The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11

December 8, 2014 (RL33110)

Contents

Figures

Tables

Appendixes

Summary

With enactment of the FY2014 Consolidated Appropriations Act on January 1, 2014 (H.R. 3547/P.L. 113-73), Congress has approved appropriations for the past 13 years of war that total $1.6 trillion for military operations, base support, weapons maintenance, training of Afghan and Iraq security forces, reconstruction, foreign aid, embassy costs, and veterans' health care for the war operations initiated since the 9/11 attacks.

Of this $1.6 trillion total, CRS estimates that the total is distributed as follows:

$81 billion (5%) for war-designated funding not considered directly related to the Afghanistan or Iraq wars.

About 92% of the funds are for Department of Defense (DOD), 6% for State Department foreign aid programs and diplomatic operations, 1% for Department of Veterans Administration's medical care for veterans. In addition, 5% of the funds (across agencies) are for programs and activities tangentially-related to war operations.

The FY2015 war request for DOD, State/USAID, and Veterans Administration Medical totals $73.5 billion including $58.1 billion for Afghanistan, $5.0 billion for Iraq, $ 100 million for enhanced security, and $10.4 billion for other war-designated funding. These totals do not reflect the new FY2015 request submitted in November 2014 to cover expenses for Operations Inherent Resolve (OIR) that began with airstrikes launched in late August 2014, to aid Syrian insurgents and the Iraq government to counter the takeover of territory by the Islamic State (IS). The Administration submitted a $5.5 billion FY2015 budget amendment for this operation that Congress is considering. Including the new request, the FY2015 war funding now totals $79.0 billion.

In late May 2014, the President announced that troop levels in Afghanistan would fall from 33,000 to 9,800 by January 1, 2015 with the U.S. role focusing on advising Afghan security forces and conducting counter-terror operations. A year later, by January 1, 2016, the President stated that the number of troops in Afghanistan would halve to about 4,900 and then by the beginning of 2017, settle at an embassy presence of about 1,000.

Overall U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan and Iraq began to decline with the withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Iraq by December 2011. The troop decline continued with President Obama's announcement in February 2013 that the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan would halve from 67,000 to 34,000 by February 2014. Annual war costs also decreased from a peak of $195 billion in FY2008 to $95 billion enacted in FY2014. After the reversal of the 2009 Afghanistan surge, the President promised in the 2013 State of the Union address that "our troops will continue coming home at a steady pace as Afghan security forces move into the lead [and] our mission will change from combat to support." He also stated that by "2014, this process of transition will be complete, and the Afghan people will be responsible for their own security."

The FY2015 Continuing Resolution (H.J.Res. 124/P.L. 113-164) sets war funding at the FY2014 enacted level of $95.5 billion, which exceeds the FY2015 amended request (with OIR) by about $16.5 billion. The CR expires on December 11, 2014, and Congress is expected to enact another CR or an Omnibus appropriations act for the rest of the fiscal year.

Congress may face several budgetary issues about how to respond to the FY2015 war request and longer-term war cost issues including:

There are some indications that the FY2015 DOD war funding request may be more than is needed in light of FY2014 experience when expenses for returning troops and equipment have proven to be lower and the pace faster than anticipated. If expenses are lower and withdrawal is faster than anticipated, the FY2015 request may also include excess funds that could be used to pay for part or all of the new $5.5 billion request to counter the Islamic State. Savings in FY2015 could be partly offset by the recent announcement by Secretary Hagel that up to 1,000 U.S. troops could be kept in Afghanistan until the spring of 2015 to substitute for a delay in NATO troops being available to provide needed support.

Members have raised various concerns about the broad authorities requested for the new CTPF, which exceed current authorities for other Train & Equip programs. The conference version of the FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act, H.R. 3797, reduces the funding and rejects most of the new authorities requested. Other concerns include the lack of evidence of success in previous similar programs, particularly in situations like the complex political-military environment in Syria and Iraq.

Congress may wish to consider ways to restrict war-funding to exclude activities marginally related to war operations and support, and to limit the use of ground troops in Operation Inherent Resolve.


The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11

Introduction

Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the U.S. Armed Forces, under guidance from the Department of Defense (DOD), have conducted the following military operations:

On May 27, 2014, President Obama's announced that the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan would decrease from 33,000 to 9,800 by January 1, 2015; would halve again by January 1, 2016, to about 4,900; and be limited to an embassy presence of about 1,000 thereafter.1 Some unspecified number of the 60,000 U.S. troops currently providing in-theater support would remain in the region as an "enduring presence" after the withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan.

The FY2015 Request and Potential War Cost Issues

In June 2014, after the announcement of troop levels for the Afghan withdrawal, the Administration replaced its earlier $79.4 billion placeholder request for DOD (submitted with the original FY2015 budget in March) with an amended war request of $58.6 billion. 2 Including this amended DOD request with State Department/U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), and Veterans Administration (VA( Medical requests, the total FY2015 war request—including the new November 2014 request for OIR—totals $79.0 billion.

The FY2015 Continuing Resolution (H.J.Res. 124/P.L. 113-164) sets war spending levels for this fiscal year at $95.5 billion, reflecting the FY2014 enacted level. That total is $16.5 billion above the $79.0 billion amended request that includes OIR. The continuing resolution (CR) exceeds the request primarily because DOD's FY2015 request is below the FY2014 enacted level.3 The CR expires on December 11, 2014, and Congress is expected to pass another CR or an Omnibus Appropriations act to set final FY2015 spending levels.

At that time, Congress may consider the following war budget issues:

These defense budget issues are discussed below after a summary of the status of the FY2015 request and an accounting of cumulative and annual war funding levels for FY2001-FY2015.

Box A. Other CRS Reports and Definitions of War Funding

This CRS report defines war costs as those designated as emergency or OCO appropriations for: Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) largely for the Afghan war; Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation New Dawn (OND) for Iraq; and, Enhanced Security or Operation Noble Eagle. For State Department, and USAID, CRS includes all appropriations for activities and programs in Iraq and Afghanistan. CRS includes Budget Authority (BA) for VA Medical costs for OEF/OIF veterans as identified in budget justification materials. Emergency or OCO-designated funds are exempt from budget caps.

Other observers and analysts define war costs more broadly than congressional appropriations and include estimates of the life-time costs of caring for OEF/OIF/OND veterans, imputed interest costs on the deficit, or increases in DOD's base budget deemed to be a consequence of support for the war.5 Such costs are difficult to compute, subject to extensive caveats, and often based on methodologies that may not be appropriate.6

For a discussion of war funding issues for the State Department/USAID FY2015 request, see CRS Report R43569, State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs: FY2015 Budget and Appropriations, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed]. For a description of politico-military developments in Afghanistan and Iraq, see CRS Report RL31339, Iraq: Post-Saddam Governance and Security, by [author name scrubbed], and CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed]. For the Islamic State crisis, see CRS Report IF00050, The Islamic State: Q&A (In Focus) (pdf), by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed] and CRS Report R43612, The "Islamic State" Crisis and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed] et al., and CRS Report R43727, Proposed Train and Equip Authorities for Syria: In Brief, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

Status of FY2015 DOD Request

Under the FY2015 Continuing Resolution or CR (H.J.Res. 124/P.L. 113-164), enacted September 19, 2014, OCO-designated funding would total $95.5 billion. This total includes $85.8 billion for DOD, $21.7 billion above the amended request of $64.1 billion including OIR. After the CR expires on December 11, 2014, Congress is expected to pass either another CR or an Omnibus Appropriations Act that could adjust these levels. Since it is not clear, at this time, whether Congress will address the $5.5 billion amended request for OIR during the lame duck session and whether those funds should appropriately be allocated to Iraq, CRS tables that follow exclude that amount.

FY2015 Defense Authorization Action

The House-passed version of H.R. 4435, the FY2014 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), included $79.4 billion for DOD war funding, matching the OCO placeholder request included in the Administration's original FY2015 budget.7 The House NDAA also adopted an amendment that required that the Administration's war funding request meet OMB's 2010 criteria for DOD war funding that placed certain limitations on what would be considered war-related (see "War Funding and Budget Controls").

Table 1. FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4435/S. 2410)

Subcommittee Markup

House Report

House Passage

Senate Report

Senate Passage

Conf. Report

Conference Report Approval

Public Law

House

Senate

House

Senate

4/30/2014 and 5/1/2014

na

H.Rept. 113-446

5/8/2014

Passed 325-98

5/22/14

S.Rept. 113-176

6/2/2014

 

 

H.R. 3979

12-2-14

 

 

Sources: H.R. 4435 and H.Rept. 113-446 and S. 2410 and S.Rept. 113-176.

Reported on June 2, 2014, the Senate Armed Services Committee version of the FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 1970) did not address either the placeholder OCO request or the amended request submitted on June 14, 2014. The Senate has not taken up S. 1970 (Table 1).

The House passed a conference version of the NDAA, H.R. 3979, on December 4, 2014, and the Senate is expected to consider it prior to the adjournment of the 113th Congress. With the exception of the request for Counterterrorism Partnership Response Fund (CTPF), H.R. 3779 made minor adjustments to DOD's entire OCO-designated request. The conference bill reduces the $4.0 billion DOD request to $1.3 billion. The final NDAA will set a cap on funding levels.

Although H.R. 3979 approves the $1.618 billion requested for a new Iraq Train and Equip account, it makes several revisions, including sunsetting the authority on December 31, 2016, rather than September 30, 2017.

The bill endorses the Administration cost-sharing provision in which U.S. obligations are capped at 60% until Iraqi, Kurdish, and tribal security forces contribute 40% of the $1.6 billion total, in cash or in kind.8

The conference draft also sets a 25% cap on obligations and expenditures that would go into effect 15 days after the Secretary of Defense and the Secretary of State submit a specific plan identifying, to the appropriate congressional committee and the House and Senate leadership, the forces to receive assistance and the retraining and rebuilding for those forces. The plan is to include goals, concept of operations, timelines, types of training and other assistances, roles of other partners, number and roles of U.S. military personnel, and additional military support and sustainment, and other relevant details. Ninety days later, and every 30 days thereafter, the Secretary of Defense is to submit quarterly reports of any changes.9

Instead of the blank waiver of other laws requested, H.R. 3979 permits more limited waiver authority for the Secretary of Defense of acquisition and arms sales provisions. It also includes a more general waiver for the President if it is determined to be vital to U.S. national security, and it can be implemented only 15 days after notification to the appropriate defense committees.10

H.R. 3979 also continues the Continuing Resolution provision that funds training of vetted Syrian opposition forces by reprogramming from other funds. The bill also rejected the broad authorities requested, and included additional reporting requirements for both the Iraq and the Syria Train and Equip programs.11

FY2015 Defense Appropriations Action

The House passed H.R. 4870, the FY2015 DOD Appropriations Act on June 20, 2014, providing OCO-designated funding of $79.4 billion, matching the Administration's placeholder request. Funding levels were set at the title level (Military Personnel, Operation and Maintenance) rather than by account, as is customary.

