RUSSIA-USA: PUTIN, SIAMO PRETESTO PER FONDI MILITARI



(AGI) - Amman, 13 feb. - Per nulla imbarazzato dalle secche repliche degli Stati Uniti, da lui accusati solo pochi giorni fa di "voler imporre la loro volonta' al mondo" rendendolo "unipolare", il presidente russo Vladimir Putin e' tornato alla carica nei confronti dell'amministrazione Usa, denunciandone il presunto tentativo di sfruttare la rinnovata immagine da Guerra Fredda della Russia come potenziale "minaccia alla sicurezza", con l'unico obiettivo di forzare il Congresso di Washington ha stanziare i fondi necessari per le operazioni militari in Iraq e in Afghanistan, e per il programma di difesa anti-missilistica. "Per oltre dieci anni", ha affermato Putin, conversando con i giornalisti a margine di una visita in Giordania, "siamo stati ad ascoltare cio' che i nostri partner", ha sottolineato, alludendo proprio agli americani, "avevano da dire su diverse questioni. Noi siamo molto pazienti e molto tolleranti, ma ora abbiamo la sensazione di non essere compresi". Poi l'affondo: "Essi hanno cominciato a sollevare le cosiddette minacce create dalla Russia, che semplicemente non esistono, allo scopo di chiedere poi al Congresso i fondi per le azioni militari in Afghanistan, in Iraq, e per costruire in Europea il nuovo scudo anti-missile. Questi", ha tagliato corto il leader del Cremlino, "non sono problemi nostri, non hanno nulla a che fare con la Russia".

2007-02-03 16:39
BUSH ANNUNCIA TAGLI A SPESE NON MILITARI
NEW YORK - Il presidente degli Stati Uniti, George W. Bush, ha confermato, nel suo tradizionale discorso radiofonico del sabato mattina, la sua intenzione di diminuire le spese non militari per non sottrarre fondi alle guerre in corso in Iraq e in Afghanistan.

''Tagliare il deficit in periodo di guerra -ha tra l'altro detto Bush- richiede una limitazione nelle spese negli altri settori''. A poche ore dalla presentazione, lunedi', del progetto di budget 2008 (che iniziera' il primo ottobre prossimo), Bush ha chiesto al Congresso di rendere permanenti i tagli fiscali gia' decisi, per diminuire il deficit di bilancio rilanciando l'attivita' economica. ''Il Congresso deve rendere permanenti le diminuzioni fiscali -ha spiegato l'inquilino della Casa Bianca- in modo da mantenere la crescita dell'economia americana''. Secondo fonti ufficiali, Bush intende chiedere lunedi' un totale di 245 miliardi di dollari per finanziare le guerre in Iraq e in Afghanistan. Ai 145 miliardi per il 2008 andranno ad aggiungersi 100 miliardi supplementari per il 2007.
http://www.ansa.it/opencms/export/site/notizie/rubriche/daassociare/visualizza_new.html_2083390594.html

WASHINGTON --- A 3-percent pay raise for servicemembers, an increase in ground forces and continued funding of the war on terror are on the table now that President Bush delivered his fiscal 2008 defense budget request and 2007 emergency supplemental request to Congress yesterday. The total DoD 2008 budget request is pegged at $481.4 billion, an 11.3-percent increase over fiscal 2007. The request will improve readiness through additional training and maintenance and by resetting forces following overseas deployments, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates said yesterday at a Pentagon news conference. "We will transform our military to meet the new threats of the 21st century and provide the brave men and women on the front lines with resources they need to be successful in this decisive ideological struggle," President Bush said in his letter delivering the budget to Congress. The President's emergency supplemental request for fiscal 2007 is set at $93.4 billion, with $39.3 billion going to warfighting, supplies, support and maintenance. It also provides $10.4 billion to defeat IEDs. The requests must be passed by the House of Representatives and the Senate, both of which may make changes in the requests. Pentagon Comptroller Tina W. Jonas told reporters that DoD has delivered more than 38,000 pages of explanation to members of Congress and their staffs to justify the issues in the defense budget request. The 2008 "base budget" invests in four primary areas, Jonas said: - readiness and support at $146.5 billion, - strategic modernization at $176.8 billion, - military pay and health care at $137 billion and - family housing and facilities at $21.1 billion. Jonas broke the military pay and benefits portion of the budget down further. The department's request provides a 3 percent pay raise for 2.1 million active-duty and reserve-component personnel. It provides $15 billion for the basic allowance for housing and $4.3 billion for the basic allowance for subsistence. It also provides $38.7 billion for military health care. Growing the Army Under the proposal, the active-duty Army will grow to 547,400 Soldiers by the end of fiscal 2012. It now has 484,400 Soldiers. The increase will allow the Army to field 48 brigades - up from 42 - and give Soldiers two years at their home stations for every year deployed. If the budget is enacted as submitted, the Army will also receive $130.1 billion in fiscal 2008, for an increase of more than 20 percent. The Army's Future Combat System will receive $3.7 billion in research and development funds. Unmanned aerial and ground vehicles, non-line-of-sight launch systems, and command and control systems are highlighted in the program. The Army is asking for just more than $24 billion in procurement dollars. About $4 billion will go toward aircraft purchases, including 37 armed reconnaissance, 44 light utility helicopters, 42 UH-60 Black Hawk helicopters and 29 CH-47 Chinook helicopters. The remaining funds are earmarked for aircraft modifications to current aircraft inventory. Another $3 billion will go toward Army combat and support vehicles, with the largest slice going for 127 Stryker combat vehicles and 180 armored security vehicles. The Army will spend another $1 billion on weapons and other combat vehicles, including $97.6 million for nearly 70,000 M-4 carbine rifles and $35.3 million for more than 8,300 M-249 squad automatic weapons. More than $4.6 billion is earmarked for tactical and support vehicles. Communications and electronics equipment rings in at more than $5.7 billion, and other support equipment tops out at roughly $2.3 billion. The budget request highlights the importance of space-based systems for today's military. The request calls for $6 billion for command and control, navigation, strategic/tactical communications and weather satellites. This includes the next generation NAVSTAR Global Positioning System satellite constellation. The request also asks for $2 billion to train and equip Iraqi security forces and $2.7 billion for Afghan security forces. The request provides $1.7 billion for coalition support efforts and $1 billion to replenish the Commander's Emergency Response Program, which allows commanders down to brigade level to fund projects in neighborhoods that benefit the community and put unemployed Iraqis and Afghans to work.