iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Christopher Hellman

Christopher Hellman

Posted: March 1, 2011 11:57 AM

Crossposted with TomDispatch.com.

What if you went to a restaurant and found it rather pricey? Still, you ordered your meal and, when done, picked up the check only to discover that it was almost twice the menu price.

Welcome to the world of the real U.S. national security budget.  Normally, in media accounts, you hear about the Pentagon budget and the war-fighting supplementary funds passed by Congress for our conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan.  That already gets you into a startling price range -- close to $700 billion for 2012 -- but that’s barely more than half of it.  If Americans were ever presented with the real bill for the total U.S. national security budget, it would actually add up to more than $1.2 trillion a year.

Take that in for a moment.  It’s true; you won’t find that figure in your daily newspaper or on your nightly newscast, but it’s no misprint.  It may even be an underestimate.  In any case, it’s the real thing when it comes to your tax dollars.  The simplest way to grasp just how Americans could pay such a staggering amount annually for “security” is to go through what we know about the U.S. national security budget, step by step, and add it all up.

So, here we go.  Buckle your seat belt: It’s going to be a bumpy ride.

Fortunately for us, on February 14 the Obama administration officially released its Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 budget request.  Of course, it hasn’t been passed by Congress -- even the 2011 budget hasn’t made it through that august body yet -- but at least we have the most recent figures available for our calculations.

For 2012, the White House has requested $558 billion for the Pentagon’s annual “base” budget, plus an additional $118 billion to fund military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.  At $676 billion, that’s already nothing to sneeze at, but it’s just the barest of beginnings when it comes to what American taxpayers will actually spend on national security.  Think of it as the gigantic tip of a humongous iceberg.

To get closer to a real figure, it’s necessary to start peeking at other parts of the federal budget where so many other pots of security spending are squirreled away. 

Missing from the Pentagon’s budget request, for example, is an additional $19.3 billion for nuclear-weapons-related activities like making sure our current stockpile of warheads will work as expected and cleaning up the waste created by seven decades of developing and producing them.  That money, however, officially falls in the province of the Department of Energy.  And then, don’t forget an additional $7.8 billion that the Pentagon lumps into a “miscellaneous” category -- a kind of department of chump change -- that is included in neither its base budget nor those war-fighting funds.

So, even though we’re barely started, we’ve already hit a total official FY 2012 Pentagon budget request of:

$703.1 billion dollars.

Not usually included in national security spending are hundreds of billions of dollars that American taxpayers are asked to spend to pay for past wars, and to support our current and future national security strategy.

For starters, that $117.8 billion war-funding request for the Department of Defense doesn’t include certain actual “war-related fighting” costs.  Take, for instance, the counterterrorism activities of the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development. For the first time, just as with the Pentagon budget, the FY 2012 request divides what’s called "International Affairs" in two: that is, into an annual "base" budget as well as funding for "Overseas Contingency Operations" related to Iraq and Afghanistan.  (In the Bush years, these used to be called the Global War on Terror.)  The State Department’s contribution? $8.7 billion.  That brings the grand but very partial total so far to:

$711.8 billion.

The White House has also requested $71.6 billion for a post-2001 category called “homeland security” -- of which $18.1 billion is funded through the Department of Defense. The remaining $53.5 billion goes through various other federal accounts, including the Department of Homeland Security ($37 billion), the Department of Health and Human Services ($4.6 billion), and the Department of Justice ($4.6 billion). All of it is, however, national security funding, which brings our total to:

$765.3 billion.

The U.S. intelligence budget was technically classified prior to 2007, although at roughly $40 billion annually, it was considered one of the worst-kept secrets in Washington. Since then, as a result of recommendations by the 9/11 Commission, Congress has required that the government reveal the total amount spent on intelligence work related to the National Intelligence Program (NIP).

This work done by federal agencies like the CIA and the National Security Agency consists of keeping an eye on and trying to understand what other nations are doing and thinking, as well as a broad range of “covert operations” such as those being conducted in Pakistan. In this area, we won’t have figures until FY 2012 ends. The latest NIP funding figure we do have is $53.1 billion for FY 2010.  There’s little question that the FY 2012 figure will be higher, but let’s be safe and stick with what we know.  (Keep in mind that the government spends plenty more on “intelligence.”  Additional funds for the Military Intelligence Program (MIP), however, are already included in the Pentagon’s 2012 base budget and war-fighting supplemental, though we don’t know what they are. The FY 2010 funding for MIP, again the latest figure available, was $27 billion.)  In any case, add that $53.1 billion and we’re at:

$818.4 billion.

