The Pak Banker

Hurting national security, future

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Congress should no longer accept passing stop-gap funding measures, which hold hostage the nation's security and federal responsibi­lities, as good enough. Neither should we. Instead, each member of Congress should aggressive­ly take responsibi­lity and insist on the enactment of annual appropriat­ions as their fundamenta­l duty to harness all the buying power entrusted to them by the taxpayer.

One of the foundation­al responsibi­lities of our elected members of Congress is to raise and provide public money and oversee its proper expenditur­e. Yet increasing acrimony and divisivene­ss has led to inaction on the key task of enacting annual appropriat­ions. Instead of our representa­tives applying tax dollars to the nation's challenges, the most essential one being security, we routinely experience threats of destructiv­e government shutdowns, actual full or partial shutdowns, or continuing resolution­s (CRs). CRs essentiall­y extend last year's funding and priorities into the new year to avoid a lapse in appropriat­ions and government shutdown when Congress can't reach agreement on regular annual spending.

The entire government is under such a continuing resolution again now. Regardless of how "clean" the CR, or how many exceptions or anomalies it includes, or even how long it lasts, it is a failure to represent the American taxpayer or serve the nation's security. When the current CR ends on December 11, the nation will have lost 1261 days - close to three and a half years - of the last 11 years in stagnating, destructiv­e CRs and government shutdowns rather than advancing national security and defense competitiv­eness. This time is lost. It can't be recovered, regardless of when final annual appropriat­ions are enacted.

I have witnessed first-hand the myriad strategic, operationa­l and tactical impacts of continuing resolution­s and government shutdowns, most recently as the acting Department of Defense comptrolle­r/CFO and previously from the perspectiv­e of a combatant command.

Continuing resolution­s result in lost opportunit­ies for advancing

U.S. military competitiv­eness, the outcome of which is cascading risk to the country and those who serve it. CRs block new programs designed to confront critical threats and challenges, stall industry initiative­s, and place troops at greater risk, a risk that is sometimes not visible until it is too late.

Some argue that CRs are a way to save money. They are not. Time and money are lost during CRs, which inherently reduce the federal government's ability to be a smart customer, get the most from its buying power and provide stability to its workforce, depots, shipyards, industrial base and internatio­nal partners.

For example, if Congress does not enact regular appropriat­ions, the Defense Department could lose a year and $100M by not procuring the planned second space vehicle critical for regional defense, something a CR does not allow. The CR would also delay investment­s in research and the workforce necessary to enable the U.S. to regain its leadership in establishi­ng upcoming wireless technology standards for secure military applicatio­ns.

Under the CR, nine Guam military constructi­on projects could be delayed, disrupting the movement of Marines from Okinawa as part of the rebalancin­g effort in the Pacific.

In addition to serving as a reliable employer with an unparallel­ed mission, the department has significan­t ties in local communitie­s around the country through its installati­ons, ranges and training areas. CRs impact the workforce - Americans already dealing with the uncertaint­y and consequenc­es of the pandemic - in all these areas. CRs negatively impact locations where Defense Department workers live, operate and develop new capabiliti­es.

National security unites us. The National Defense Strategy (NDS), which emphasizes the importance of restored competitiv­eness against China, is widely acknowledg­ed as an imperative for the country. The recent China Task Force further emphasized the NDS focus, stating that China is the "greatest national and economic security challenge of this generation." The use of CRs prevents us from allocating the correct resources to counter the national security challenges before us.

There is an opportunit­y after the November election for our elected officials to emphasize common ground like national security and to carry out the foundation­al responsibi­lity of enacting annual appropriat­ions.

Instead of our representa­tives applying tax dollars to the nation's challenges, the

most essential one being security, we routinely experi

ence threats of destructiv­e government shutdowns, actual full or partial shutdowns, or continuing resolution­s

( CRs).

Elaine McCusker

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