In his essay on conservatism and
constitutionalism, Charles Kesler touches on a point we've recently
discussed here:
National defense is the national government's most
urgent and fundamental priority. But as Robert Samuelson noted
recently, defense spending is only a fifth of the federal budget;
in 1956, during a peaceful part of the Cold War, it was 60% of the
budget. Social welfare spending (counting Social Security and
Medicare) has moved in the opposite direction. It was a fifth of
the budget in 1956; today, it is three times that percentage, and
climbing. While waging a multi-front war, the Bush Administration
has done all it can to hold down defense spending and the size of
the armed forces. Partly, this is the result of its faith that with
high technology and transformed forces, more could be done with
less. Partly, however, the administration fears being backed into a
tax increase, or unpopular reductions in spending, or both.
But conservatives ought to do better than that. National defense
is central to constitutionalism in a way that entitlement spending
is not. Defense spending needs to grow dramatically, and if that
forces a hard look at entitlements and domestic discretionary
spending, all the better.
I'm actually less sure that defense spending "needs to grow
dramatically" -- some of the money for much needed investments in
this area could be freed up by curbing excesses in the procurement
process, excising pork, and reevaluating Cold War-era weapons
systems and commitments -- but definitely agree it should consume a
much larger portion of the federal budget.
topics:
Federal Budget, Entitlements, Social Security, Constitution, Conservatism, Medicare