Briefing by White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, 2/25/2009:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Briefing-by-White-House-Press-Secretary-Robert-Gibbs-2-25-2009/Q To follow up on Chip's talking about Afghanistan. The President said last night, we will no longer hide its price -- the price of the two wars, in Afghanistan and Iraq. Yet at the Pentagon today, Geoff Morrell, the spokesman, said there will be a supplemental in 2010 for war costs. And the Pentagon frequently asserts that the reason there are supplementals is not to hide the cost, but because it is impractical and difficult, if not impossible, to fully predict the cost of ongoing military operations.
First of all, do you agree there will have to be a supplemental in 2010, the President's first budget under his signature? And second of all, do you at least have some comment or evaluation of the necessity at times to supplementally fund ongoing military operations -- and that doesn't necessarily constitute hiding the cost.
MR. GIBBS: Well, I will check on supplementals, in terms of going forward. I don't think that -- I think you'll see in the President's budget that he considers honest and transparent, while it may not be a perfect accounting of what one might ultimately find, I think you'll find an effort, a good effort to denote in that budget that there will be costs.
I think it's hard to -- I mean, take for instance, in previous budgets in which we've had troops in Iraq there's been no accounting for any of that spending in that budget. Now, that's either -- you could say, I guess, if you wanted to, that there was some delineation of the complexity of budgeting that number, or you could be surprised we had troops in Iraq. I think that's hard to posit, given what happened over the last seven years. The President believes --
Q So the administration will try to come up with a number, but not necessarily assert that that is the only number?
MR. GIBBS: Well, I think the President will come up with what he believes is an honest number that accounts for, as best he and the team can come up with, an overall spending number for our overseas commitments in both Iraq and Afghanistan.
But again, I just want to make the point, there -- I'll give you the point on supplementals in terms of understanding, again, that it might be hard to throw a dart and hit the exact number on a board that accompanied the exact total of spending in that fiscal year. But there wasn't -- there wasn't even a picking up of the dart and throwing it at the board. There was just a -- I assume their hands were not unlike mine, saying, well, there's no accounting for it in the budget. I think that was -- would not have met the President's commitment to open and honest budgeting.