海角大神

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Who鈥檚 going to pay for the president's war against the Islamic State?

Budget debates on Capitol Hill have been extraordinarily contentious in recent years. Sooner rather than later, Congress needs to come to terms on how to pay for this war.

By Doug Mataconis , Decoder contributor

Andrew Sullivan points out that Republicans, or anyone for that matter,聽don鈥檛 seem to be all that concerned with how we鈥檙e going to pay for the president鈥檚 war against the Islamic State, also known as ISIS.

To be fair, the issue of paying for the president鈥檚 war isn鈥檛 necessarily one that needs to be answered immediately. We鈥檙e not talking about anything on the scale of the Iraq or Afghanistan Wars, at least not yet, and it seems apparent that the Pentagon should be able to pay for ongoing operations out of its regular operating budget for the time being. Indeed, attacks that we鈥檝e seen launched to date have, at least in some sense, already been paid for to the extent that they involve planes, bombs, and missiles, along with their related support materials, that have already been paid for. The Pentagon would be spending the same amount on this material, and on the salaries of the pilots and support personnel involved regardless of whether or not we were attacking Syria so they are essentially sunk costs that have already been paid for. The fiscal questions will come as the campaign goes on and we need to replace things like bombs and missiles with new weapons purchased from defense contractors, and if (and when?) the war itself expands and requires a greater American commitment, which seems inevitable. At least for the time being, though, the fiscal issues that Sullivan raises are not quite as immediate as the myriad of other issues that the president鈥檚 war raises.

Notwithstanding that qualification, though, Sullivan raises a valid point here. For the past two months or so since the president began air strikes against IS, we鈥檝e seen a myriad of criticisms of the president鈥檚 policy from the right. Some of these critics have argued that the president isn鈥檛 doing enough, some have argued that he鈥檚 doing too much or that certain elements of the policy, such as arming the 鈥渕oderate鈥 Syrian rebels, can鈥檛 possibly work. Other Republicans, and most especially the House and Senate leadership, have been largely supportive of the president鈥檚 policy and worked together with Democrats to push forward last week鈥檚 vote on authorizing to fund the 鈥渕oderate鈥 Syrian rebels.

Nowhere in any of this discussion, though, has there been any talk about the fiscal issues related to the strategy that the president wants to pursue against IS. While the plan currently limits American involvement to airstrikes, we鈥檝e already seen comments from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs and the Army chief of staff that ground forces might be necessary at some point. The president鈥檚 own advisers have already said that the campaign against IS could take years, even if we don鈥檛 suffer any setbacks. At the very least, this suggests that, likely sooner rather than later, we鈥檙e going to have to deal with 聽the question of how to pay for this war, a question that becomes even more important in an era where there seems to be very little room for political consensus on budget issues. At least to some extent, we would expect to see some of these questions answered when the president submits his Fiscal Year 2016 budget next year, or when Congress deals with the FY 2015 budget, which was basically delayed until December, thanks to a continuing resolution. However, it鈥檚 likely that the Pentagon may need some form of stopgap authorization for additional funds before that budget is approved. At that point, choices will need to be made about where to get the money from or whether to allow the additional spending to just be financed by debt.

The last time we went to war, there was almost no discussion in Congress about how we were going to pay for it. Indeed, the issue seems to have not occurred to anyone in the White House or Congress. Rather than raising taxes, as we have in past wars, we cut taxes and did nothing to cut spending in any other part of the budget, which went a long way toward raising the budget deficit well after President Bush left office. As we sit here today, it doesn鈥檛 seem as though the campaign against IS is going to reach the level of the Iraq War or the Afghanistan War, although it remains within the realm of possibility that future escalations could turn it into something like those wars. Before we reach that point, and given the fact that budget debates on Capitol Hill have been extraordinarily contentious in recent years, we ought to have at least some idea of how we鈥檙e going to pay for that conflict, because the way we did it last time was pretty much the worst way possible.

Doug Mataconis appears on the Outside the Beltway blog at http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/.