I waver, in that maybe some of those guys went up to the line in asking such a blunt question.... Rumsfeld did put himself out there and in front of the troops to answer their questions. That seems to be a question on everyone's mind, so why not ask it?
I worked in DC for a year, undergrad Internship, and worked specifically on budgeting, out of my Senator's office. He was working on budugeting requests and omnibus spending, etc. This was several years ago, but with the recent passing of the Omnibus Bill, and then reading this post, it reminded me of that time.
There should be more money poured into the DoD, especially now. There are NO shortages of anything, no rationing, and we all go into convulsions when our oil prices go up. With this Omnibus bill, the extra money was staggering:
$3.5 million for bus acquisition in Atlanta, Ga.;
$2 million for kitchen relocation in Fairbanks North Star Borough in Fairbanks, Alaska;
$1.5 million for a demonstration project to transport naturally chilled water from Lake Ontario to Lake Onondaga;
$500,000 for the Kincaid Park Soccer and Nordic Ski Center in Anchorage, Alaska;
$250,000 for the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tenn.;
$200,000 for Fenton Street Village pedestrian linkages in Montgomery Co., Md.;
$100,000 for the Punxsutawney Weather Museum
$100,000 for a municipal swimming pool in Ottawa, Kan.;
$80,000 for the San Diego Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Community Center;
$75,000 for the Paper Industry International Hall of Fame in Appleton, Wis.; $35,000 for the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame; and
$25,000 for fitness equipment for the YMCA in Bradford County, Pa.
That's $8,365,000 in needless spending.
"According to Lees, the armor kits for the FMTV trucks will not double the cost of the truck, estimated at $150,000 per unit..."
Without all that garbage in the Omnibus Bill, we could have had 55 new Armored vehicles in Iraq.
HOWEVER, now you're getting into the real political wanking up there. According to TACOM, "...the Army would need to invest up to several million dollars to "come up with a decent strap-on package" for (armored vehicles)..." Well, again, that could have been found in the Omnibus Bill
"The (Humvee) armor protection, however, is not aimed at landmine threats, but was designed to safeguard the crew from shrapnel.
The armor work is being done by O'Gara-Hess & Eisenhardt Armoring Company, Fairfield, Ohio. The firm became the Army's supplier of up-armored Humvees in 1993.
Currently, O'Gara is producing between 30 to 45 up-armored Humvees per month and will continue to do so for several years, said Robert E. Morris, the company's vice president for military products. So far, he said in an interview, O'Gara has built about 2,000 of the up-armored vehicles for the Army and the Air Force." - National Defense Magazine
Weaver, who was responsible for the up-armored Humvee effort in the mid-1990s, said "it was a good job but certainly wasn't optimized, because we had to work around the basic design of the Humvee ... We were able to do it with the Humvee because its front wheels offered some reasonable angles to vent the blast. But it is not the way we would have done it, if it had been a major consideration in the early stages of design."
"The bottom line is that the program office is awaiting funding-there is a $1 million unfunded requirement." The up-armored Humvee made headlines three years ago, when a truck driving through Bosnia hit a 14-pound landmine and all three crew members emerged virtually uninjured."
So now they need funding? Well!? I can't really work my mind around this, without vomiting.
Get ready, because THIS is the worst bit:
Weaver, a former program manager, understands the dilemmas associated with keeping projects on budget while meeting all desired specifications. "Armor is expensive," he said. "It leads to the discussion of how much is a life worth." "When the up-armored Humvee was introduced, the armor doubled the cost of the vehicle," he said. "But there were G.Is who were able to walk away from a mine blast who would otherwise have been severely injured or killed."
And THIS is who our Army is contracting with, to make our Armored Vehicles, and save the troops in Iraq. And they're smegging about the cost of armor, and the value of a life. to save money in a budget, when over 8 million just went to bull around the country. I will gladly ride a bike and not use aluminum foil and whatever else the WWII generation did to salvage everything they could to help the front lines.
So no, now I guess I am glad that the question was asked.