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[big campaign] McCain's war plan would balloon the deficit
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/07/07/fact-check-mccains-iraq-w_n_111215.html
McCain's 'Deficit Reduction' Plan Would Cost
Trillions<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/07/07/fact-check-mccains-iraq-w_n_111215.html>
On Monday, John McCain released the outlines of his economic agenda,
promising to balance the federal budget by the end of his first term by
saving money from achieving victory in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"Since all their costs were financed with deficit spending, all their
savings must go to deficit reduction," McCain's memo read.
But if the goal is to reduce deficit by cutting down on foreign
expenditures, the question should be raised: whose Iraq plan -- McCain's or
Barack Obama's -- would do more?
Estimating costs for troop withdrawal, long-term occupations, and even
current operations, is a tricky business, made more complicated by the
difficulties in pinpointing exactly what each candidate is seeking to do
with U.S. troops once he enters office.
But the Congressional Budget Office has put out several possible templates
for an American presence in Iraq and Afghanistan that offer an approximation
of the costs of Obama and McCain's policies. Should the candidates follow
through with their proposals, taxpayers would be spending, perhaps,
tens-of-billions (if not hundreds-of-billions) more under McCain. The
Arizona Republican argues that this is a price worth paying. But it is still
worthwhile noting just how much more his Iraq policy would contribute to the
deficit.
If the number of troops in both Iraq and Afghanistan were reduced to 30,000
by 2010, the United States would spend an estimated $570 billion between
2008 and 2017, according to an October 2007 COB
report<http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=8690&type=0>.
Under this scenario, the number of personnel deployed in Iraq, Afghanistan,
and elsewhere would start at 200,000 in fiscal year 2008, "decline to
approximately 100,000 personnel, on average, in 2009, and then reach 30,000
at the beginning of fiscal year 2010."
That timeline, however, could represent a quicker reduction than even Obama
has pledged. While the Senator has stuck to the promise of removing
one-to-two combat brigades a month from Iraq over the course of 16 months,
his advisers say he is open to the idea (perhaps committed) of sending
additional forces into Afghanistan. Should that be the case - and keeping in
mind that Obama will leave a residual force in Iraq - an estimated troop
reduction to 75,000 by 2013 seems more likely. Under that scenario, the
United States would spend slightly more than $1 trillion from 2008 through
2017. For the sake of context: the cost of the wars between 2001 and 2007
has been more than $600 billion.
McCain has pledged that the war in
Iraq<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/05/15/mccain-predicts-the-iraq_n_101969.html>will
be won by 2013. But he has also said that he would keep troops in the
country for "100 years" (or some extended length of time) provided that the
level of violence were minimal. That policy would cost a pretty penny for
taxpayers.
In a letter sent to Sen. Ken Conrad in September 2007, the CBO estimated
that keeping approximately 55,000 military personnel in Iraq, under the
assumption that they would operate at the "same pace and conduct the same
types of missions as the forces currently deployed there," would have a $4
billion to $8 billion one-time cost and a price of $25 billion annually.
This is an estimate of just the military operations, and would come on top
of the $1-trillion-or-so cost of troop reductions as detailed by the
previous CBO estimates.
Under a "non-combat" scenario, a la America's current presence in South
Korea (which McCain has referenced as a template for what he would do in
Iraq), costs of a long-term presence in Iraq would be approximately $8
billion at once, and $10 billion annually.
In a statement to Talking Points Memo, McCain campaign spokesman Brian
Rogers tried to clarify the Senator's claim that the United States could
reduce its deficit by winning the war.
"It's pretty straightforward," he
wrote<http://tpmelectioncentral.talkingpointsmemo.com/2008/07/mccains_plan_to_balance_budget.php>.
"As we win, costs will go down with a smaller footprint over time, and those
savings will go to deficit reduction. It's really the logical extension of
Senator McCain's position as articulated in the 2013 speech. Achieving
success in Iraq would obviously lead to reduced expenditures on the effort."
But cost estimates suggest that if reducing America's deficit is the goal, a
long term military presence in Iraq is not the best mechanism for getting
there.
That said, there are a variety of unknowns when it comes to estimating the
costs of war policy. For example, how much money would it take for an Obama
administration to send troops to Afghanistan? What would happen if, after
withdrawal, troops needed to be brought back into Iraq (would they have to
fight to regain bases)? How much will medical costs end up being for
returning soldiers? What are the costs of a disorderly withdrawal? And how
long, exactly, will McCain's vision of a long-term presence in the region
last?
"Look at the initial estimates offered by Mitch Daniels [Director of the
White House Budget] for the war in 2002," remarked Brian Katulis, a foreign
policy specialist for the Center for American Progress. "He was saying the
war would cost somewhere between $50 billion and $60 billion. How accurate
did that turn out?"
But there are certain cost predictions that analysts can make with greater
certainty. One is that transporting troops, whether to a different country
or back home, is generally the same (roughly $4 billion to $5 billion). The
other is that drawing down troops is more cost effective then keeping them
in Iraq.
"The pace of the drawdown matters a lot," said one analyst who has studied
the issue extensively. "The faster it is the more you save. The less combat
operations costs you will have, the few combat payments you will have to
make, the less expensive it will be to operate and repair equipment. You
will consolidate bases. And the transportation costs will be the same.... It
is a linear cost reduction. As you take people out you save money."
--
Nico Pitney
The Huffington Post
P: 202.834.0301
AIM: njpitney
GTalk/MSN: [email protected]
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