Already reeling from a USD 34 billion budget blow this year due to deficit-driven spending reductions known as sequestration, the Defense Department would feel an additional USD 20 billion punch in 2014.
All told, the Pentagon's budget for next year would be cut by about 10 per cent below levels approved just six months ago.
Domestic programs are spared further automatic budget cuts, a little-known wrinkle that could give Democrats some advantage in upcoming negotiations over repealing the cuts, known as sequestration or at least easing its effects.
The situation is a product of the fallout of a budget law enacted two years ago that set up a deficit "supercommittee" with orders to come up with USD 1.2 trillion in deficit cuts over a decade. The law included the threat of the automatic cuts as a backstop intended to force a deal.
The cuts are indeed daunting to the Pentagon, which has traditionally enjoyed sweeping bipartisan support from Congress and has seen its budget requests go mostly unchallenged during more than a decade of war in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Senior military officials have repeatedly warned about the devastating effects of the automatic cuts. Yet the Pentagon also appears resigned to the possibility that it will get no relief from sequestration and that defense hawks in Congress outnumbered by Republican deficit hawks will be unable to save the military budget.
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