The Senate Appropriations Committee version of H.R. 4870 provided $58.3 billion for DOD, close to the amended request of $58.6 billion; the Senate version added about $1 billion to both Operation and Maintenance and procurement accounts that was offset by halving the $4.0 billion requested for the new flexible Counterterrorism Response Program (CTRP) that would give the Administration broad discretion to provide funds to countries conducting counter-terror efforts (see Table 2 and Figure 9).

Table 2. FY2015 DOD Appropriations Bill (H.R. 4870)

Subcommittee Markup

House Report

House Passage

Senate Report

Senate Passage

Conf. Report

Conference Report Approval

Public Law

House

Senate

House

Senate

5/30/2014/

7/15/2014

H.Rept. 113-473

6/13/2014

Passed 340-73

6/20/14

S.Rept. 113-211

7/17/2014

 

 

 

 

 

Sources: H.R. 4870 as passed by the House and reported by the Senate Appropriations Committee; H.Rept. 113-473 and S.Rept. 113-211.

The section below summarizes cumulative war funding by operation and agency. It also analyzes the major factors affecting annual funding levels. The tables below do not reflect the $5.5 billion budget amendment to combat the Islamic State, considered to be a new operation by the Department of Defense. That request is discussed separately in the section titled "The New Request to Counter the Islamic State."

Cumulative War Funding and the FY2015 Request

Based on funding enacted from the 9/11 attacks through FY2014, CRS estimates a total of $1.6 trillion has been provided to the Department of Defense, the State Department and the Department of Veterans Administration for war operations, diplomatic operations and foreign aid, and medical care for Iraq and Afghan war veterans over the past 13 years of war.

By Operation

Allocated by operation, this $1.6 trillion total is made up of:

$686 billion for Afghanistan and other counter-terror operations (OEF);

Table 3. Cumulative War Funding by Operation, FY2001-FY2015 Request

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority (BA) and Percent of Total

Fiscal Year/
Operation

Cumulative Total

In Billions of $

As Percent of Total

FY01-14 Enacted

FY2015 Requesta

FY2001-15 Requesta

FY01-14 Enacted

FY2015 Requesta

FY01-15 Requesta

Afghanistan/OEFb

$685.6

$58.1

$743.7

43%

79%

44%

Iraq/OIF/ONDc

$814.6

$5.0

$819.6

51%

7%

49%

Enhanced Securityd

$27.4

$0.1

$27.5

2%

0%

2%

Othere

$81.3

$10.4

$91.7

5%

14%

5%

Total

$1,608.9

$73.5

$1,682.4

100%

100%

100%

Sources: Relevant public laws, House Appropriation Committee tables, conference reports for relevant appropriations acts for State/USAID and VA Medical, For DOD, CRS calculates splits by operation using DOD's Cumulative CW-01-Z data base which reports obligations by operation, fiscal year, account, and type of expense. In addition to obligations incurred, in more recent years, CRS estimates unobligated balances based on DOD data on shares by appropriation account; for the FY2015 request, CRS uses figures shown in Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Amendment, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, June 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf. State Department/USAID figures reflect enacted levels and FY2015 request based on appropriation reports, budget justification materials on allocations between operations, a USAID data base (the "spigot" table), and State Department materials. VA figures are from annual budget justification materials for Medical Funding; allocated between operations by CRS based on a cumulative rolling average reflecting in-country troop levels. Excludes OIR. Total percentages may not equal 100 due to rounding.

Of the total amount appropriated,:

As would be expected, the majority of the FY2015 request is for the war in Afghanistan with

If Congress approves the FY2015 war funding request for $73.5 billion for DOD, State/USAID, and VA Medical (excluding the new OIR request), cumulative funding over the past 15 years would rise to $1.69 trillion, including $744 billion for Afghanistan/OEF, $820 billion for Iraq/OIF/OND, $28 billion for Enhanced Security, and $92 billion in "Other" funding (Table 3).

"Other" War Funding

In this report, CRS war funding totals include all funding designated by statute as for emergencies or for Overseas Contingency Operations or for Afghanistan and Iraq.13 Of the $1.6 trillion total for FY2001-FY2015 request (excluding OIR), "other" war funding designated as emergency or OCO but not directly related to Afghan or Iraq war operations, diplomatic support, or foreign aid to Afghanistan or Iraq countries totals $91 billion or about 5.4% of the total (see Table 3 and "

Changes in DOD Definitions of War Funding").14

By Agency

Splitting the cumulative total of $1.6 trillion (excluding OIR) appropriated by agency:

In terms of shares for the three agencies:

Table 4. Cumulative War Funding by Agency, FY2001-FY2015 Request

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority (BA) and Percent of Total

Fiscal year/
Agency

Cumulative Total

In Billions of $

As Percent of Total

FY2001-FY2014 Enacted

FY2015 Requesta

FY2001-FY2015 Requesta

FY2001-FY2014 Enacted

FY2015 Requesta

FY2001-FY2015 Requesta

DOD

$1,498.7

$58.6

$1,557.6

92%

80%

93%

State/USAID

$92.7

$9.4

$102.1

6%

13%

6%

VA Medical

$17.6

$5.2

$22.8

1%

7%

1%

Total

$1,608.9

$73.5

$1,682.4

100.0%

100%

100%

Sources: Relevant public laws, House Appropriation Committee tables, conference reports for relevant appropriations acts for State/USAID and VA Medical, For DOD, CRS relies on DOD's Cumulative CW-01-Z data base, which reports obligations by operation, fiscal year, account, and type of expense. In addition to obligations incurred, in more recent years, CRS estimates unobligated balances based on DOD data on shares by appropriation account; for the FY2015 request, CRS uses figures shown in Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Amendment, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, June 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf. State Department/USAID figures reflect enacted levels and FY2015 request based on appropriation reports, budget justification materials on allocations between operations, and a USAID data base (the "spigot" table). VA figures are from annual budget justification materials for VA Medical programs.

Notes: Totals may not add due to rounding. Excludes OIR.

By agency, the FY2015 war request includes:

By shares, in the FY2015 request:

DOD funds are used to conduct and support military operations and reset damaged or destroyed equipment, to train the Afghan and Iraq security forces, and to provide other assistance for reconstruction, coalition support, and counter-drug operations. State Department funding is for the conduct of diplomatic operations and foreign assistance programs ranging from the Economic Support Fund to counter-drug programs. VA medical funding provides for medical care of OEF/OIF/OND veterans; this does not include the cost of VA disability payments because VA does not provide those figures.16

U.S. Boots on the Ground, FY2001-FY2015

Although there are other significant variables, the main factor in determining costs is the number of U.S. troops deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq at different points in time. Between 2001 and 2014, troop levels in Iraq and in Afghanistan changed dramatically. Because policy announcements typically focus on "Boots on the Ground" in-country, Figure 1 shows those figures and excludes military personnel providing support in the region or conducting other counter-terrorism operations (see Figure 2).

Figure 1. Boots on the Ground In-Country, FY2001-FY2017

In thousands of U.S. troops

Sources: DOD, Monthly Boots-on-the Ground reports provided to CRS and congressional defense committees, 2001-June 2014. For month-by-month troop levels, both in-country and in-theater, see Table A-1.

Notes: Reflects U.S. troops in-country; excludes troops providing in-theater support or conducting counter-terror operations outside the region.

For FY2002-FY2007, overall troop levels reflect the combined effect of the gradual buildup in U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan after the 9/11 attacks and the Iraq invasion in 2003, followed by the Iraq surge ordered by then-President George W. Bush from 2007-2008. The next phase includes the phased withdrawal for Iraq by December 2012 and the gradual buildup resulting from the troop surge in Afghanistan initiated by then-President Bush in 2008 and continued by President Obama in 2009. That surge peaked in May 2011 and was followed by a phased withdrawal that is to culminate in January 2017 with a limited embassy presence (Figure 1).

Changing Troop Levels in Iraq, 2003-2014

Six months after the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, U.S. troop levels reached 149,000 troops in-country. By December 2003, troop levels fell to 124,000 and remained at about that level for the next three years. In January 2007, then-President Bush initiated the Iraq surge in response to growing levels of violence and a request for assistance in fighting insurgents, referred to as the "Sunni Awakening." The "Iraq surge" peaked at 165,000 troops in November 2007. As levels of violence fell by July 2008, then-President Bush began to reverse the surge and troop levels declined to 147,000 (Figure 1).

After President Obama took office in January 2009, the Administration conducted a strategy review of both the Afghan and Iraq wars. In that review, the President decided to shift U.S. forces in Iraq from a combat to an advisory and assistance role, and reduce troop levels from 141,000 in March 2009 to about 50,000 by September 2010. The bilateral security agreement at that time required that all U.S. troops be withdrawn by December 31, 2011. Although the United States hoped to revise that agreement and retain some troops beyond 2011, the Iraqi government refused to sign a new agreement that would shield U.S. troops from local law, so all U.S. troops were withdrawn by December 31, 2011. There are currently 100 to 200 U.S. military personnel in Iraq to manage arms sales.17

Changing Troop Levels in Afghanistan, 2001-2017

Compared to Iraq, troop strength in Afghanistan grew more slowly but is falling as rapidly. After the initial defeat of the Taliban in December 2001, the number of U.S. troops gradually doubled from 10,000 in 2002 to 20,000 in 2005 as the mission expanded, although violence remained at a fairly low level. In response to concerns about the deteriorating security situation raised by U.S. commanding officers, then-President Bush agreed to gradually double U.S. troop levels to about 40,000 between 2007 and 2008. Before leaving office in 2009, then-President Bush agreed to increase U.S. troops in Afghanistan to 45,000, initiating what became known as the Afghanistan surge.18

After its strategy review, the new administration decided to continue the surge and add another 20,000 troops by November 2009. After a second review in December 2009 prompted by pressure from military commanders for additional troops to combat worsening security, President Obama approved an additional increase of 30,000 troops, bringing the total number of U.S. total to 98,000 by September 2010.19 At that time, President Obama committed to evaluate current U.S. strategy in Afghanistan in December 2010 to "allow us to begin the transfer of our forces out of Afghanistan in July of 2011."20 The total peaked at 100,000 in May 2011 (Figure 1).

