Off the wire
South Sudan, UN agree to boost agribusiness development  • Demonstration held in Bishkek to support detained Kyrgyz opposition leader  • Liverpool to open Britain's biggest collection of Egyptian mummies outside of London  • 1st LD: U.S. President seeks to raise defense spending by 54 billion dollars: White House  • Mobile World Congress opens doors in Barcelona  • Rebel leaders urge halt to railway blockade of Donbas  • Nissan trials self-driving cars in Europe  • 20 martyrs' remains to return to China from ROK  • Feature: Meitu wins Brazilian market with photo editing apps  • JSE closes in red on Monday  
You are here:   Home

2nd LD Wriththru: U.S. President to raise defense spending by 54 billion dollars: White House

Xinhua, February 28, 2017 Adjust font size:

U.S. President Donald Trump is seeking to increase U.S. defense spending by 10 percent, or 54 billion U.S. dollars, White House revealed Monday.

The money to boost military building-up may come from deep cuts to almost every non-security category, including foreign aid and domestic discretionary programs, according to White House officials.

"This budget will be a public safety and national security budget," Trump said at a bipartisan gathering of U.S. governors at the White House Monday morning.

"We will increase security and we will decrease lower-priority programs. Most federal agencies will see a reduction as a result," the conservative Washington Times newspaper quoted an Office of Management and Budget official asking anonymous as saying.

Trump's plan will also call for hikes in spending on homeland security, intelligence, the Department of Justice and law enforcement, said a Politico report, quoting another unidentified senior official as its source.

Trump will propose "dollar for dollar cuts" elsewhere, the official said.

So far few details were provided on how the cuts will be made and over what time period they will be implemented.

On Friday, Trump pledged that he will oversee "one of the greatest military buildups in American history."

"We will be substantially upgrading all of our military, all of our military, offensive, defensive, everything. Bigger and better and stronger than ever before," Trump told the Conservative Political Action Conference.

Also last week, White House Chief Strategist Stephen Bannon said that the Trump administration set the "deconstruction of the administrative state" as one of its top goals.

The White House is scheduled to send its preliminary funding targets for 2018 to federal agencies Monday. These agencies will have an opportunity to respond to the White House draft and appeal before the administration sends its formal budget request to Congress.

On Tuesday night, Trump is expected to address the Congress, laying out his policy priorities for the coming months. Enditem