Veterans programs are an important part of the national security budget with the projected funding figure for 2012 being $129.3 billion. Of this, $59 billion is for veterans’ hospital and medical care, $70.3 billion for disability pensions and education programs. This category of national security funding has been growing rapidly in recent years because of the soaring medical-care needs of veterans of the Iraq and Afghan wars. According to an analysis by the Congressional Budget Office, by 2020 total funding for health-care services for veterans will have risen another 45%-75%.  In the meantime, for 2012 we’ve reached:

$947.7 billion.

If you include the part of the foreign affairs budget not directly related to U.S. military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as other counterterrorism operations, you have an additional $18 billion in direct security spending.  Of this, $6.6 billion is for military aid to foreign countries, while almost $2 billion goes for “international peacekeeping” operations. A further $709 million has been designated for countering the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, combating terrorism, and clearing landmines planted in regional conflicts around the globe.  This leaves us at:

$965.7 billion.

As with all federal retirees, U.S. military retirees and former civilian Department of Defense employees receive pension benefits from the government. The 2012 figure is $48.5 billion for military personnel, $20 billion for those civilian employees, which means we’ve now hit:

$1,034.2 billion. (Yes, that’s $1.03 trillion!)

When the federal government lacks sufficient funds to pay all of its obligations, it borrows. Each year, it must pay the interest on this debt which, for FY 2012, is projected at $474.1 billion.  The National Priorities Project calculates that 39 percent of that, or $185 billion, comes from borrowing related to past Pentagon spending.

Add it all together and the grand total for the known national security budget of the United States is:

$1,219.2 billion.  (That’s more than $1.2 trillion.)

A country with a gross domestic product of $1.2 trillion would have the 15th largest economy in the world, ranking between Canada and Indonesia, and ahead of Australia, Taiwan, the Netherlands, and Saudi Arabia.  Still, don’t for a second think that $1.2 trillion is the actual grand total for what the U.S. government spends on national security. Former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld once famously spoke of the world’s “known unknowns.”  Explaining the phrase this way: “That is to say there are things that we now know we don't know.” It’s a concept that couldn’t apply better to the budget he once oversaw.  When it comes to U.S. national security spending, there are some relevant numbers we know are out there, even if we simply can’t calculate them.

To take one example, how much of NASA’s proposed $18.7 billion budget falls under national security spending? We know that the agency works closely with the Pentagon. NASA satellite launches often occur from the Air Force’s facilities at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California and Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. The Air Force has its own satellite launch capability, but how much of that comes as a result of NASA technology and support?  In dollars terms, we just don’t know.

Other “known unknowns” would include portions of the State Department budget. One assumes that at least some of its diplomatic initiatives promote our security interests. Similarly, we have no figure for the pensions of non-Pentagon federal retirees who worked on security issues for the Department of Homeland Security, the State Department, or the Departments of Justice and Treasury. Nor do we have figures for the interest on moneys borrowed to fund veterans’ benefits, among other national-security-related matters. The bill for such known unknowns could easily run into the tens of billions of dollars annually, putting the full national security budget over the $1.3 trillion mark or even higher.

There’s a simple principle here.  American taxpayers should know just what they are paying for.  In a restaurant, a customer would be outraged to receive a check almost twice as high as the menu promised.  We have no idea whether the same would be true in the world of national security spending, because Americans are never told what national security actually means at the cash register.

Christopher Hellman is communications liaison at the National Priorities Project in Northampton, Massachusetts. He was previously a military policy analyst for the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, a Senior Research Analyst at the Center for Defense Information, and spent 10 years on Capitol Hill as a congressional staffer working on national security and foreign policy issues. He is a TomDispatch regular and a frequent media commentator on military planning, policy, and budgetary issues. To listen to Timothy MacBain’s latest TomCast audio interview in which Hellman explains how he arrived at his staggering numbers, click here, or download it to your iPod here.

[Note on Sources: The press release from the Office of The Director of National Intelligence disclosing the Fiscal Year 2010 $53 billion intelligence budget consists of 138 words and no details, other than that the office will disclose no details. It can be found by clicking here (.pdf file).  An October 2010 analysis by the Congressional Budget Office entitled "Potential Costs of Veterans' Health Care" projects rapid cost growth for Veterans Administration services over the next decade as a result of spiraling health care costs. To read the full report, click here (.pdf file).  To see all the federal agencies that contribute to homeland security funding, click here (.pdf file)]

Copyright 2011 Christopher Hellman

 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 128
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (5 total)
06:37 PM on 03/06/2011
You missed (I think) costs of maintaining the nuclear stockpile, which is maintained via the DOE. The dept of commerce has obligations too.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
09:52 AM on 03/02/2011
There are still people that think the government is needed? When the parasitic class wipes out the productive class then what?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Jerry Vasquez
A Unapologetic liberal
10:04 AM on 03/02/2011
Then we will finally know who is the parasitic ones are and won't you be surprised.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
10:58 AM on 03/02/2011
No surprise. The parasitic class are those who live off the productive class. Government employees, teachers, cops, politicians and anyone who profits from the money the government steals from the productive people.

