MURTHA'S CONCERNS
Rep. Bill Young of Florida, the senior Republican on the House Appropriations defense panel, said lawmakers were still negotiating over whether money should be included in the emergency war spending bill to fund F-35 Joint Strike Fighter jets to replace F-16s lost in Iraq.
The airplanes, to be built by Lockheed Martin Corp. (LMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research), would not be delivered for another three years, according to some estimates. Young said he supported funding the purchase now.
Murtha was one of the earliest and highest profile members of Congress to call for an end to the Iraq war in late 2005 and since then he has come under sharp attack from Republicans.
But in seeking conditions on war funds, Murtha has insisted that he is simply calling on the Pentagon to follow its own criteria for the training of soldiers and their duration in combat.
The former Marine says he is concerned about stressed American troops and an overall weakening of the military four years after the Iraq war started.
Speaking to reporters, Murtha said that during a recent visit to a military base he was looking at a seven-ton truck "and the damn seat fell out." Humvee vehicles, used to move troops around Iraq, have been outfitted with heavy armor, but lack strong enough suspension systems and engines to support them, Murtha complained.
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