We’re all for flood-the-zone coverage of the budget, so a tip of The Audit’s green eyeshade to The Wall Street Journal, which unfurls the story in full glory, with charts, breakdowns, analysis for individual federal departments and agencies, plus, for no extra charge, a handy Q & A on what it all means for taxpayers.
The package is here.
The politics analysis is here.
Bloomberg also goes big and includes a look at U.S. companies that would see their taxes go up if the blueprint is approved and implications for municipal bonds.
And far be it from me to scoff at any opportunity to ogle the, um, photogenic director of the Office of Management and Budget (insert wolf whistle here).
But lost in the shuffle, I’m afraid, is the jaw-dropping number that Obama is requesting for the Defense Department next year: $708 billion.
That’s seven oh eight. Billion. Cash money.
I know, I know. The defense budget is Washington’s version of Groundhog Day. Year in and year out, pork barrel politics make it impossible for the Pentagon to cut programs that the Pentagon itself doesn’t want or need. Apparently, people outside of Washington think this is strange.
And this year, as The New York Times tells it, even defense contractors are surprised by the budget gusher.
“The defense industry is pleased but bemused,” said Loren Thompson, the chief operating officer at the Lexington Institute, a policy group financed partly by military contractors. “It’s been telling itself for years that when the Democrats got control it would be bad news for weapons programs. But the spending keeps going on.”
This isn’t exactly Mother Jones talking here.
The Times and others devote the usual attention to the fate of individual, big-ticket programs. And that’s fine. For today.
Slate’s Fred Kaplan brings some healthy skepticism to the broader defense spending numbers.
The Pentagon released its budget for fiscal year 2011 this afternoon, and it is enormous—much larger, even adjusting for inflation, than any budget since World War II. What’s more, some numbers buried within the budget suggest that it’s set to grow larger still in the coming years—to a greater extent than the White House or the Defense Department acknowledges.
But may we humbly suggest that today’s budget release mark not the end of reporting on defense spending, but the beginning? I mean, from a journalism point of view, this is what military types would call a target-rich environment.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has already made clear that she disagrees with Obama’s decision to exempt military spending from his proposed budget freeze.
“I don’t think that we have to protect military contractors, and I want to make that distinction very clearly,” Ms. Pelosi said. “I do not think the entire defense budget should be exempted.”
Sounds like a potential source to us.
Another might the Secretary of Defense, last seen canning the Marine general in charge of the F-35 and rebuking the contractor, Lockheed Martin, which is clearly reeling, as the Times reports:
In a statement issued late Monday, Lockheed Martin said it had been working with military officials “on a plan to get the program back on track” and was “committed to stabilizing F-35 cost, affordability and to fielding the aircraft on time.”
He’s almost inviting reporters in for a look around.
The president may have taken defense spending off the table, for all sorts of reasons, some having nothing to do with sound risk-assessment, prudent budgeting, and competent administration. But that doesn’t mean the press has to go along with it.

Methinks the lady doth protest too much about the wrong things.
$708 billion does sound like a lot of money, and it’s certainly not chump change by any stretch of the imagination, but your focus on procurement and the jaw dropping numbers seems disproportionate.
The base request was for $548 billion, putting core defense spending at 3.7% of GDP. The supplemental $159 billion for overseas operations in Afghanistan/Pakistan and Iraq puts the total at 708$ billion, or 4.8% of GDP. The 50 year average for US defense spending is 5.6%. In other words this is hardly a historically large number and it blows my mind that Kaplan could base such an absurd statement solely on a deeply flawed CNAS study. Comparing real dollar costs from a conflict that took place 60 years ago should be done with some significant qualifiers.
The breakdown for procurement for the 2011 budget comes in at $112.9 billion, a 7.7% increase. A significant, but unknown (to me at any rate) portion of this overall number is for equipment and vehicles destroyed or prematurely sent to the scrap heap as a consequence of deployments. Equipment replacement costs for damaged vehicles or vehicles prematurely retired from heavy operational use are not part of the $159 billion supplemental and are typically folded over into procurement. While the procurement budget for the DOD had a large year to year increase, it is unknown just how much of this is “new” procurement and how much is replacement and that adds much needed context to this story.
I realize that ferreting out such minutia would require hours and hours of talking to accountant types at the DOD and CBO and pouring over hundreds of pages of budget data, but I though that’s what journalists did? Look behind the headlines and get to the real story. You seemed content with just regurgitating some superficial sound bites.
At any rate, what really stuck me about the WSJ piece you linked to is the huge gaping mile wide discrepancy between Social Security/Medicaid/Medicare receipts and outlays. $935 billion in receipts and $2,165 billion in outlays.
Holy shitballs! That’s the real story here! Entitlements running a $1,230 billion dollar deficit (that’s realcash money toots)!
This deficit alone is over ten times the entire DOD procurement budget for 2011!
Given the prevailing wisdom of your peers, I understand the DOD emphasis might be “sexier”, but you just missed a chance to cover a much more target rich environment.
#1 Posted by Mike H, CJR on Tue 2 Feb 2010 at 04:30 PM
Let's put this in perspective.
The United States of America spends more (much more) than the rest of the world spends on their militaries - combined.
Do we really need a military that large?
#2 Posted by Ron R, CJR on Wed 3 Feb 2010 at 03:52 PM
here's a great link to tomdispatch story on the billion dollar a year embassy-super-fortress in bug-a-dud-a-doo, bedbug of bulgaria is the band that plays there; the other day , he also had a great decimation of what is actually a trillion dollar war budget; empires sure are expensive!
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/174789/the_mother_ship_lands_in_iraq
#3 Posted by MICHAEL ROLOFF, CJR on Wed 3 Feb 2010 at 05:56 PM