Dossier Afghanistan
 
     
 
foto_articolo

Obama signs $636.3 billion defense-spending bill 22/12/09

128 miliardi per l'Afghanistan e l'Iraq: il budget della Difesa statunitense

Source: Seattle Times

 

22 Dicembre 2009 news
Obama signs $636.3 billion defense-spending bill

President Obama signed into law legislation that provides $636.3 billion for the U.S. military in fiscal 2010, including $128.3 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the White House announced today.

Seattle Times
22 Dec 2009
By Bloomberg News and Tribune Washington Bureau
22 Dec 2009
WASHINGTON

President Obama signed into law legislation that provides $636.3 billion for the U.S. military in fiscal 2010, including $128.3 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the White House announced today.

About $65 billion of the war funding is for operations in Afghanistan. The administration says it will need about $30 billion more to finance the addition of 30,000 more troops there that begins this month. That request is likely to come with the fiscal 2011 budget to be submitted in February.

The defense bill was the last of 12 annual spending bills to be sent to the president. It includes a stopgap provision to ensure that unemployment benefits aren't cut off over the holidays.

As the last major spending bill of the year, the legislation also carried about $13.3 billion in nondefense spending, most of it for temporary extensions of several domestic programs Congress didn't have time to consider separately.

Lawmakers extended through February a package of emergency unemployment and health-care benefits that had been part of this year's economic-stimulus package. Those benefits include health-insurance subsidies for laid-off workers under a federal program called COBRA. The benefit had been slated to expire at the end of this month.

Lawmakers also temporarily reauthorized portions of the anti-terror USA Patriot Act and provided funding for Medicare to forestall for two months a scheduled 21 percent cut in payments to doctors who treat patients in the government health program for the elderly.

Senators arrived at a vote on the bill after defeating a Republican effort to filibuster the legislation Friday.

Most of the military spending had broad support, but Republicans sought the delay to express their displeasure with Congress' inability to consider nondefense items separately and to slow progress on the health-care legislation.

Some Republicans also blasted what they perceived as unnecessary pork-barrel spending in the bill.

Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., the ranking member of the Armed Services Committee, complained that the bill was laden with earmarks.

Majority Whip Dick Durbin of Illinois said several of the nondefense items in the bill, such as the unemployment-benefits extension, were sorely needed in the face of a lagging economy.

The bill includes about $11 billion more than the $625.3 billion Congress approved for fiscal 2009, according to the Senate Appropriations Committee.

The funding for fiscal 2010 brings to more than $1 trillion the money approved since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks for the wars, veterans' care, embassy protection and enhanced domestic security, according to the Congressional Research Service (CRS).

That includes $748 billion for spending related to the war in Iraq and $300 billion for Afghanistan, the research service said in a Sept. 28 report. The $128.3 billion for war spending is $22.1 billion less than the $150.4 billion approved in fiscal 2009 and the lowest since 2006, according to the CRS.

 

 
Ultimi Articoli

La rubrica "dossier Afghanistan" è momentaneamente sospesa

Nato-Afghan roadmap revealed 26/4/10

Afghanistan: The Test in Kandahar 23/4/10

Afghanistan: la jirga de paix de Kaboul repoussée à fin mai

Karzai to visit US in May, Hillary to attend Kabul conference 20/4/10

Marines try unorthodox tactics to disrupt Afghan opium harvest 13/4/10

Italian Aid Group Protests Detentions in Afghanistan 12/4/10

U.S. Now Trying Softer Approach Toward Karzai 10/4/10

Kabul Dur Ast 4/4/10

Karzai seeks to allay US concerns over anti-West speech 3/4/10

Karzai rails against foreign presence, accuses West of engineering voter fraud 2/4/10

Canadians firm on leaving Afghanistan next year 31/3/10

Pakistan needs friendly Afghanistan 25/3/10

India concerned about US-Pakistan talks on Afghanistan 25/3/10

Afghan Taliban name new deputies 24/3/10

REPORT AFGHANISTAN ICSA 24/3/10

Afghan insurgents in peace talks 22/3/10

Taliban arrests halt UN contacts 19/3/10

Why the U.S. must talk to the Taliban 17/3/10

Afghan attack 'was warning to US' 14/3/10

A return to Taliban days? 12/3/10

Iran attacks US over Afghanistan 10/3/10

March 8 for Afghan women 9/3/10

Down the AfPak Rabbit Hole 3/3/10

Afghanistan bans coverage of Taliban attacks 3/3/10

Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty 1/3/10

Concern at Karzai poll power grab 23/2/10

Air strike kills Afghan civilians 22/2/10

Dutch cabinet falls in Afghan row 22/2/10

Taliban chiefs 'held in Pakistan' 19/2/10

In Pakistan Raid, Taliban Chief Was an Extra Prize 19/2/10

America’s New Nightmare (mullah Baradar) 16/2/10

Secret Joint Raid Captures Taliban’s Top Commander 16/2/10

 
   
Asia Maior - "alcuni diritti riservati" - 2007