The Denver Post

Congress warns Pentagon not to move money to fund Trump wall

- By Lolita C. Baldor Josh Galemore, Arizona Daily Star

WASHINGTON» Lawmakers from both parties told Pentagon leaders on Wednesday that the Defense Department is underminin­g its own efforts to get military money by diverting billions of dollars for the constructi­on of President Donald Trump’s U.S.-Mexico border wall

The chairman of the House Armed Services Committee and the committee’s top Republican warned Defense Secretary Mark Esper that overturnin­g congressio­nal funding decisions to shift money for the wall is an enormous problem that will have consequenc­es.

The plan to shift money has triggered rare Republican opposition to one of Trump’s priorities.

Rep. Mac Thornberry, R-Texas, said the result may be that Congress will place greater restrictio­ns on the Pentagon’s ability to move money around to meet military needs. The chairman, Democratic Rep. Adam Smith of Washington, said the money transfer is “very, very damaging to the Pentagon.”

“The message it sends is the Pentagon has plenty of money,” said Smith, adding that it “undercuts any arguments for any need for resources.”

The Pentagon announced this month that it was slashing billions of dollars in funding for Navy and Air Force aircraft and other military programs to free up money for the constructi­on of the wall.

Esper approved the $3.8 billion border wall request from the Department of Homeland Security, and the Pentagon acknowledg­ed that more cuts could be coming to provide additional dollars for the wall. Trump repeatedly has claimed that Mexico is paying for his promised “big beautiful wall,” but that has never happened.

The Pentagon’s decision, announced in “reprogramm­ing” documents provided to lawmakers, stripped money from major aircraft and procuremen­t programs that touch Republican and Democratic districts and states.

Pointing to the $1.5 billion stripped from National Guard programs, Rep. Elissa Slotkin, DMich., said she’s “concerned the Pentagon is going to become the piggy bank for any pet project. Today it could be the wall; tomorrow it could be someone’s decision to fund a health care project.”

Slotkin, a former senior policy adviser at the Pentagon, told Esper that “you leave us no choice but to look at what we can do to constrain your reprogramm­ing authority.”

Esper said the money was shifted from programs that had more money than needed or had money that wasn’t needed right away.

Congress, which has final budget authority, often makes changes to budgets requested by various department­s including the Pentagon, and adds money to programs that lawmakers deem important. Esper’s comments set off alarms for those who worry their budget authority is being usurped.

Lawmakers also noted that the U.S.-Mexico border is not included as a priority at all in the Pentagon’s new national defense strategy. Esper said homeland security is a priority.

 ??  ?? Constructi­on crews blast a portion of Monument Hill in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument west of Lukeville, Ariz., on Wednesday. Crews in southern Arizona have begun clearing space for new stretches of a border wall.
Constructi­on crews blast a portion of Monument Hill in the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument west of Lukeville, Ariz., on Wednesday. Crews in southern Arizona have begun clearing space for new stretches of a border wall.

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