The productive class are those who create wealth, produce profits and work hard for money that comes from those profits. They design, create, engineer and offer service people are willing to voluntarily pay for. They do not get their money from a system that threatens violence against people who are productive.

You are either productive or you live off of those who are.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Rappaport
tired of the con game called "free markets."
09:51 AM on 03/02/2011
And yet no one calls it what it is -- corporate welfare.
09:48 AM on 03/02/2011
The former Soviet Union collasped under the weight of its own military-industrial complex. The United States is well on the path of duplicating that event.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hkochii
Why do I even care?
09:22 AM on 03/02/2011
It's great to have this accounting of how many tax payer dollars are being spent on our security but there's no explanation on how to grasp just how unbelievably gargantuan a trillion anything is let alone a trillion dollars. Here's a simple way to get a grasp of how big this number is. Most all adults have a grasp of time. We know how long a second is, a day, a week, a month. Most of us have lived a few decades and there might even be a few out there who have lived close to a century. If you consider a second to represent each dollar think about how long it takes a trillion to tick by. One million seconds takes 11.5 days, that's not too long. One billion takes 31.7 years, a bit longer but ok, I've live almost two billion seconds. Now for a trillion, that's a one with twelve zero's behind it, 31,709.8 years. Yep it takes a bit over 317 centuries for that number to tick by one second at a time. To represent the number presented in this article, $1,219.2 billion, that's one trillion two hundred nineteen billion two million, takes 38,660.5 years to tick by, 386.6 centuries. Hard to believe I know, just do the math, any fifth grader can.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Red Herring
Retired Miner, living in third world
07:40 AM on 03/02/2011
This not new to anyone who follows the actual moneys spent. The Pentagon shows us a small number as the price of what they are doing , in the meantime it is shoveling money out the back door by the truckload to it's cronys and friends. is it a crime? Most certainly is.
07:08 AM on 03/02/2011
interesting
thanks
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AndyWright68
Freedom is inevitable!
07:04 AM on 03/02/2011
this what your government does. It steals your money from every different direction, lies to you and uses violence against us to keep stealing our money. And people still think the government is needed? When the parasitic class wipes out the productive class then what?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:36 AM on 03/02/2011
And please let's not call it a security or defense spend any more. It's a war spend.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lorili Lee
03:10 PM on 03/02/2011
The Department of Defense used to be called the War Department. Of course the US used to be called a constitutional republic.

Reminds me of that scene from Dr. Strangelove, "Gentlemen, please, no fighting in the War Room!"
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
06:33 AM on 03/02/2011
Don't worry about it. It's only a loan from China. And they won't call in the debt. Yet.
photo
sloppybear16
"Dare we live, without molds"
04:25 AM on 03/02/2011
Change? Why would anyone believe in it? It should have been obvious that this nonsense would continue regardless to whether Obama or McCain got elected.
photo
HamletsMill
All Myth is Astronomy
03:42 AM on 03/02/2011
WAR IS A RACKET!
http://www.lexrex.com/enlightened/articles/warisaracket.htm

"WAR is a racket. It always has been.

It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives.

A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of the people. Only a small "inside" group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes."

- Major General Smedley D. Butler, USMC, Retired - 1936

Dwight D. Eisenhower exit speech on Jan.17,1961 WARNING us of the Military Industrial Complex. From Vietnam to Afghanistan the rest is history.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y06NSBBRtY

Trillions of dollars have been "spent" to the corporate welfare Military Industrial Complex and no person on Earth is safe from Weapons of Mass Destruction. Especially the people who live and work in NYC. DUH! Every thinking person on Earth knows it. Every thinking person on Earth knows where this is all going. Buying Armageddon is a very, very profitable business. Until The Day. IT WILL HAPPEN and everyone knows it. EVERYONE.

Countdown To Zero - Official Trailer [HD]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mn-1LuLhrw
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
12:49 AM on 03/02/2011
thats a lot of spending, whats it all for? they must think people are D.U.M.B.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vincent Van Der Hyde
The truth will set you free.
05:58 AM on 03/02/2011
And,
they would be right.
photo
Alan
American Robin (Turdus migratorius) . So true.
12:25 AM on 03/02/2011
In public records of project/grant requests for the stimulus I noticed several airports in the state were requesting large amounts of money to purchase body scanners. The requests were categorized under the heading of "Homeland Security". Do we not fund a massive amount of money to the boondoggle known as the "Department of Homeland Security"?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SoCalOC
J 'Accuse
11:54 PM on 03/01/2011
Repulicans dont want to have any cuts to defence or the classified national security budget. They just want cut aid to most needy in society. Repubs call it the Ayn Rand budget or the FU America budget.