Bloomberg reports that members of the military will likely be forced out to meet the spending reductions required in the Pentagon's latest budget. Writes Bloomberg:
The Defense Department may have to force soldiers, Marines or other members of the military out of the services for the first time since the aftermath of the Cold War to achieve the spending reductions in its budget proposal.
The Pentagon plans to cut 67,100 soldiers from active and reserve Army units and the Army National Guard in the five years starting Oct. 1, as well as 15,200 from the active and reserve ranks of the Marine Corps as part of an effort to save $487 billion over a decade, according to the budget sent to Congress today. The Navy and Air Force would lose fewer people -- 8,600 and 1,700 respectively -- because of their role in a strategic shift toward the Asia-Pacific region and the Middle East. ...
Representative Howard "Buck" McKeon, the Republican chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, cited a comment by White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew in an interview on NBC’s "Meet the Press" that "the time for austerity is not today."
"They’ll have a tough time explaining that to the 100,000 troops who will be forced from service under the president’s new budget plan," McKeon of California said today in a statement.