With the Super Committee officially dead, lobbyists, politicians and Pentagon officials are racing to repeal the $600 billion in defense cuts scheduled to begin in 2013. The 2011 Budget Control Act, which created the Super Committee, called for $1.2 trillion in across-the-board cuts on domestic and military spending if the 12-member Super Committee failed to reach an agreement. Now that that's happened, the push to unwind the defense portion of the trigger has begun in earnest. Here is the phalanx of forces working to destroy it.
The lawmakers Just as the Super Committee raised its white flag today, Sen. John McCain tweeted a message calling on Congress to "prevent #defense cuts that threaten our nat'l security." The tweet linked to a press release signed by him and South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham. “As every military and civilian defense official has stated, these cuts represent a threat to the national security interests of the United States, and cannot be allowed to occur" they wrote. The two Senators are by no means alone. As Politico reports, Republican Congressman Buck McKeon, the chairman of the Armed Services Committee has vowed to introduce legislation repealing the defense cuts. “I will not be the armed services chairman who presides over crippling our military,” he said just before the Super Committee admitted defeat Monday afternoon." Graham and McCain also suggested they were considering introducing legislation, saying "we are now working on a plan to minimize the impact of the sequester."
The Pentagon Defense Secretary Leon Panetta has made the trigger his main enemy in recent months. “This mechanism would force defense cuts that would do catastrophic damage to our military and its ability to protect the country," he said at a convention in Washington, D.C. "It would double the number of cuts that we confront and it would damage our interests not only here, but around the world." According to Reuters, defense lobbyists are grateful. "Panetta's better than any lobbyist we could hire," said a lobbyist interviewed by the news service.
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John Hudson



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