Screw The Liberal Lyin Fact Checkers

azmastablasta

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Anyone with half a brain, and let's not forget that a liberal with half a brain is considered gifted, knows that cutting defense is courting disaster. China is dead set on having the world's largest navy. The liberal azz kissing factcheckers are all dry humping each other over Romney's claim regarding barry and his defense cuts. They say he was wrong about too few ships. Well here from May is a different look.



And this:
Navy Faces Readiness Crisis as More Ships Unprepared for Combat
Rob Bluey
May 31, 2012 at 8:42 am

The year was 1979. America’s military had emerged from the Vietnam War earlier in the decade and was now facing sizable and significant budget cuts.

Capt. Tom Shanahan, commanding officer of the USS Canisteo, had just returned from the Mediterranean Sea and was now leading an overhaul of his fleet supply ship. Over the course of 10 months, the crew assigned to the Canisteo gradually disappeared, relocated by the Navy to other assignments. Those personnel cuts eventually left Shanahan with so few men that he couldn’t take his ship to sea.

“Little by little, they stripped us of a lot of the people we had, key people,” Shanahan recounted recently. “By the time we were ready to get underway from the shipyard and go back to Norfolk, we didn’t have enough people. We didn’t have enough people in any of the departments, but mainly we didn’t have enough people in the engine room.”

Shanahan took the bold step of refusing to certify his ship as seaworthy. He warned his superiors long before his readiness reports. Yet when he deemed his warship not ready for combat, it came as a surprise to many in the military.

“We were in one of those periods where in order to cut costs, we cut personnel. And we cut personnel too far,” he said. “You see that cycle repeating itself, and now we’re in that same situation right now as we were before. So you’re readiness goes down. It just has to.”

More than 30 years later, the U.S. Navy is facing another readiness crisis. Shanahan’s story illustrates how budget cuts after Vietnam left the military unprepared. Cuts today are creating a new set of challenges.

Stars and Stripes reported that more than one-fifth of Navy ships were not ready for combat. One of those ships, the USS Essex, has suffered three-high profile problems over the past year alone. It was unable to complete two missions because of mechanical or maintenance issues. And just this month, as it made the trip from Japan to San Diego, the aging warship’s steering failed, causing it to collide with a tanker.

“I can see in the USS Essex the same types of things that happened to me in Canisteo,” Shanahan said. “You draw down equipment, you draw down personnel, and therefore, you draw down the readiness of your ship to deploy. I had that case in Canisteo. I was drawn down to the standpoint I could not get the ship to sea, and I had to be honest with my superiors and say I couldn’t do it.”

In the case of the USS Essex, the 21-year-old amphibious assault ship spent the past 12 years deployed in Japan and other areas of the Pacific. It will undergo maintenance for about a year in San Diego.

The readiness challenges are something Shanahan thinks can be avoided. He noted the typical pattern of cutting the military’s budget following conflicts, a short-term perspective that undermines the long-term goals of protecting America.

“It doesn’t make any sense to me to get the budget under control by devoiding yourself of a national defense,” he said. “There’s only one place to be when you’re fighting war. Second place is no good. You have to win.”

Shanahan said he saw this play out before and regrets that it could be happening again. Unless Congress acts, the U.S. military is facing $492 billion of mandatory defense cuts from sequestration agreed to in the Budget Control Act.

For the Navy, readiness plays a crucial role, according to Heritage’s Brian Slattery. He said it’s particularly important in areas of the world like the Asia-Pacific, where China has shown assertiveness.

“The aircraft carrier fleet is an asset that should be of particular concern,” Slattery wrote on The Foundry. “There is a possibility that soon the fleet may fall to nine ships — below the congressionally mandated requirement of 11. Meanwhile, China has recently begun sea trials on its first aircraft carrier, and its officials have expressed a requirement of at least three carriers ‘so we can defend our rights and our maritime interests effectively.’”

President Obama, however, shows no sign of changing course. Just last week during a speech at the Air Force Academy, Obama defended his sizable budget cuts and told graduates that they would need to prepare for a leaner force.

http://blog.heritage.org/2012/05/31/vide...red-for-combat/
 
Typical democrat ploy to raid the military budget to satisfy their insatiable need for more money to cover their inability to balance a budget.

Regards,
hm
 
To say we've been cut deep is an understatement. Our manning is terrible! I was last in a shop that was slated for 19 people. We had 5. The shop before that? 39 required, 23 assigned...it's hard to get work done with no people...
 
The only accurate and honest fact checking that I've found in this election is on the Fox News Channel. The strategy of the Chicago gangsters and communists in control of the Democratic Party is to lie,deny and evade. That's the only way they can ever hope to deceive the majority of the American people. It's a pitty for them that more and more voters are waking up to their deception every day.
 
Originally Posted By: pahntr760All of the above. And, they're looking for excuses to kick folks out too. PT is a huge one.


They had an excellent excuse, then our illustrious leaders made it perfectly OK to be gay and in the military.
 
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