January 22, 2010
PRESIDENT OBAMA is preparing to ask Congress for another $14.2 billion to grow, train and equip the Afghan National Security Forces for the remainder of this fiscal year and in fiscal 2011, according to a budget document obtained by CongressDaily.
The funding, outlined in a "pre-decisional" Pentagon budget document that still must receive the Office of Management and Budget's final approval, represents more than double the $6.6 billion already appropriated for fiscal 2010 for the Afghan army and police -- signifying the importance of training indigenous forces needed to permit an eventual U.S. military withdrawal.
According to the document, the Defense Department needs an additional $2.6 billion for the Afghan forces this year and $11.6 billion next year . . .
Besides the Afghan forces request, the Pentagon will ask for $1 billion to train and equip Iraqi forces in fiscal 2010 and another $2 billion in fiscal 2011 . . .
As part of the supplemental, the Pentagon also plans to ask for $1.1 billion in fiscal 2010 for Oshkosh Corp.'s mine-resistant all-terrain vehicles . . .
For fiscal 2011, the Pentagon wants $3.4 billion to sustain, upgrade, overhaul and test the thousands of mine-resistant vehicles that have been deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan . . .
Meanwhile, the Pentagon wants $18.9 billion more in fiscal 2010 to pay for increased operations in Afghanistan and support an average troop level there of 84,000 U.S. troops . . .
In fiscal 2011, $88.9 billion will be sought for operations to support average U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan of 102,000 and in Iraq of 43,000 . . .
The Pentagon's fiscal 2011 war request is also expected to include $21.3 billion to repair and replace equipment that has been lost or damaged in combat . . .
In addition, the Pentagon intends to ask for $1.3 billion in fiscal 2011 for the Commander's Emergency Response Fund, which gives military commanders money to address urgent local needs . . .
more:
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0110/012210cdam1.htm