding for classified acquisition programs has grown at a
faster rate than funding for acquisition programs overall -- up 64
percent in real terms, the report said.
The Air Force's fiscal 2007 budget request contained the biggest share
of the Pentagon's classified acquisition funding -- more than
three-quarters of the total.
Classified programs account for about 44 percent, or $14.1 billion, of
the Air Force's procurement request and 39 percent, or $9.6 billion, of
its research and development request, Kosiak said, citing Pentagon
budget documents.
__________________________________________________________
What are these screwballs spending your dough on? None of yer business.
Harry
(see all of Harry Hope's excellent posts as they break, put this link
in your browser, use it, this is a search on google groups, on the
author Harry Hope sorted by date... nothing fancy):
http://groups.google.com/groups?q=&start=0&scoring=d&enc_author=-nIhFBQAAACtBOUGAhN9cSve8yYdFJBuOPANdqfI6prRsqjc7uCt1A&
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