Defense Secretary Robert Gates makes an unlikely progressive hero. A holdover from the Bush administration, Gates is an ex-spy and button-down conservative who keeps a portrait of President Eisenhower behind his desk. Yet he’s also warned against the “militarization” of U.S. foreign policy, forced the armed services to adapt to untraditional modes of warfare, and axed major weapons programs.
Republicans like to posture as the scourge of big government, but they’ve long been AWOL in the battle to discipline the biggest, most bloated bureaucracy of them all: the Pentagon. Not so with Gates, who has taken Ike’s farewell warning about “the military-industrial complex” to heart.
Even as he’s presided over America’s wars, Gates has sought to restrain military spending. He has canceled dozens of non-essential programs, saving taxpayers over $300 billion, and has ordered his department to find another $100 billion in administrative savings over the next five years. Going where others have feared to tread, Gates has targeted soaring military health-care cuts. And he’s promised to thin the ranks of top military commanders, whose numbers have mushroomed all out of proportion to recent increases in troop strength.
All this has drawn predictable fire from conservative hawks, for whom any cut in defense spending apparently signals an ominous weakening of national will. However, they’ve found it hard to make the usual “soft on defense” charge stick to George W. Bush’s tough-minded former Pentagon chief.
Some liberals, apprehensive over the possibility of deep cuts in domestic and entitlement programs once unemployment rates fall, want Gates to go a lot further. But until the United States is in a position to withdraw most of its troops from the Middle East and Central Asia, that’s not likely to happen. As PPI’s Jim Arkedis has documented, the truly big driver of Pentagon costs is manpower. To get the kind of military spending reductions many doves would like to see would require major changes in U.S. foreign policy – not just nips and tucks in this weapons system or that, or administrative reforms. That’s hard to do in the middle of two wars and a global counterinsurgency campaign against Salafist extremists.
But as Gates recognizes, defense will have to make a substantial contribution to America’s coming fiscal retrenchment. He’s offering credible reforms that will promote efficiency and reduce needless redundancy and waste, and, frankly, provide the administration with political cover against the GOP’s ritual claims that Democrats want to eviscerate the nation’s defenses.
All that may not win Gates many cheers at the next netroots convention. But this is a clear instance in which Obama’s “post-partisan” penchant for reaching across political divides has served him, and the nation, well.