How Trump Feels Safe
How Trump Sees the World
From
here >>> President
Donald J. Trump loves Nukes and used to say “everyone needs one (sic)” or “why
have them if you won’t use them?” Well, now he has proposed to boost federal
spending on the production of nuclear weapons by more than $1 billion in 2018
while slashing
or eliminating spending on many federal programs related to diplomacy,
foreign aid, and social needs, in a budget proposal that reflects the first
tangible expression of his defense priorities.
Trump
likes being “unpredictable.”
The
$1.4 billion budget increase for the National Nuclear Security Administration
amounts to just a small fraction of the overall $54 billion boost he requested
over the military’s roughly $639 billion 2017 budget, but it is a
proportionally higher increase (11 percent) than the Defense Department itself
would get (8 percent), signaling that he and his advisers feel the U.S. nuclear
weapons program deserves special treatment.
The 64-page budget document released by
the White House on March 16 — and entitled “America First: A Budget
Blueprint to Make America Great Again”
— contained only a few sentences about the proposal, which would give the
NNSA a total of $14.3 billion in fiscal year 2018. But the blueprint said the
new spending would support “the goals of moving toward a responsive nuclear
infrastructure and advancing the existing program of record for warhead life
extension programs.”
That language refers to an existing effort to modernize three types of
warheads, so they can be deployed with bombers, submarine-launched missiles,
and land-based missiles, some of which will themselves be modernized in years
to come. That warhead work is well under way, although
the budget document suggested it had been slowed by Obama-era defense spending
caps. Some independent experts have cautioned, however, that the speed of the
work is limited mostly by its sheer complexity, rather than by fund shortages,
and expressed doubt that it could be accelerated.
Trump’s
budget proposal also says the additional NNSA funds would address its “critical
infrastructure maintenance” needs — which is Washington-speak for everything
from laboratories and test tracks to office buildings — which NNSA director
Frank Klotz has pegged in public statements at roughly $3.7 billion.
Now the rest of the story - as the late great Paul Harvey used to say:
That tally includes both nuclear weapons-related work and non-nuclear
work related to the cleanup of wastes from past weapons production activities.
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