On July 22, 2011, President Obama announced the surge would be reversed and the U.S. role would transition from a combat role to a train and assist role in Afghanistan, stating that by "2014, this process of transition will be complete, and the Afghan people will be responsible for their own security." As Afghan troops gradually took the lead, U.S. troop levels declined fairly rapidly from the May 2011 peak of 100,000 to about 65,000 in September 2012. In February 2013, President Obama announced that the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan would halve from 65,000 to 33,000 within a year. The President also announced that the "drawdown will continue and by the end of next year, our war in Afghanistan will be over."21

After over a year of speculation about future U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan, President Obama announced on May 27, 2014, that once the U.S. combat role ended by December 31, 2014, some 9,800 troops would remain for another year to train Afghan security forces and conduct counter-terror operations. That number would halve to about 4,900 by January 2016, and fall to "an embassy presence" by January 2017.22

This plan was contingent on the Afghan government signing a new bilateral security agreement (BSA) with Afghanistan which would shield U.S. troops from Afghan law, a U.S. precondition, and possibly specify the size and role of the residual force and U.S. funding support for Afghan Security Forces, subject to congressional appropriations. 23 Although then-President Karzai was unwilling to sign the agreement, his successor, President Ashraf Ghani signed the agreement on September 30, 2014, the day after taking office.24 The new BSA does not specify U.S. troop levels or require that the United States remain in Afghanistan after 2014 or provide for permanent U.S. bases in Afghanistan.25

NATO and Afghan Troops

In addition to U.S. troops, some 28 NATO and other allies have also deployed troops to Afghanistan as part of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). Between 2001 and 2008, these allies contributed roughly the same number of troops as the United States. During the Afghan surge, that ratio dropped to 50% and has remained at roughly that level since then.26

Location of U.S. Military Personnel Serving in OEF and OIF/OND

Figure 2 shows the number and location of U.S. military personnel serving in either OEF or OIF/OND as of March 2014 based on DOD documents. As points of comparison, it also shows the number of U.S. military personnel deployed in the region before 9/11, at the peak of the Iraq surge in 2008 and the Afghan surge in 2011. These figures differ from the more-commonly cited "boots on the ground" numbers that include only U.S. military personnel in-country, in Afghanistan, and in Iraq. The additional personnel shown include those military personnel providing "in-theater support," those engaged in other counter-terrorism operations, and those deployed on ships afloat.

Before the 9/11 attacks, the number of U.S. military personnel in the Area of Operations (AOR) for OEF, OIF, and OND totaled some 30,000 including about 15,000 on ships afloat in the region. During the Iraq surge of April 2008, U.S. personnel reached a peak of just over 300,000, a 10-fold increase. That total included some 53,000 for OEF and about 224,000 for OIF as well as 17,000 on ships afloat (Figure 2).

In May 2011, during the Afghan surge, the number of U.S. military personnel peaked at 278,000, somewhat below the Iraq surge. That total included 156,000 for OEF, another 86,000 for OIF, and 30,000 afloat. By the end of December 2011, all U.S. troops were withdrawn from Iraq and the Iraq mission (OND) ended. After December 2011, troops providing in-theater support for Iraq were transferred to OEF because of the end of the Iraq mission.27

By March 2014, the total U.S. military personnel assigned to OEF had dropped to 138,000, reflecting the drawdown in Afghanistan (Figure 2).

Figure 2. OEF and OIF Deployed U.S. Troops

In 2000, 2008, 2011, and 2014

Sources: For 2001, Department of Defense, Active Duty Military Personnel Strengths by Regional Area and By Country (309A), September 2001; https://www.dmdc.osd.mil/appj/dwp/reports.do?category=reports&subCat=milActDutReg; Defense Manpower Data Center, DRS 11280–Number of Members Deployed By Country, By Component and Month/Years, Contingency Tracking System file as of March 31, 2014.

Trends in War Funding by Operation

From the 9/11 attacks until FY2008, total war costs for all three operations—Iraq, Afghanistan, and other GWOT and enhanced security—rose steeply from $36 billion in FY2001/FY2002 to a peak of $195 billion in FY2008, primarily because of Iraq war costs. In FY2009, overall war funding fell to $157 billion, reflecting the decline in troop levels after the Iraq surge, and the beginning of troop withdrawals.

The decline of total war costs since FY008 due to the Iraq withdrawal was partly offset by the rise in Afghan war costs because of the FY2009-FY2011 troop surge in Afghanistan. In FY2001/FY2002, the cost of enhanced security (Operation Noble Eagle) covered the initial responses to the 9/11 attacks, repair of the Pentagon, and combat air patrols in the United States. These costs declined, falling to less than $200 million by FY2008 (Figure 3).

Iraq War Funding

As troop levels in Iraq rose to 149,000 after the invasion in the spring of 2003, war funding for the year reached $51 billion, rising further to $77 billion in FY2004 and to $79 billion in FY2005 as the United States established bases in Iraq to support somewhat lower troop levels. With the initiation of the surge in 2007, costs increased to $131 billion, then peaked at $144 billion in FY2008.

With the reversal of the Iraq surge, Iraq costs declined to $93 billion in FY2009, $65 billion in FY2010. As the U.S. combat mission was replaced with an "advise and assist" role, costs continued to fall to $47 billion in FY2011, and $20 billion in FY2012 when all U.S. troops were withdrawn (Figure 1 and Figure 3).

Afghan War Funding

After dropping from $23 billion in FY2002 to $17 billion in FY2003 and $15 billion in FY2004, Afghan war costs rose to $19 billion in FY2005 and $31 billion in FY2006 with troop levels around 20,000. By FY2008, Afghan costs increased to $39 billion as both troop levels and the conflict's intensity grew. With the initiation of the Afghan troop surge, costs grew to $56 billion in FY2009, and $94 billion in FY2010, peaking at $107 billion in FY2011 (Figure 3).

As U.S. troop levels declined and Afghan forces have taken the lead in operations, U.S. costs dropped to $86 billion in FY2013 and $77 billion in FY2014. The current FY2015 request is $58 billion for Afghanistan expenses for DOD, State/USAID, and VA Medical. In addition to higher troop strength, cost increases reflect substantial amounts to train Afghan security forces and higher investment levels in response to policy changes.

Figure 3. Estimated War Funding by Operation, FY2001-FY2015 Request

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority

Sources: Relevant public laws, House Appropriation Committee tables on relevant appropriations acts, DOD budget justification material, DOD, Cumulative CW-01-Z, Cumulative (war obligations data base), March and June 2014. DOD figures are split by operation based on obligations incurred for each operation for funds of each fiscal year; State Department/USAID figures reflect enacted levels, and budget justification material on allocations between operations; VA from annual budget justification materials for Medical Funding; allocated between operations by CRS based on a cumulative rolling average of in-country troop levels.

Notes:

a. FY2015 reflects June 2014 amended request rather than initial placeholder request of $79.4 billion for DOD; reflects resources not scoring level. Excludes $5.5 billion requested for OIR in FY2015.

b. DOD refers to the Afghan war as Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF), primarily military and other operations in Afghanistan as well as in-theater support in neighboring countries and other counter-terror operations (e.g., Philippines, Djibouti).

c. DOD refers to the Iraq war as Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) until September 1, 2010, when U.S. forces transitioned from combat operations to advising, assisting, and training Iraqi forces and the mission was re-named Operation New Dawn (OND). OND ended on December 31, 2011 when all U.S. forces left the country of Iraq; military personnel continuing to provide in-theater support were assigned to OEF. Excludes new OIR request.

d. Enhanced security covers cost of 9/11 attacks to the Department of Defense (DOD) and in New York City; referred to as Noble Eagle by DOD.

e. "Other" includes funding in DOD designated as for war emergency or for Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) that is not tracked by DOD as a war cost, such as congressional adds for childcare centers, barracks improvements, additional C-130 and C-17 aircraft not requested as well as unanticipated increases in basic housing allowances, fuel costs, modularity or restructuring of Army brigades, and in recent years, transfers by Congress of base budget operation and maintenance expenses to Title IX war funding.

Enhanced Security

Funding for Enhanced Security (Operation Noble Eagle) peaked at $13 billion in the first year after the 9/11 attacks, primarily for one-time costs like Pentagon reconstruction ($1.3 billion), security upgrades, combat air patrol (about $1.3 billion for around-the-clock coverage), and activating reservists to guard bases.28 These costs fell to $4 billion in 2003, and then to $2 billion in FY2004.

Beginning in FY2005, DOD funded this operation in its baseline budget rather than as emergency or Overseas Contingency Operation (OCO) funding. Costs fell to under $1 billion in FY2006, $500 million in FY2007, and about $100 million per year in FY2008 and after (Figure 3).

Trends in War Funding by Agency

The Department of Defense accounts for $1.5 trillion or 92% of the $1.6 trillion total enacted war funding. Diplomatic operations and foreign aid programs of the State Department account for another $93 billion, or 6% of the total. Another $18 billion, or just over 1% of war funding, funds medical care in the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) for OEF and OIF veterans. The VA does not provide figures showing the cost of its benefits for veterans of the two wars (Figure 4).

Department of Defense

DOD's war funding for the Afghan and Iraq wars primarily pays for deploying and supporting U.S. troops (e.g., special pays for deployed personnel), conducting and supporting military operations, repairing war-worn equipment, and transporting troops and equipment to and from the war zone (O&M activities); buying and upgrading weapon systems (Procurement); conducting Research, Development, and Testing and Evaluation (RDT&E); Military Construction on site; and conducting intelligence activities. In addition, DOD war funding finances training for the Afghan and Iraqi security forces and other reconstruction activities.

