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Military

SLUG: 2-309717 Congress Defense (L-only)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=11-11-03

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=CONGRESS DEFENSE (L ONLY)

NUMBER=2-309717

BYLINE=DEBORAH TATE

DATELINE=CAPITOL HILL

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

/// EDS: VOTE COULD COME AS EARLY AS TUESDAY NIGHT ///

INTRO: The U-S Senate is nearing final approval of a 400 billion dollar budget for the Defense Department. President Bush is expected to sign the measure into law. Correspondent Deborah Tate reports from Capitol Hill.

TEXT: The defense authorization bill is a compromise between House and Senate-passed versions of the legislation.

The measure, which is seven billion dollars more than last year's defense authorization funding, will pay for salaries for U-S troops, research and development, construction and other military operations for the budget year that began October first.

Republican Senator John Warner of Virginia is chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee:

/// WARNER ACTUALITY ///

This conference report contains much-deserved pay raises and benefits for our military personnel and their families, much-needed increases in family housing and quality of life projects on military installations, as well as prudent investments in equipment and technology our military needs to successfully counter future threats.

/// END ACT ///

Among the compromises in the bill is one calling for the Air Force to lease 20 Boeing airplanes as midair refueling tankers, and buy 80 more. Some Senators had criticized the Defense Department's initial proposal to lease all 100 planes as too expensive.

Another compromise concerned a House-passed provision that would have restricted the Defense Department's ability to buy equipment, parts and services from other nations. The provision angered U-S allies and was opposed by the Pentagon.

The final deal creates a fund to ensure that the U-S industrial base can manufacture all critical military components. It also calls on the Pentagon to determine whether any countries have refused to deliver military supplies because they objected to U-S counter-terrorism or military operations, and if so, to stop buying from them. In addition, the bill includes incentives to encourage defense contractors to use U-S machine tools.

/// REST OPT ///

The authorization does not include the 87 billion dollar spending bill signed last week by President Bush for operations and reconstruction in Afghanistan and Iraq. (signed)

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