2020 Army Budget Begins 'Dramatic Shift'
February 26, 2019 | AUSAEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
An Army budget drill that identified $30 billion in savings was partly about finding money for future modernization and partly to “do better with every dollar we have,” Undersecretary of the Army Ryan D. McCarthy said.
Speaking at a Feb. 26 breakfast hosted by the Association of the U.S. Army’s Institute of Land Warfare, McCarthy did not talk about specifics of the fiscal 2020 budget now expected to be unveiled March 12. He did talk about the work to build a budget that continues to prioritize readiness while also making certain there is money over the next five years for much-needed modernization of weapons and equipment.
The $30 billion in savings is the result of more than 60 hours of reviewing programs. About $8 billion is the result of cost avoidance and $22 billion is from terminations or cuts “so that we could realign the funding against our priorities,” said McCarthy.
He continued, “We ran through every program in the budget, and I haven’t seen something like that since [then-Defense Secretary] Robert Gates did that about 10 years ago.” McCarthy was a special assistant to Gates during the Bush and Obama administrations.
The $30 billion adjustment in spending allows a shift in two to five years from legacy weapons systems to new capabilities, he said. “It is a pretty dramatic shift.”
The process the Army underwent to develop this upcoming budget request really began two years ago, McCarthy said, as the service unveiled its six modernization priorities: long-range precision fires, a next-generation combat vehicle, future vertical lift, the Army network, air and missile defense, and soldier lethality.
“With the ’18 and ’19 budgets, we’ve delivered a modernization strategy, we’ve been very consistent with where we want to take the Army … and with that comes difficult choices,” McCarthy said.
The Army also has “maintained readiness as the priority,” including getting as many brigade combat teams to the highest state of readiness, McCarthy said.
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The Association of the United States Army is a nonprofit educational and professional development association serving America’s Total Army, our Soldiers, Army civilians, and their families; our industry partners, and supporters of a strong national defense. AUSA provides a voice for the Army, supports the Soldier, and honors those who have served in order to advance the security of the nation. AUSA educates its members, the public, industry, and Congress about the critical nature of land warfare and the Army’s central role in national defense. AUSA informs its members, our communities, and Congress about issues affecting America’s Army and the Soldiers who serve in the Regular Army, Army National Guard, and Army Reserve. AUSA connects the Army to the American people at the national, regional, and chapter levels.
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