DOD funding grew more rapidly than might have been expected based on changes in troop levels alone. Instead, much of the increase reflects other factors discussed below—higher than anticipated support costs, an expanded definition of war-related procurement, and the growth of programs to meet specific needs, such as training Afghan and Iraqi security forces.

Figure 4. Estimated War Funding by Agency, FY2001-FY2015 Request

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority

Source: Relevant public laws, House Appropriation Committee tables on relevant appropriations acts, DOD budget justification material, DOD, Cumulative CW-01-Z, Cumulative (war obligations data base), March and June 2014. DOD figures are split by operation based on obligations incurred for each operation for funds of each fiscal year; State Department/USAID figures reflect enacted levels, and budget justification material on allocations between operations; VA budget justification materials for each year.

Notes: FY2015 reflects June 2014 amended request rather than initial placeholder request of $79.4 billion for DOD. Excludes $5.5 billion requested for OIR in FY2015.

State Department Diplomatic Operations and U.S. Foreign Aid (USAID)

The $93 billion in war appropriations enacted thus far for the State Department/USAID funds diplomatic operations: e.g., paying staff, providing security, building and maintaining embassies, and funding a variety of foreign aid programs in Afghanistan and Iraq ranging from the Economic Support Fund to counter-drug activities.29 This figure reflects all funds for Afghanistan and Iraq provided in the regular base budget or as emergency or OCO-designated appropriations.

Starting in FY2012, the State Department, like DOD, began to designate certain monies in its regular request as OCO, to fund

the extraordinary, but temporary, costs of the Department of State and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) operations in the Frontline States of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan... [identifying] the exceptional costs of operating in these countries that are focal points of U.S national security policy [as opposed to] the permanent base requirements in the Frontline States, which will endure after OCO funding is phased out.30

Except for a one-time appropriation of $20 billion for Iraq reconstruction in FY2004, war-related annual foreign aid and diplomatic operations funding hovered between $4 billion and $5 billion each year until FY2011 with one exception in FY2010. When the State Department began to designate spending as OCO, funding levels rose to $11 billion in FY2012 and $9 billion in FY2013, partly due the budgetary advantage of the designation which exempts this funding from budget limits. State/USAID funding fell to $6 billion in FY2014 (Figure 4).31

In its FY2015 request of $14 billion, the State Department gives another rationale for OCO-designated funding—"an important tool that allows the Department to deal with extraordinary activities that are critical to our immediate national security objectives without unnecessarily undermining funding for our longer-term efforts to sustain global order and tackle transnational challenges."32

VA Medical War-Related Funding

The VA identifies the dollar value of all medical services provided to OEF/OIF veterans who qualify for care based on statutory criteria. Costs for VA medical services have increased not only as the number of those eligible grows but also as the criteria for eligibility has expanded since the 9/11 attacks.

In general, veterans who served in combat theater of operations are entitled to five years of VA health care services following their separation from active duty, regardless of whether they are eligible for VA services on other grounds, such as service-related medical condition. For combat veterans who were discharged or released from active service on or after January 28, 2003, they may enroll in the VA health care system within five years from the date of their most recent discharge. 33 Most of VA's medical expenses for OEF/OIF veterans have been funded with regular appropriations. The VA also provides disability benefits to OEF and OIF veterans but has not published the amounts attributable to these veterans.

See Table 5 for a more detailed breakdown of the cost of the Afghan and Iraq wars.

Table 5. Estimated War Funding by Operation, Agency, and Fiscal Year, FY2001-FY2015 Request

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority

Operation/Agency

01&02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

12

13

14

15 Req.a

FY01-14

FY01-15

Afghan War or Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)

DOD

22.0

16.7

13.2

17.9

17.5

29.2

36.1

52.6

88.2

103.1

96.3

80.6

74.0

53.3

647.3

700.7

State/USAID

0.8

0.7

2.2

2.8

1.1

1.9

2.7

3.1

5.6

3.3

3.5

3.9

2.0

2.6

33.6

36.2

VA Medical

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.1

0.1

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.5

0.8

1.1

1.4

2.2

4.7

6.9

Total

22.8

17.4

15.4

20.7

18.7

31.1

39.0

56.0

94.1

106.8

100.6

85.6

77.4

58.1

685.6

743.7

Iraq War or Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation New Dawn (OND)

DOD

0.0

48.0

57.1

77.1

91.9

127.1

140.3

89.6

59.9

42.7

13.5

4.9

1.1

0.5

753.1

753.5

State/USAID

0.0

3.0

19.5

2.0

3.7

3.2

2.7

2.2

3.3

2.1

4.7

0.7

1.4

1.5

48.6

50.2

VA Medical

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.4

0.6

0.9

1.3

1.6

1.8

2.1

2.1

2.3

3.0

12.9

15.9

Total

0.0

51.0

76.7

79.1

96.0

130.8

143.9

93.1

64.8

46.5

20.3

7.7

4.8

5.0

814.6

819.6

Enhanced Security or Operation Noble Eagle (ONE)

DOD

13.0

6.0

4.0

2.0

1.0

0.5

0.2

0.2

0.1

0.1

0.2

0.1

0.1

0.1

27.4

27.5

State/USAID

13.0

6.0

4.0

2.0

1.0

0.5

0.2

0.2

0.1

0.1

0.2

0.1

0.1

0.1

27.4

27.5

War-Designated Funding Not War-Related

DOD

0.0

0.0

0.0

6.6

8.0

7.3

12.1

7.5

6.4

5.4

5.4

1.9

10.2

5.1

70.9

75.9

State/USAID

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

3.2

4.6

2.6

5.3

10.4

15.7

Total

0.0

0.0

0.0

6.6

8.0

7.3

12.1

7.5

6.4

5.4

8.6

6.6

12.8

10.4

81.3

91.7

All War-Designated Funding

DOD

35.0

70.7

74.3

103.6

118.4

164.0

188.7

149.8

154.6

151.2

115.3

87.5

85.4

58.9

1,498.7

1,557.6

State/USAID

0.8

3.8

21.7

4.8

4.9

5.0

5.4

5.4

8.9

5.4

11.5

9.2

6.0

9.4

92.7

107.1

VA Medical

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.4

0.7

1.0

1.5

1.9

2.3

2.9

3.2

3.7

5.2

17.6

22.8

Total

35.8

74.4

96.0

108.4

123.7

169.7

195.2

156.7

165.4

158.9

129.7

99.9

95.2

73.6

1,608.9

1,682.4

Sources: Relevant public laws, House Appropriation Committee tables on relevant appropriations acts, DOD budget justification material, DOD, Cumulative CW-01-Z, Cumulative (war obligations database), March and June 2014. DOD figures are split by operation based on obligations incurred for each operation for funds of each fiscal year; State Department/USAID figures reflect enacted levels, and budget justification material on allocations between operations; VA budget justification materials for each year.

Notes:

a. Reflects June 2014 amended DOD request, excludes OIR. Totals may not add due to rounding.

War Funding and Budget Controls

Since the 9/11 attacks, some observers have criticized war funding as "off-budget" or a "slush fund" appropriated largely in emergency supplemental acts or for "Overseas Contingency Operations" (OCO) where normal budget limits in annual budget resolutions or the Budget Control Act (BCA) do not apply.34 In recent testimony on September 18, 2014, for example, former Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel acknowledged these ambiguities, saying "there're a lot of different opinions about whether there should be an overseas contingency account or not and whether it's a slush fund or not."35

Some observers have argued that the tendency to designate funding for activities only tangentially related to OCO or war has intensified with the threat of sequestration in the BCA. Under that act, if final appropriations breach separate, annual "defense" and non-defense budget caps, OMB must administer a largely across-the-board sequestration reducing each account, and sometimes individual programs, by the same percentage to ensure that caps are met.36 (Should a sequestration be required, however, all budgetary resources, including war funding, would be affected by across-the-board cuts.)

Others have suggested that the "OCO" designation has provided a "safety valve" to preserve base budget programs and help agencies meet BCA caps by designating funding for base budget programs as OCO.37 For example, Congress transferred $9.2 billion in Operation and Maintenance (O&M) funds from DOD's base budget request to the OCO-designated Title I funds in the FY2014 Consolidated Appropriations Act (P.L. 113-76).38

Under the BCA caps, DOD spending has been constrained to $496 billion in FY2013, FY2014, and FY2015, with a $3 billion increase to $499 billion in FY2016.39 DOD contends that the BCA "sequester" caps (the limits that must be reached to avoid a sequester) would require DOD to make significant cuts from current plans that would affect both readiness and modernization.40 DOD's current Future Years Defense plan exceeds the BCA limits by $176 billion or 3.3% over the BCA caps between FY2012 and FY2021.41

In addition, departmental spokesmen argue that congressional reluctance to accept DOD-proposed compensation reforms and weapon system cancellations could create an additional "hole" of $70 billion in DOD's current five-year defense plan, which already exceeds sequester caps by about 4.4%. In both FY2014 and FY2015, the Administration has contended that the BCA limits for both defense and nondefense should be raised with additional savings achieved from tax and entitlement reform, proposals that have not been addressed by Congress.42

The OCO or emergency designation can be applied to all or only some accounts within an appropriation act. There is no single account for war funding in any agency. Generally, war funding is appropriated in regular appropriation accounts for incremental expenses associated with war activities or programs. For DOD, war funding designations has been provided in individual accounts in emergency supplemental, omnibus, or DOD Appropriation Acts for amounts that cover incremental or additional expenses related to deploying military personnel, conducting combat or train and assist operations, and supporting troops overseas.43

With BCA spending limits in place until FY2021, some believe that the definition of what constitutes war funding may continue to be applied broadly. For example, concerned about DOD's proposal to end funding for A-10 ground attack aircraft in its base budget, the House version of the FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act included $635 million in Title XV for OCO funding to retain A-10 aircraft.44

In a similar way, the State Department has requested emergency or OCO designations for some of the costs of diplomatic operations or USAID programs associated with Afghanistan and Iraq, such as the Diplomatic and Consular Programs or the Economic Support Fund. Congress has also created new accounts or spending caps to fund activities that do not fit neatly into the purposes of regular accounts and to provide additional flexibility (see Figure 9).

