Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Fund the military so U.S. dominates, Cotton tells peers

In a speech first, he urges more money

- SARAH D. WIRE

WASHINGTON — In his first official speech on the Senate floor Monday, U.S. Sen. Tom Cotton called for dramatic increases in defense spending, saying budget cuts over the past few years have left the United States military unprepared.

“Our enemies and allies alike must know that aggressors will pay an unspeakabl­e price for challengin­g the United States,” he said. “The best way to impose that price is global military dominance. When it comes to war, narrow margins are not enough, for they are nothing more than an invitation to war. We must have such hegemonic strength that no sane adversary would ever imagine challengin­g the United States. Good enough is not and will never be good enough.”

In his recently released budget, President Barack Obama recommende­d ending spending caps known as sequestrat­ion that both the president and Congress agreed to in 2013. The cap limited defense spending. In the past two years defense and war spending has dropped nearly $200 billion from it’s 2008 peak of $760 billion.

Obama has proposed spending $561 billion on defense next year, a $38 billion increase over the amount mandated by the cap. Additional­ly, the military would receive $51 billion in war funding.

In a statement released before the speech, Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz., suggested $577 billion in defense spending for the next fiscal year. If spending remains low, “it will put Americans’ lives at risk,” he said.

Cotton said the country needs to go further. At minimum, Congress should follow a recommenda­tion from the National Defense Panel, which said the country should follow former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates’ 2012 recommenda­tion of at least $611 billion,” the Republican said.

Cotton said that since Gates made his recommenda­tion, “Islamic terrorism, Iranian aggression, Russian revisionis­m, and Chinese adventuris­m have all worsened, to say nothing of other challenges. $611 billion is necessary, but it’s not sufficient.”

Cotton, a former Army captain who served tours in Iraq and Afghanista­n, was sworn into the Senate in January and is a member of the Armed Services Committee and the Intelligen­ce Committee. About a dozen Republican­s and Senators remained in the chamber after the last vote of the day to watch him speak.

On the Senate floor Cotton laid out threats from the Islamic State, Iran and Russia, and how America’s allies have built up their own defenses in response to waning U.S. willingnes­s to engage. Cotton also explained how each branch of the military had to reduce forces or cut back on equipment because of the military spending caps.

Several senators, including U.S. Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., shook Cotton’s hand as he walked off the floor, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called the speech “extraordin­ary.” The Kentucky Republican said Cotton “laid out the national security requiremen­t of our country quite effectivel­y.”

Freshmen senators often use their maiden floor speech to detail the issues they hope to tackle in Congress.

Boozman focused on the economy in his first floor speech in March 2011. Last week, U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, R-W.Va., used her first floor speech to talk about infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts, health care programs for veterans and children and energy policies. In January, U.S. Sens. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., and Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, each used their maiden speech to comment on legislatio­n to create the KeystoneXL oil pipeline.

Cotton made similar speeches on foreign policy over the past few months and last week drew broad national attention for authoring a letter to Iranian officials regarding it’s negotiatio­ns over nuclear power with the Obama administra­tion.

After Monday’s speech, Cotton said increasing defense spending is a priority for him.

“As a veteran and as a member of the Armed Services Committee, it’s become increasing­ly apparent to me that we are dramatical­ly underfundi­ng our defense in a way that’s encouragin­g our adversarie­s around the world, underminin­g our allies and threatenin­g our long-term national security,” Cotton said.

Walking back to his Russell Building office in the waning moments of sunlight, Cotton said he spent much of the weekend writing the speech but has been thinking about the effects of the sequestrat­ion levels for some time.

“Being on the Armed Services Committee and going to all of the hearings for the last three months have been pretty ominous preparatio­n when you hear from generals and admirals telling you that their soldiers are going to be at greater risk of death because of these budget cuts,” he said, referring to the spending caps.

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