Pentagon chief unveils extra funds to counter Russia, fight ISIS
U.S. Defense Secretary Ashton Carter on Tuesday announced a big boost in military spending to counter Russia and raise the U.S. presence in eastern Europe, while also stepping up the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group.
The total budget for fiscal year 2017 will be $583 billion, Carter said, far surpassing that of any other country and exceeding the combined defense spending of the next eight biggest militaries in the world.
The budget includes $3.4 billion – quadruple the amount spent last year – for operations in Europe to deter Russian “aggression,” Carter said.
“We’re reinforcing our posture in Europe to support our NATO allies in the face of Russia’s aggression,” Carter said.
“That’ll fund a lot of things. More rotational U.S. forces in Europe, more training and exercises with our allies, more prepositioned warfighting gear, and infrastructure improvements to support it.”
Additionally, the United States will spend $7.5 billion – a 50 percent increase from last year – to fund the fight against ISIS group. He noted that the 18-month U.S.-led air campaign against the militants in Iraq and Syria has depleted U.S. bomb stocks.
“We’ve recently been hitting ISIL with so many GPS-guided smart bombs and laser-guided rockets that we’re starting to run low on the ones we use against terrorists the most,” Carter said, using an acronym for ISIS.
“So we’re investing $1.8 billion dollars in 2017 to buy over 45,000 more of them.”
He also said America would continue to invest in futuristic technologies such as the rail-gun, which can shoot projectiles at a massive velocity, and swarming micro-drones.
[wpResize] |
You must be logged in to post a comment.