Congressional Concerns

Recently, some Members have expressed concerns about and taken action to limit the tendency by both the Administration and Congress to apply the OCO designation to activities only tangentially related to war. For example, in H.R. 4435, the FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act, the House adopted the Mulvaney amendment to require that the Administration's requests comply with OMB's relatively strict 2010 war spending criteria that are intended to limit DOD war spending to activities and programs directly related to the incremental costs of war operations.45 This provision would not apply to congressional decisions to attach an OCO designation to activities and programs that may be marginally related to those costs.

The FY2015 House Budget Resolution report contends that the OCO designation for war costs "has created a loophole that could be used to circumvent discretionary spending limits" and warns that "the Budget committee will be vigilant that the OCO/GWOT cap adjustment is not abused as a means of evading the statutory caps on discretionary spending."46 During a July 17, 2014, hearing by the House Budget Committee on the FY2015 OCO request, both Democratic and Republican members raised concerns about ever-broader definitions of war costs. For example, ranking member Congressman Chris Van Hollen noted a tendency for

creeping allocations from the base budget into the OCO budget. And I have to say, this is not just on the side of the administration. In fact, I think if you look at the record, Congress has actually been a greater offender in this area. But the reality is we have to work together—the executive branch, the congressional branch—to make sure that we have clear and transparent budgeting.47

In a similar vein, Congressman Bill Pascrell emphasized

it's important that the committee ensure that the caps on spending in that law are respected or renegotiated. No one is innocent here. The administration, the Congress have used the OCO budget in the past to skirt the Budget Control Act's caps ... But it's critical that emergency spending be just that. For emergencies. And not just an accounting gimmick that undermines the budget discipline we've all agreed on.48

While acknowledging that BCA budget limits have made DOD planning "complicated and difficult," Congressman Adam Smith suggested that "a substantial portion of this OCO request really is not directly related to the war in Afghanistan [and] has been spread out amongst a variety of different other funds." 49 DOD witness Deputy Secretary Robert Work agreed that

there's is an awful lot in this request that is outside Afghanistan, but that supports Afghanistan or is an integral part of our operations in Afghanistan. But I'd also like to make the point that as sequester has impacted the department, it has really squeezed our ability to absorb within the department unanticipated operations.50

While House Armed Services Committee Chairman, Bud McKeon called for a more expansive definition of war costs to cover "readiness shortfalls" developed over "a decade of war," Deputy Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Winnefeld, responded that

Mr. Chairman, in trying to stay true and faithful to what the concept of overseas contingency operations really means, we didn't view that kind of [full-spectrum] training necessarily as falling into that category. It'd be tempting to do that. We'd love to do that. But we really wanted to stay faithful and really reset this OCO idea into what it really is supposed to be.51

With the prospect of smaller war budgets as U.S. troop levels fall and as BCA caps continue through FY2021, Congress is likely to continue to face the question of what is appropriately designated as emergency or OCO.

The two key questions in assessing the use of emergency or "OCO" designations are:

Designating Funding as Emergency or OCO

Current budgetary law provides that any funding designated by Congress in statute and by the President in writing as "emergency" or "Overseas Contingency Operations" does not count against budget caps. In other words, what qualifies as "emergency" or "OCO" funding is its designation by Congress and the President.

The Chairs of the respective budget committees are required to raise budget limits to accommodate that spending, which effectively exempts that funding from spending limits set in either annual budget resolutions or more recently, the BCA (see Box B.).52

According to budget law, "emergency" spending is to be "unanticipated," meaning that it is "sudden ... urgent ... unforeseen ... and temporary" (See § 102 (4) (20) in Box B.). Although a Member can raise a point-of-order challenge to the emergency designation on the Senate floor, the challenge would have to be sustained by 60 votes, which has has seldom happened.53

The OCO designation was added in the Budget Control Act (P.L. 112-25), presumably to provide Congress with an alternate way to designate war funding than the "emergency" designation, which no longer seemed appropriate after over ten years of wars.54 There are no criteria for the OCO designation nor is there a similar point of order to challenge it (Box B.).

In the initial years of the Afghan and Iraq wars, most war-related funding was provided in supplemental emergency appropriations. Starting in FY2004, DOD received some of its war funding in Title IX of its regular appropriation act to ensure that war funding was available at the beginning of the fiscal year but these funds were also designated as emergency; this funding was thus exempt from budget limits. DOD monies were first designated as "OCO" in FY2012 and also were exempt. When war funding needs were higher than anticipated, the Administration submitted additional emergency or OCO supplemental requests.55

Box B. Designating Funds as Emergency or for Overseas Contingency Operations:
Budget Control Act of 2011 (italics added)

(b) ADJUSTMENTS TO DISCRETIONARY SPENDING LIMITS.—

(1) CONCEPTS AND DEFINITIONS.—When the President submits the budget under section 1105 of title 31, United States Code, OMB shall calculate and the budget shall include adjustments to discretionary spending limits (and those limits as cumulatively adjusted) for the budget year and each outyear to reflect changes in concepts and definitions. Such changes shall equal the baseline levels of new budget authority and outlays using up-to-date concepts and definitions, minus those levels using the concepts and definitions in effect before such changes. Such changes may only be made after consultation with the Committees on Appropriations and the Budget of the House of Representatives and the Senate, and that consultation shall include written communication to such committees that affords such committees the opportunity to comment before official action is taken with respect to such changes.

(2) SEQUESTRATION REPORTS.—When OMB submits a sequestration report under section 254(e), (f), or (g) for a fiscal year, OMB shall calculate, and the sequestration report and subsequent budgets submitted by the President under section 1105(a) of title 31, United States Code, shall include adjustments to discretionary spending limits (and those limits as adjusted) for the fiscal year and each succeeding year, as follows:

(A) EMERGENCY APPROPRIATIONS; OVERSEAS CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS/GLOBAL WAR ON TERRORISM.—If, for any fiscal year, appropriations for discretionary accounts are enacted that—

(i) the Congress designates as emergency requirements in statute on an account by account basis and the President subsequently so designates, or

(ii) the Congress designates for Overseas Contingency Operations/Global War on Terrorism in statute on an account by account basis and the President subsequently so designates, the adjustment shall be the total of such appropriations in discretionary accounts designated as emergency requirements or for Overseas Contingency Operations/Global War on Terrorism, as applicable."

Definitions of Emergencies

SEC. 251. ENFORCING DISCRETIONARY SPENDING LIMITS

(c) DISCRETIONARY SPENDING LIMIT

SEC. 102. DEFINITIONS

(20) The term 'emergency' means a situation that—''(A) requires new budget authority and outlays (or new budget authority and the outlays flowing therefrom) for the prevention or mitigation of, or response to, loss of life or property, or a threat to national security; and

(B) is unanticipated.

(21) The term 'unanticipated' means that the underlying situation is—

(A) sudden, which means quickly coming into being or

not building up over time;

(B) urgent, which means a pressing and compelling

need requiring immediate action;

(C) unforeseen, which means not predicted or anticipated as an emerging need; and

(D) temporary, which means not of a permanent duration.

Changes in DOD Definitions of War Funding

DOD definitions of what constitutes war-related activities and expenses have shifted over the years. Because of the flexibility of the emergency or OCO designations, some have questioned whether there are any limitations on what could be counted as war funding. The only check on the amount of funding that can be designated as either "emergency" or "OCO" is the requirement that Congress and the Administration agree.

Shifts in DOD definitions have reflected differing viewpoints about the extent, nature, and duration of the Afghan and Iraq wars and the "Global War on Terror" (GWOT) as well as growing budget pressures. Over the years, both Congress and the President have adopted sometimes more and sometimes less expansive definitions to accommodate the needs and pressures of the moment.

DOD's Regulations on War Funding

DOD's financial management regulations appear to specify fairly clearly the types of activities that would be considered related to contingency operations. Since the 1990s Bosnian war, DOD regulations have defined war costs as those expenses necessary to cover incremental costs "that would not have been incurred had the contingency operation not been supported (italics added)."56War costs would not cover, for example, base pay for troops or normal training activities since those are normal peacetime expenses, or planned equipment modernization.

Only those costs in addition to DOD's normal peacetime activities such as those incurred because troops are deployed for war are to be considered OCO. To identify these activities, the guidance requires that the services show how additional wartime deployments and operations affect peacetime assumptions about troop levels and operational tempo. Investment costs were only to be included if "necessary to support a contingency operation." 57

War Expenses Within Regular Accounts

Under these regulations, the following types of expenses were considered war costs:

Additional Special Purpose Accounts

In addition, the Administration initiated several programs and accounts designed to fund specific war-related activities that do not fit into traditional accounts. These programs and accounts include:

Congressional Adds and DOD 'Must-Pay' Bills

As often occurs in supplemental appropriations, DOD added funds for unanticipated "must pay" bills and Congress added funds for programs that were designated as "emergency" or "OCO." For DOD, examples included unanticipated increases in basic housing allowances, incentive pays, fuel prices and base support expenses. Before the 9/11 attacks, such expenses would often be offset by reductions in other programs.

Congress added funds for childcare centers and barracks improvements to improve morale, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI) as urgently-needed mental health programs, C-130 and C-17 transport aircraft facing production line cut-offs, and National Guard and Reserve equipment.

In recent years, Congress has transferred funds requested in base budget accounts to Title IX war-designated funding, ranging from monies for Mission and Other Operations funding training to base support of state-side facilities; in FY2014, Congress moved $9.2 billion in Operation and Maintenance funds requested in DOD's base budget to Title IX war funding.58 The effect was to ease the limits of BCA spending caps.

DOD's 2006 Guidance Expands Definition of "War-Related"

In its initial July 19, 2006, guidance to the services for developing the FY2007 Supplemental and FY2008 war cost requests, DOD reiterated that war funding must comply with financial regulations limiting expenses to incremental costs or strictly war-related procurement. For example, this guidance specifically prohibited including the Army's modularity funds to reorganize units as war funding "because it is already programmed in FY2007 and the outyears," and warned that the services would have to demonstrate that investment items were "directly associated with GWOT operations," rather than to offset "normal recurring replacement of equipment."59 In addition, the services would have to show that reset (the repair or replacement of war-worn equipment) plans were executable in FY2007, indicating it was urgently needed for war operations.

