Troops' anxiety over US default
IT is unclear if the United States will be able to pay troops on time in the event of a debt default, the top US military officer told troops in Afghanistan yesterday.
Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Pentagon officials were working hard to plan for a potential default but cautioned that the circumstances were extraordinary.
"So I honestly can't answer that question," he told troops at Kandahar air base in southern Afghanistan, as several expressed anxiety over budget wrangling in Washington.
Potentially suspending pay to US forces waging wars in Afghanistan and Iraq is an extremely sensitive subject in the United States and Mullen acknowledged that many troops lived paycheck to paycheck.
"So if paychecks were to stop, it would have a devastating impact," Mullen said. "I'd like to give you a better answer than that right now, I just honestly don't know."
The United States has warned that it will run out of money to pay all of its bills after August 2 without a deal from Congress to raise a US$14.3 trillion debt ceiling. Where US troops fall in priority for payment in a default has not been made clear.
With US$172 billion of revenue between August 3 and August 31, the US Treasury could fully fund Social Security payments, Medicare and Medicaid, interest on the debt, defense vendor payments and unemployment insurance, found a study by the Washington-based Bipartisan Policy Center.
But that would leave entire government departments - such as Labor, Commerce, Energy and Justice - unfunded, and many others unpaid, like active-duty troops and the federal workforce.
Mullen believed that troops would be paid eventually and there was an expectation US forces, seen as essential to national security, would need to show up for work. "I have confidence that at some point in time whatever compensation you were owed you will be given," he said.
Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the US military's Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Pentagon officials were working hard to plan for a potential default but cautioned that the circumstances were extraordinary.
"So I honestly can't answer that question," he told troops at Kandahar air base in southern Afghanistan, as several expressed anxiety over budget wrangling in Washington.
Potentially suspending pay to US forces waging wars in Afghanistan and Iraq is an extremely sensitive subject in the United States and Mullen acknowledged that many troops lived paycheck to paycheck.
"So if paychecks were to stop, it would have a devastating impact," Mullen said. "I'd like to give you a better answer than that right now, I just honestly don't know."
The United States has warned that it will run out of money to pay all of its bills after August 2 without a deal from Congress to raise a US$14.3 trillion debt ceiling. Where US troops fall in priority for payment in a default has not been made clear.
With US$172 billion of revenue between August 3 and August 31, the US Treasury could fully fund Social Security payments, Medicare and Medicaid, interest on the debt, defense vendor payments and unemployment insurance, found a study by the Washington-based Bipartisan Policy Center.
But that would leave entire government departments - such as Labor, Commerce, Energy and Justice - unfunded, and many others unpaid, like active-duty troops and the federal workforce.
Mullen believed that troops would be paid eventually and there was an expectation US forces, seen as essential to national security, would need to show up for work. "I have confidence that at some point in time whatever compensation you were owed you will be given," he said.
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