The Congressionally-directed 9/11 Review Commission released a report
titled The FBI: Protecting the Homeland in the 21st Century, in which
it is determined that the budget cuts resulting from the Republicans’
sequestration “severely hindered” intelligence and national security
improvements.
The Review Commission is comprised of former
Attorney General Edwin Meese (currently associated with the very
conservative Heritage Foundation, so Republicans can’t blame bias),
former Congressman and Ambassador Tim Roemer, and Professor and
counterterrorism expert Bruce Hoffman of Georgetown University. They
were tasked to conduct a “comprehensive external review of the
implementation of the recommendations related to the FBI that were
proposed by the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United
States (commonly known as the 9/11 Commission).”
The 9/11 Committee found, “It is important to note
that sequestration in FY14 severely hindered the FBI’s intelligence and
national security programs.”
Here’s the context per the report, my bold:
“The FBI should align its budget structure according to its four main programs: intelligence, counterterrorism and counterintelligence, criminal, and criminal justice services to ensure better transparency on program costs, management of resources, and protection of the intelligence program.”Review Commission FindingIn direct response, the FBI adjusted its budget structure to meet the objectives of the recommendation and further consolidated all national security and intelligence programs under the NSB in 2005. In 2014, the FBI further re-aligned its intelligence program by creating the new Intelligence Branch (IB). It is important to note that sequestration in FY14 severely hindered the FBI’s intelligence and national security programs.
This might be expected from the folks who just
attempted to sabotage the President’s nuclear negotiations with Iran by
colluding behind his back and refused to fully fund the actual
Department of Homeland Security for several months because it looked
like a juicy hostage to take over their disagreement on an unrelated
matter — after all, who wants to die? Republicans figured if they
threatened to close down the DHS, President Obama would have to give in.
While it never fully shut down, border security, law enforcement and
the President’s Secret Service protections were just a few of the areas
impacted by the department not being fully funded.
In other words, Republicans came to play and they
don’t care who is put at risk. In fact, the more people they put at
risk, the better hostage it is for them. Republicans — harming the
homeland since they lost the White House.
This is no small thing. No petty, partisan debate.
In 2014, the commission was formed to determine if the FBI had what it
needed and was implementing changes recommended for national security.
Ironically, it was Congress who directed them to do this and Congress
that took away the means to implement the changes post 9/11.
Wait. Before Republicans deny that they were and
remain the driving force behind sequestration, allow me to refresh
memories, because it was televised. Former Republican Representative Eric Cantor admitted that he and Paul Ryan were the driving force behind sequestration.
Former VP candidate and alleged GOP budget hawk Paul Ryan (R-WI) has been championing sequestration as the Holy Grail since 2004.
In fact, Representative Ryan bragged on Fox News that Republicans had
gotten everything with sequestration and President Obama nothing, “We
actually got discretionary caps in law. I’ve been fighting for these
spending caps ever since the day I came to Congress. We couldn’t even
get these kinds of spending caps in the Bush administration.”
Ryan: What conservatives like me have been
fighting for, for years are statutory caps on spending, legal caps in
law that says government agencies cannot spend over a set amount of
money.
Sequestration has long been put forth by Republicans
as a “solution” to balancing the budget. Most elected officials would
probably not want to harm national security in order to cut the budget
willy-nilly, but hey. Sequestration isn’t well thought out- it’s slash
and dash, meant to drown the baby with the bathwater.
Perhaps now we can see how foolish simple ideas like
this are. Government, whether we like it or not, is a complex organism
and the people who came before us had reasons for the way they did
things. Only the very immature think an idea like slash and dash would
work.
The
Republican idea has hurt national security and intelligence. This is
not news to anyone with a brain, but it is now the verifiable conclusion
of the Congressionally-appointed 9/11 Commission.
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