On October 25, 2006, however, Deputy Secretary of Defense Gordon England issued revised guidance for requesting war funds to the services that significantly changed these criteria. New requests were to be submitted within two weeks that reflected the "longer war on terror" rather than strictly the requirements for war operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and other counter-terror operations.60 There was no definition of what types of expenses might be covered by the "longer war on terror." Presumably, this change reflected presidential policy. Since the longer war on terror was an integral part of DOD's national strategy, some might argue that these types of expenses would more appropriately be included in DOD's regular base budget, where they would compete with other defense needs.61

In response to this new guidance, the services expanded the types of programs and activities considered to be war-related. Examples included acceleration of planned equipment upgrades, modernization of the Army's Bradley fighting vehicles, M-1 tanks and its truck and vehicle fleet, and state-side base support. The effect of this policy change can be seen in the doubling of war-funded procurement from $22.9 billion in FY2006 to $49.5 billion in FY2007, with a peak of $65.9 billion in FY2009. The peak year also reflects a congressional decision to add $16.8 billion in a special account to quickly purchase mine resistant ambush protected (MRAP) vehicles, a heavy truck with a V-shaped hull that increased soldier survivability against roadside bombs or improvised explosive devices (IEDs) (Table 7).

Overall, between FY2001 and FY2014, DOD's war-designated procurement added almost $300 billion, or about 25%, to the $1.2 trillion in procurement funds appropriated to the base budget.62 Although some war funding for procurement net was unanticipated, new wartime needs, such as uparmored Humvees for force protection, other war procurement funding converted Army brigades to modular units, and upgraded and purchased equipment sooner than planned.

For example, a 2007 CBO study found that more than 40% of the Army's spending for reset—the repair and replacement of war-worn equipment—was not for replacing lost equipment or repairing equipment sent home. Instead, Army funds were spent to upgrade systems to increase capability, to buy equipment to eliminate longstanding shortfalls in inventory, to convert new units to a modular configuration, and to replace equipment stored overseas for contingencies.63

Such investment funding contributed to DOD's modernization. In the case of the Army, particularly, war funding paid and accelerated the modernization of "nearly its entire fleet of ground combat vehicles [e.g., Abrams tanks and Bradley Infantry Fighting vehicles] and ... dramatically increased its stocks of small arms and support vehicles [e.g., Humvees, trucks]."64 In this way, DOD war funding, in fact, financed some modernization requirements sooner than anticipated, effectively reducing funding that would otherwise be financed in DOD's base budget.

OMB 2009 Guidance Restores War Funding Limits

In 2009, at the beginning of the Obama administration, OMB issued new guidance outlining the criteria for war funding that largely restored earlier regulations. This guidance was modified in 2010 (Appendix B).

While the new OMB guidance restored some of the earlier limits on what would be considered "war-related" expenses, it adopted a broad geographic span for war-related activities. The theater of operations for "combat or direct combat support operations ... [for] non-classified war overseas contingency operations funding ... [is] to include Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, the Horn of Africa, Persian Gulf and Gulf nations, Arabian Sea, the Indian Ocean, the Philippines, and other countries on a case-by-case basis."65 The criteria permitted the Administration to add other countries "on a case-by-case basis," as appears to be the case with the use of OCO funds for recent Syrian operations.

Under this new guidance, procurement requirements were limited to:

Operational requirements were confined to:

War-related military construction was designed for

Certain items were to be funded in the base budget rather than OCO (as had been the case):

At the same time, then-Secretary of Defense Robert Gates pushed to move some war costs to the base budget that reflected long-term requirements for counter-terrorism operations, such as expanding special operations forces and higher funding for mental health. Some $8 billion was transferred from the war to the base budget in FY2010, and smaller amounts in FY2011.67 DOD also included some funding for the Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund (JIEDDF) in its base budget to cover research and procurement costs to counter IEDs or homemade land mines, with the rationale that this threat was likely to persist beyond the Afghan and Iraq wars. Congress, however, chose to move this funding to war-related Title IX of the DOD Appropriations Act.

Partly in response to this revised guidance, war procurement levels dropped from the peak of $65.9 billion in FY2008 to $34.6 billion in FY2009 to $32.6 billion in FY2010 and $29.8 billion in FY2011. Along with the new guidance, the end of U.S. combat operations and the withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan caused war procurement to fall to $16 billion in FY2012, $8 billion in FY2013, $7 billion in FY2014, and $6 billion in the FY2015 request (Table 7).

Force Structure and War Funding

Another area with shifting definitions of what is and what is not considered war funding are changes in force structure over the past decade. In FY2005 and FY2006, the Army requested and received $10 billion in war funding over two years to pay for the Army's ongoing modularity initiative to redesign and modernize its brigades. The Army claimed the initiative would extend the time between deployments ("dwell time"), which would reduce stress on those units that were frequently deployed. Studies by CBO and RAND questioned this conclusion, finding that modularity would only marginally improve rotation schedules.68 DOD does not count modularity as a war cost (see Table 6).

The Army acknowledged that the distinction between war and base budget needs is murky "since modularity requirements mirror the equipment requirements the Army already procures for its units, the ability to precisely track modularity funds is lost."69 Congress included the funds in the FY2005 and FY2006 war appropriations acts (effectively giving the Army more room in its regular budget for other things) but with the understanding that DOD would rely on the regular budget after FY2006 and set aside $25 billion in future years to cover these costs.70

The 2006 England guidance reversed this decision.71 The FY2007 Supplemental included $3.6 billion to convert two Army brigade teams and create an additional Marine Corps regimental combat team, and the FY2008 war request included $1.6 billion to accelerate the creation of more modular brigades plus additional funds for equipping them (see "DOD's 2006 Guidance Expands Definition of "War-Related"'").72

In addition to modularity, war funding was also used to pay for the cost to equip an additional 30,000 soldiers temporarily added to the Army in FY2004 to help reduce the frequency of wartime rotations for certain units. In January 2007 in light of war experience, DOD decided that Army and Marine Corps ground forces were needed for the long term and increased them by 92,000 from pre-war levels over the next several years so that the United States would be able to deploy substantial numbers of troops to conduct "stability operations" for prolonged periods of time.

The Army's pre-war level of 482,000 would increase by 65,000 in this "Grow the Army" initiative while the Marine Corps pre-war level of 175,000 would grow by 27,000 active-duty forces. The FY2007 Supplemental included $4.9 billion to cover the cost of 22,000 additional military personnel plus $1.7 billion for equipment and infrastructure although DOD promised that other funding for this force structure growth would be included in the regular budget starting in FY2009.73

In new strategic guidance issued in January 2012, after the death of Bin Laden and passage of the Budget Control Act mandating lower defense spending levels for the next decade, President Obama reversed this plan to size ground forces to conduct long-term stability operations, arguing instead that

the United States will emphasize non-military means and military-to-military cooperation to address instability and reduce the demand for significant U.S. force commitments to stability operations ... [and that] U.S. forces will no longer be sized to conduct large-scale, prolonged stability operations.74

In 2013, as part of the changes to meet the first tranche of BCA reductions, the President announced that the size of the Army would be reduced from its wartime peak of 570,000 to 490,000 while the Marine Corps could be cut from 202,000 to 183,100—both close to pre-war levels. DOD then argued that the cost of gradually shedding Army and Marine Corps personnel because of this change should be considered a war cost, and included $6.0 billion in FY2013, $4.6 billion in FY2014, and $2.4 billion in FY2015 in its war request to cover the "over strength" or excess personnel on-board because of the change in strategic guidance.75

Unlike other war-related military expenses, this funding did not pay for troops deployed overseas in a war zone. Some may argue that these transition costs should be funded in the base budget since the decision reflected a choice about the appropriate size of all ground forces.

Reset Requirements

Another type of expense affected by the changing definitions of war funding is reset or reconstitution—the amount of funds needed to "reset" or restore the services' equipment to pre-war levels, the "process of bringing a unit back to full readiness once it has been rotated out of a combat operation."76 Reset funds consist of both depot maintenance costs to repair equipment and replacement when repair is not worthwhile. Between FY2004 and FY2008, reset accounted for the largest increase, not only because ongoing operations had built up wear and tear on equipment, but also because of the 2006 Deputy Secretary of Defense England policy decision to broaden the definition of what was considered a war-related cost.77

Estimates of reset costs have changed frequently. In March 2005, CBO estimated that annual repair and replacement costs would run about $8 billion a year based on the current pace of operations and service data.78 According to 2007 testimony by then-Army Chief of Staff, General Peter J. Schoomaker, and other military spokespeople, Army reset was estimated to be $12 billion to $13 billion a year as long as the conflict lasted at the current level and "for a minimum of two to three years beyond."79

There is some evidence that DOD front-loaded (funded in advance of need) its reset needs in 2007, a fact acknowledged by then-OMB Director Robert Portman in testimony at the time.80 Congress has generally funded, if not added to, Army and Marine Corp reset requests.81The FY2007 Supplemental and the FY2008 war request both appear to include an extra year of Army and Marine Corps reset requirements; GAO has also questioned the accuracy of DOD's reset requirements.82

Another indication of frontloading reset is when procurement obligations rates are slower than normal (generally about 90% in the first year), resulting in large carryovers of war-related investment from earlier appropriations. As of the beginning of FY2008, for example, DOD had $45 billion in war-related carryover that had not been obligated or placed on contract.83 As of April 30, 2010, about 40% of FY2009 war procurement funds remained unobligated.84

As mentioned, Army and Marine Corps spokesmen have also frequently predicted that reset funding would be needed two to three years after U.S. troops leave. Frontloading may reflect DOD desires to include reset funding before troop levels fall, anticipating greater difficulties in getting funding after U.S. troops leave. This frontloading practice may help explain why reset funding initially fell less rapidly than troop strength in Iraq but declined rapidly once all U.S. troops left.

In Iraq, reset funding halved from $16.5 billion in FY2009 to $8.5 billion in FY2010 while troop strength dropped one-third, perhaps reflecting the effects of the Iraq surge. In FY2011, the following year, reset funding remained at $8.9 billion while troop levels fell by another third. In FY2012 when troop levels fell to 9,200, Iraq reset funding fell steeply to $1.6 billion, then to $1.3 billion in FY2013 when troop levels in-country fell to zero. (Table D-1).

