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U.S. military concerned over cost cutting
by Staff Writers
Washington (UPI) Aug 5, 2011

German official named to head UN mission in Iraq
United Nations (AFP) Aug 5, 2011 - UN leader Ban Ki-moon on Friday named Martin Kobler of Germany as the new head of the UN mission in Iraq helping the government with efforts to recover from conflict.

Kobler, 58, a former top official at the German foreign ministry with particular expertise in helping countries in conflict, moves from the UN mission in Afghanistan where he was deputy head. He had previously been Germany's ambassador to Iraq.

Kobler replaces Ad Melkert of the Netherlands, who had led the UN mission in Iraq, UNAMI, since July 2009. "The secretary general is grateful for Mr Melkerts leadership of UNAMI," said Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky.

As the dust temporarily settles in the U.S. deficit debate military leaders are sounding the alarm over a "doomsday" provision in deficit reduction legislation.

The mechanism could trigger another $500 billion in across-the-board cuts by the U.S. Department of Defense over the next decade instead of targeted cuts of about $350 million if Congress doesn't pass a separate spending package.

"If that happened … it would result in a further round of dangerous cuts across the board, defense cuts that I believe would do real damage to our security, our troops and their families and our military's ability to protect the nation," Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said this week.

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff U.S. Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, was of like mind, saying: "The Defense Department may represent 50 percent of the discretionary budget in this country but there is nothing discretionary about the things we do every day for our fellow citizens … the U.S. military remains the linchpin of defending our national interests."

"Debilitating and capricious" cuts threaten U.S. capability to meet threats, he said.

The United States spends about 5 percent of the nation's gross domestic product on defense when overseas operations are factored in. That's the largest of amount in the world.

A recent report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington think tank, stated that U.S. spending accounted for about 46.5 percent of global military spending in 2009.

China, a potential adversary that is rapidly modernizing its military and that doesn't have overseas operations, accounts for about 6.6 percent of spending.

The rock-and-a-hard place the United States finds itself in on military spending ironically comes after former Secretary of Defense Robert Gates strongly chastised America's NATO allies for failing to adequately fund their militaries or even meet the NATO requirement of a minimum of about 2 percent of GDP.

Speaking to NATO members in June, he said the alliance had turned into a "two-tiered" organization. There were those willing and able to bear the price of alliance commitments and those who won't share the risks and costs.

The Pentagon since April has been looking at spending cuts under urging from U.S. President Barak Obama to trim $380 billion-$400 billion over the next decade, so the current plan is in line with that. But it's the doomsday mechanism of across-the-board cuts that has leaders worried.

"Make no mistake about it," Panetta said. "We will face some tough challenges here as we try to meet those numbers. But those numbers are within the ballpark that we were discussing with both the president and (Office of Management and Budget)."

Recommendations are due later this year. One big ticket program under scrutiny is the costly F-35 Joint Strike Fighter.

How the Pentagon handles the biggest portion of the defense budget -- personnel costs and benefits, such as healthcare for dependents and retirees, remains to be seen.

"We have to protect our core national security interests, we've got to be able to provide the best military in the world and we cannot break faith with the troops and their families," Panetta said.




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US-Bahrain defense pact renewed
Washington (AFP) Aug 5, 2011 - US officials and their counterparts in Bahrain, which crushed month-long protests in mid-March, have renewed a defense pact, officials said Friday.

The two countries inked a 10-year defense agreement on October 28, 1991, seven months after the Gulf War, that was renewed in October 2001 for the same duration.

As early as 2002, the administration of former US president George W. Bush and the Bahraini regime secretly extended the accord for another five years, to 2016, The Washington Post reported. But Pentagon officials declined to confirm those dates to AFP.

A US official who requested anonymity, however, said that "it would be accurate to say that it goes beyond that date" of October 2011.

Yet the official cautioned that: "Obviously, it's a very delicate situation over there right now, so you never know what could change."

The defense pact allows US access to bases in strategically located Bahrain, home the US Fifth Fleet, and for the United States to preposition its military equipment.

It also provides for consultations if any security crisis arises for the Gulf country and for the United States to train Bahrain forces, according to the Congressional Research Service.

Washington considers Bahrain, located across the Gulf from arch-US foe Iran, a major non-NATO ally.

Security forces in the tiny archipelago ruled by the Sunni Al-Khalifa dynasty cracked down on mostly Shiite pro-democracy protesters in mid-March after being backed by troops that rolled in from neighboring Sunni Gulf monarchies.

Washington decried the crackdown, urging Bahrain's rulers to negotiate with protesters and respond to the legitimate needs of the people.





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MILPLEX
US-Bahrain defense pact renewed
Washington (AFP) Aug 5, 2011
US officials and their counterparts in Bahrain, which crushed month-long protests in mid-March, have renewed a defense pact, officials said Friday. The two countries inked a 10-year defense agreement on October 28, 1991, seven months after the Gulf War, that was renewed in October 2001 for the same duration. As early as 2002, the administration of former US president George W. Bush and ... read more


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