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Biden must invest in people, not the Pentagon

In its first budget blueprint to Congress, the Biden administration suggested a level of $753 billion for the Pentagon, an increase from President Trump’s final enacted budget. Today, WAND joined [number and type of] national groups in releasing a statement in reaction:

As organizations that believe strongly in the need to invest in our communities, there are many parts of this budget request to celebrate. Unfortunately, an increased Pentagon budget is not one of them. After a surge of funding for the Pentagon over the last four years, it is important that Pentagon spending not increase in any way, and in fact it is vital that it be reduced.


It is crystal clear that the status quo is failing to keep our communities at home and abroad safe. We must change course and invest in the needs of people rather than the greed of the military-industrial complex. As we enter the second year of a crisis that has killed over 500,000 people in the United States and nearly three million people around the world, led to the highest national unemployment since the Great Depression, and ravaged the U.S. and global economy, we simply cannot justify pouring billions of dollars into weapons and wars that serve to maintain conflict and violence at home and abroad. The weapons industry’s wealth has only grown during the pandemic, while constituents in every district continue to struggle to meet their basic needs. Yet the Pentagon topline in this proposed budget request communicates a commitment to the status quo.


The previous administration, with congressional acquiescence, increased the Pentagon’s budget by $133 billion even as the Defense Department failed its first two audits, continued to produce faulty weapons systems and programs with cost overruns, accelerated a new global nuclear arms race, and remained one of the world’s largest polluters at a time when climate change presents an existential threat. That Trump-era surge capped nearly two decades of endless war with a price tag of more than $6 trillion that could have been invested in diplomacy, domestic infrastructure, green jobs, health care and more.


There are numerous proposals on how to rein in the gargantuan Pentagon budget while increasing national and global security, and we are eager to work with Congress and the Biden administration to support these or other long-overdue efforts to scale back Pentagon spending. The American people know that producing more weapons, greenlighting corporate contracts, and propping up endless war slush funds will not make us safer.


As such, we call on President Biden to significantly lower the Pentagon budget when he sends his detailed budget request to Congress, and on Congress, as the holder of the nation’s purse strings, to allocate less for the Pentagon in its Fiscal Year 2022 spending bills.


Signed, American Friends Service Committee

Beyond the Bomb

Brave New Films

Center for International Policy

Church of the Brethren, Office of Peacebuilding and Policy

Coalition on Human Needs

CODEPINK

Columban Center for Advocacy and Outreach

Demand Progress

Friends of the Earth

Friends Committee on National Legislation

Indivisible

Just Foreign Policy

Justice Democrats

Justice Is Global

MADRE

MoveOn

National Priorities Project at the Institute for Policy Studies

NETWORK Lobby for Catholic Social Justice

Our Revolution

Pax Christi USA

Peace Direct

People's Action

Physicians for Social Responsibility

Public Citizen

Sisters of Mercy of the Americas Justice Team

Social Security Works

The United Methodist Church - General Board of Church and Society

Tri-Valley CAREs

Union of Concerned Scientists

United Church of Christ, Justice and Witness Ministries

United We Dream Network

Veterans For Peace

Women's Action for New Directions (WAND)

Win Without War

Working Families Party



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