Reset funding for the Afghan war appears to lag troop reductions. Afghan reset funding decreased from $12.7 billion in FY2011 to $11.3 billion in FY2012 as troop strength dropped modestly from the 98,000 peak to 89,000, a decrease of close to 10% for both. By FY2013, however, with troop strength one-third below the peak, reset funding declined modestly to $9.9 billion. Despite another halving in troop strength between FY2013 and FY2014, reset decreased by $1.5 billion to $8.4 billion. And in the FY2015 request, Afghan troop funds increased to $9.2 billion while troop strength fell to 11,660 (Table D-1). This pattern could suggest frontloading of reset requests.

Over the war years, reset funding to repair, upgrade, and replace war-worn equipment contributed to both DOD's modernization and depot maintenance requirements for its equipment inventory. This war funding effectively filled some of DOD's base budget requirements by repairing and replacing equipment sooner than anticipated, potentially cushioning flattening and decreases in DOD budgets in recent years.

Military Construction and Permanent Bases

The scope of military construction raised concerns with some policy makers about whether extensive construction indicated DOD intentions to set up permanent U.S. bases in Iraq and in Afghanistan. Because of that concern, both defense appropriation and authorization acts include provisions that prohibit the United States from establishing permanent bases in either Iraq or Afghanistan.85

Over the past decade of war, DOD built up an extensive infrastructure to support troops and equipment in and around Iraq and Afghanistan. Military construction funding for this purpose more than doubled from $0.5 billion in FY2005 to a peak of $4.2 billion in FY2008,then dropped to zero in FY2012 (Table 7). In response to congressional concerns, DOD guidelines re-emphasized building that was "re-locatable" rather than permanent in Iraq and Afghanistan though some construction could be classified both ways. With the U.S. withdrawals from Iraq and Afghanistan, bases have been either returned to the host country or demolished.86

DOD's Definition of "Other" Funding

In its monthly war cost tracking, DOD, lists "non-war" costs, including "must-pay" bills, modularity, and congressional additions and transfers. DOD does not include "excess over strength" as a non-war cost though some observers would count that as well.

Based on DOD's definition, "non-war" costs between FY2001 and FY2014 totaled $70.9 billion (Table 6). This total reflects growth from $6.6 billion in FY2005 to a peak of $12.1 billion in FY2008, dropping from $5 billion to $7 billion for FY2009 through FY2013, and then rising again to $10 billion in FY2014.87 The amount of "non-war" costs could be considered higher than shown by DOD depending on definitions.

Table 6. DOD's Non-War Costs, FY2001-FY2015

In Billions of Dollars

Category

Total, FY2001-FY2014

Modularity

10.0

Fuel - Non-War

9.5

Other Non-War

51.4

TOTAL

70.9

Sources: DOD data provided to CRS and Cost of War Report, June 2014.

Notes: Includes costs that DOD does not track as war obligations except for war-related "non-DOD" intelligence, or National Intelligence Program programs, which are under the jurisdiction of the Director of National Intelligence.

Assessing DOD's FY2015 War Request

DOD's initial FY2015 war request submitted in February 2014 was a "placeholder" figure because the President had not yet decided about the pace of future withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan. In June 2014, DOD submitted a specific FY2015 request for $58.6 billion for the Afghan war and post-war Iraq activities reflecting two policy announcements by President Obama about U.S. withdrawal plans.

In his February 2013 State of the Union address, the President announced that U.S. troops in Afghanistan would decrease to 33,000 by February of 2014, and that by the end of 2014, "our war in Afghanistan will be over," with later activities focusing "on two missions—training and equipping Afghan forces so that the country does not again slip into chaos, and counterterrorism efforts that allow us to pursue the remnants of al Qaeda and their affiliates."88

On May 27, 2014, President Obama announced further reductions in the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan during the transition to an "advise and assist" role with decreases from

Recent press reports suggest that the decrease to 9,800 U.S. troops may be delayed from January 1, 2015, to at least the spring of 2015 as U.S. troops fill the "train and assist" role of some allied nations who are still finalizing their contributions. 90 Another pressure to retain more U.S. troop could also be posed by the recent decision by President Obama to allow DOD to provide more extensive support for Afghan operations through air support and sometimes accompanying Afghan troops on ground operations.91

These figures do not include over 60,000 U.S. troops located primarily in the region who provide "in-theater" support to war operations as well as headquarters and presence (Figure 2 and Appendix A). The size of a U.S. "enduring presence" in the region after the withdrawal from Afghanistan remains a key policy question to be decided with significant cost implications.

DOD's FY2015 war request is $26.6 billion, or 31% below the FY2014 enacted level, while troop strength in Afghanistan falls by 69%92 (Table 7). In testimony before the House Armed Services Committee, Department of Defense Comptroller, Mike McCord, stated that the decrease in FY2015's request reflects "a continued downward trajectory of our war-related spending as we conclude our combat mission in Afghanistan after 13 years of war ..." but argues that DOD is also "faced with covering the costs of returning, repairing and replacing equipment ... [and] the costs associated with our broader presence in the Middle East, from which we support a number of critical missions in-country from FY2014 to FY2015."93

In justifying both its FY2014 and FY2015 requests, DOD contended that war expenses would not fall proportionately with troop levels because the cost of closing bases; returning, repairing, or disposing of equipment; and maintaining some 60,000 troops in the region offset some of the lower cost of deploying fewer troops at lower operating tempo.94 In addition, DOD Deputy Secretary Robert Work argued that costs remained high because of

continued support for the Afghan national security forces, our coalition partners in theater, and pay for the retrograde equipment and personnel will continue to reset the forces to enable a truly vast range of support activities, including logistics, intelligence, and will support a portion of the temporary Army and Marine Corps in strength that supports OEF, which has been approved by Congress. 95

The FY2015 DOD OCO request also includes $4 billion for DOD's Counterterrorism Partnership Fund (CTPF), a controversial, new transfer fund intended to provide "a flexible mechanism that allows the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Federal Government as a whole to respond more nimbly to evolving terrorist threats from South Asia to the Sahel." It also includes $925 million for a European Reassurance Fund (ERI) to "reassure allies of the U.S. commitment to their security and territorial integrity as members of the NATO Alliance" in response to Russian moves in the Ukraine.96 (The Administration requests another $1 billion for the State Department's CTPF account.)

Table 7. DOD Funding for OEF and OIF/OND, FY2001-FY2015 Request by Title

In Billions of Dollars and Percent Change

 

By Title in Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority (BA)

Annual Change in War Funding and Average Troop Strength In-Country

Fiscal Year

Mil. Pers.

O&M

Rev. Fds

Proc.

RDT&E

Mil.
Con.

Fam.
Hsg.

CTPFa

ERIa

Resc.b

Total
in $Bs

In-Cntry Troops
in 000s

% Annual Chge
in $Bs

% Annual Chge
in Stgth

2001

0.0

21.8

0.0

1.2

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$22.9

na

na

na

2002

0.2

15.4

0.0

1.2

0.0

0.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$16.9

5.2

-26%

na

2003

15.0

52.8

0.0

3.7

0.8

0.2

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$72.5

78.1

330%

1391%

2004

19.1

61.8

2.1

6.9

0.3

0.5

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$90.8

145.8

25%

87%

2005

17.4

37.5

1.5

17.4

0.6

1.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$75.6

161.0

-17%

10%

2006

16.5

72.4

3.0

22.9

0.8

0.2

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$115.8

159.1

53%

-1%

2007

18.9

93.6

1.1

49.5

1.5

1.7

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$166.3

181.5

44%

14%

2008

19.1

93.3

2.7

65.9

1.6

4.2

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$186.9

186.6

12%

3%

2009

19.9

87.3

0.9

34.6

0.3

2.7

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$145.7

184.0

-22%

-1%

2010

16.9

108.3

1.5

32.6

1.0

2.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$162.4

175.8

11%

-4%

2011

15.6

110.2

0.5

29.8

1.4

1.2

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$158.8

144.9

-2%

-18%

2012

11.3

86.8

0.4

16.1

0.5

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$115.1

95.8

-28%

-34%

2013

12.1

61.5

0.0

8.1

0.2

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$82.0

63.4

-29%

-34%

2014

8.1

69.7

0.3

7.0

0.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$85.2

37.2

4%

-41%

2015 Req.c

5.5

42.1

0.1

6.0

0.1

0.0

0.0

4.0

0.9

-0.1

$58.6

11.7

-31%

-69%

House Passedd

5.1

60.1

0.0

14.2

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0

$79.40

11.7

-7%

-69%

Senate Reptede

5.4

43.1

0.1

7.2

0.1

0.0

0.0

1.0

-0.6

-0.6

$58.90

11.7

-31%

-69%

 

Enacted, 2001-FY2014

Title

190.2

972.4

14.1

296.8

9.2

14.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

na

$1,496.80

na

na

na

 

Total w/ FY2015 Req.

Title

195.6

1014.5

14.2

302.9

9.3

14.1

0

0.9

-0.1

-0.1

$1,555.40

na

na

na

Sources: CRS calculations based on Table 2-1 in Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2015, April 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/FY15_Green_Book.pdf. Average strength calculated from DOD's monthly "Boots on the Ground" reports, 2001-June 2015; see Appendix A.

Notes:

a. Counterterrorism Partnership Fund (CTPF) and European Reassurance Initiative (ERI).

b. Rescissions are applied to relevant fiscal year after request and shown separately in requests.

c. Reflects Administration's amended June 2014 request.

d. H.R. 4870 as passed by the House reflects initial placeholder request.

e. H.R. 4870 as reported by the Senate Appropriations committee reflects Administration's amended June 2014 request.

Some ways to evaluate DOD's FY2015 request for war funding which Congress may consider as part of the appropriations and authorization process may include:

Passed in June 2014, the House-passed version of the DOD Appropriations bill, H.R. 4870, reflected the Administration's initial OCO placeholder request, while the Senate-reported version of H.R. 4870 marked up DOD's amended request.

Neither the House nor the Senate version includes the additional $5.5 billion requested for DOD in November 2014 to combat the Islamic State by conducting air strikes in Syria and Iraq and re-instituting training of Iraqi security forces. That request is discussed separately below because the request is for a new military operation with different purposes ("The New Request to Counter the Islamic State").

