Cuts in military budget would hit North Texas programs01:41 AM CST on Monday, November 29, 2010
By DAVE MICHAELS / The Dallas Morning News
WASHINGTON – After enjoying years of unchecked growth, the Defense Department is facing calls to slash its budget, with Texas-based weapons programs topping the menu of possible cuts.
The proposals are included in recent debt-reduction plans offered by groups such as the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, which was created by President Barack Obama.
The commission's co-chairmen, Erskine Bowles and former Sen. Alan Simpson, fired the first shot earlier this month, listing defense cuts that would save more than $100 billion in 2015. Two more plans from other commission members followed, with both calling for big reductions in Pentagon spending.
All three plans call for taking the biggest bite out of procurement, a major source of federal funding for North Texas. Purchases of the Fort Worth-built F-35 Joint Strike Fighter would be cut in half, and the Amarillo-assembled V-22 Osprey would be canceled altogether. The F-25 (sic) is built by Lockheed-Martin, and the Osprey is a joint project of Bell Helicopter Textron Inc. and Boeing Co.The chance of those proposals becoming law – at least in the short term – appears remote.
Defense Secretary Robert Gates has slammed the plans, saying their specifics were driven by "math, not strategy." unhappycamper comment: Oh yea, the math gets in the way