Has DOD Used All Its War Funds?

One standard measure to evaluate whether the budget authority (BA) appropriated is sufficient or in excess of the amount needed is to examine an agency's previous obligations history (obligations reflect when contracts to purchase goods or services are signed and when military and civilian personnel are paid). If funds are not obligated within their specified life, they are presumably not needed during that time. The funds then lapse and are returned to the Treasury, and reduce the deficit.97

Funds to cover day-to-day expenses and activities like military personnel and Operation and Maintenance (O&M) funds are available for one year, while procurement monies to buy weapon systems are available for three years because the contracting process takes more time. 98 As contracts are executed, funds are then disbursed.

Amounts designated for war (as emergency or OCO) are specified in Title XV of the defense authorization and Title IX of the DOD appropriation acts. These funds are separately tracked by DOD in its accounting systems, and reported to Congress. DOD has some flexibility to move funds from base budget accounts to those designated for war. DOD can also transfer funds from one emergency or OCO-designated account to other war-designated accounts. If funds are inadequate, DOD can transfer funds from base budget accounts to emergency or OCO-designated accounts, also within caps set in law. 99

Using DOD sources, CRS analyzed DOD's obligations of war funds appropriated between FY2008 and FY2014 to see how much of that funding lapsed after its life expired, and the amounts that DOD transferred from the base budget to meet war needs because war funding was inadequate.

Lapsed War Funds

Between FY2008 and FY2013, a total of $17.2 billion in funds designated for war lapsed. The amount of war funding that lapsed made up 2.3% of the total available. At the same time, DOD transferred a total of $9.8 billion from its base budget funding to meet war needs or 0.9% share of available war funds (Table 8).

Table 8. Execution of War Funding, FY2009-May FY2014

In Billions of Dollars and % of Total

Status of War Funds

Cumulative Amount in Billions of $

As % of Total

Lapseda

$17.2

2.3%

Added from base budgetb

$9.8

0.9%

Source: CRS calculations based on DOD, Table, "Backup Material in Cost of War Execution Reports," September of 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, and May 2014.

Notes:

a. For up to five years after the end of their statutory life, BA can be used to make adjustments to signed contracts; most adjustments reduce reported costs so lapsed amounts would be higher than shown here.

b. DOD can transfer funds appropriated for its base budget to war funding as needed.

In terms of dollar amounts, lapsed funding ranged from a low of $1.2 billion in FY2009 to a high of $5.8 billion in FY2010. The largest dollar amount of lapsed funds came from one-year monies for military personnel and O&M, while the highest shares of lapsed funding came from three-five year funds primarily for procurement (Figure 5).

Figure 5. War Funding: Lapsed and Transferred

In billions of dollars and % of total available

Source: CRS calculations based on tables in September reports for FY2008-FY2014 (as of June, 2014).

Notes: Lapsed funding reflects monies whose life has expired except to adjust signed contracts. Adjustments in later years generally reduce the amount obligated. For FY2012 and FY2013, DOD data is as of June 2014 and so lapsed funds only reflect monies with a one-year life. At this time, it is unknown whether FY2012 and FY2013 funds that are available for two or three years will be obligated before their life expires.

There are other indications that war obligations in FY2014 may be more than needed. Based on DOD's June 2014 war cost report, some obligations are slower than the experience of the past five years. For example, while O&M, Army obligations averaged 65% as of June over the past five years, the share obligated in June, 2014 made up 60% of available BA (Figure 6).

If obligations in the last quarter of FY2014 followed the pattern of the past five years, then O&M, Army obligations would total $22.7 billion out of $29.7 billion available. That would leave some $6.7 billion in available BA that could lapse unless DOD transferred the funds for other uses.100

Figure 6. O&M, Army Monthly Obligations, FY2009-FY2014

As percent of funds available

Source: CRS calculations based on Cumulative CW-01-Z, Cumulative [war obligations data base] as of June 2014.

FY2014 War Funds Finance Airstrikes, Ebola Emergency, and Aircraft

In August and September 2014, DOD submitted three requests to the four congressional defense committees to transfer a total of $2.66 billion in FY2014 O&M, Army war funds to pay for other expenses:

Transfer provisions require that war funds can only be used to finance other more urgent war needs. In all three cases, the funds transferred were to be used for other OCO needs, including the Ebola response, which was "deemed" an OCO requirement. 101

DOD received congressional approval to transfer O&M, Army funds to pay for the Navy's additional aviation fuel and maintenance for ships deployed to support Navy airstrikes in Iraq and Syria in the Middle East as well as the cost of replacing Hellfire missiles. To finance this unanticipated expense, DOD tapped O&M, Army monies that were not needed because aviation units deployed in Central Command to support Afghanistan were sent home sooner than anticipated.

DOD also received approval to provide $750 million in humanitarian assistance for the Ebola crisis, using additional O&M, Army funds that were available because of lower support costs for units re-deployed home sooner than planned.102

DOD also asked to transfer an additional $1.5 billion from O&M, Army war funds not needed because re-deployments occurred earlier than planned to finance the purchase of:

Congress denied these requests because the replacement purchases were already included in DOD's future budget plans, violating one of the OMB criteria for war funding (see "OMB 2009 Guidance Restores War Funding Limits" and Appendix B).104

War Funds Cut During the FY2013 Sequester

Another potential indicator of previous excess war funding is DOD's implementation of the FY2013 sequester that was levied on all accounts, both base and war.105 In January 2013, before the March sequester order, Deputy Secretary Ashton Carter issued guidance to the services to "fully protect all wartime operations," and "protect investments funded in Overseas Contingency Operations if associated with urgent operational needs."106 In May 2013, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel warned that "because our wartime budget is also subject to sequestration, we must utilize funds originally budgeted for other purposes in order to provide our troops at war with every resource they need."107

Under sequester rules, DOD's individual accounts for O&M funds and individual weapon system programs must be cut by the amounts specified in the OMB order. Because both base and OCO funds are generally in the same accounts, DOD has the flexibility to allocate sequester reductions to base or OCO-designated funds as long as the overall sequester savings are achieved. So, DOD could have assigned all of the sequester cuts to base accounts to protect war funding.

Instead, DOD directed $5.3 billion of its total sequester cut of $37.2 billion to war funding, a proportional share with both base and OCO funding cut by 6%. OCO-designated O&M accounts were cut by 6% and OCO-designated procurement funds by10%.108 DOD may have believed that OCO-designated funds could absorb these cuts without jeopardizing war operations.

Changes in Per-Troop Costs

Another metric that might be used to assess DOD requests is to examine the cost per troop over time. Conceptually, per-troop costs would be expected to decrease with higher troop levels, reflecting economies of scale. This has generally not been the case in Iraq and Afghanistan.

As the number of troops decrease during withdrawals, per-troop costs would be expected to rise temporarily because support costs remain high as bases stay open to support remaining troops, and because one-time costs must be paid to close bases, ship home and repair equipment retained in-theater, and dispose of equipment.109 Although per-troop costs increased in both Iraq and Afghanistan during withdrawals, the increase has been steeper in Afghanistan (Figure 7).

At the same time, such increases could be at least partially offset by lower costs to support fewer U.S. troops and conduct the less-costly train-and-assist mission.110

To capture costs likely to rise or fall with troop strength, CRS defined per-troop costs as

Per-Troop Costs Rise with Troop Levels

The cost per deployed troop—operational and investment—rose from $490,000 in FY2005 to $800,000 in FY2008 in Iraq, a 63% increase. During the same period, the per-troop cost in Afghanistan rose from $580,000 in FY2005 to $820,000 in FY2008, a 41% increase (Figure 7). When the cost per troop rises substantially, questions may be raised about the reasons.

Figure 7. Changes in Per-Troop Cost Before and After Withdrawals

In Iraq and in Afghanistan

Sources: CRS calculated average strength from DOD's monthly "Boots on the Ground" reports, and operational costs from DOD's Cost of War reports. Operational costs include war-designated military personnel and operation and maintenance obligations excluding funds to train Afghan and Iraq security forces, coalition support and other flexible funds set up to meet special war needs; investment costs include war-designated procurement, RDT&E and military construction from DOD's monthly Cost of War reports.

A variety of factors may help explain increases in per-troop costs, including:

Increases During Withdrawals

Per-troop costs increased more steeply during U.S. withdrawal from Iraq and Afghanistan than during other phases of the operations. In Iraq, per-troop costs doubled from $800,000 in FY2008 to $1.6 million in FY2012 when the last U.S. troops left the country. In Afghanistan, per-troop costs fluctuated between $820,000 and $910,000 between FY2008 and FY2011. Based on the FY2015 request, per-troop costs in Afghanistan are to increase by 345% or over three-fold from $870,000 in FY2011 to $3.9 million in FY2015. This growth in Afghanistan is steeper than in Iraq in terms of both dollars and rate of increase (Figure 7).

In previous years, Congress has reduced DOD's request based on similar analysis of trends in per-troop costs. For example, in FY2011, Congress transferred over $5 billion to the Overseas Contingency Operations Transfer Fund (OCOTF) after the House Appropriations report found excessive growth, and in FY2013 war appropriation, Army Operation and Maintenance was cut by $500 million because of "unjustified growth in average operations per troop."112

DOD Drawdown Costs in Iraq and Afghanistan

Another way to gauge the funding in the FY2015 war funding request is to compare the withdrawal experiences in both countries for operational and investment costs separately.113 The trends described below suggest that DOD's FY2015 request for operational expenses in Afghanistan may be higher than would be expected in light of the experience during the Iraq withdrawal.

Changes in Troop Strength in Iraq and Afghanistan in Earlier Years

Between FY2005 and FY2008, troop strength in Iraq rose gradually from 143,000 to 157,000, a 10% increase. From FY2005 to FY2009, troop strength in Afghanistan more than doubled from 18,000 to 43,800, a more rapid increase than in Iraq.

The peak strength in Iraq was 156,000 during the surge in FY2008 while the peak strength in Afghanistan was 100,000 during the troop surge. In both countries, the rate of decrease from these peaks was similar.

Figure 8. Changes in Troop Strength and Operational Costs

In Iraq and in Afghanistan, FY2005-FY2015 Request

Sources: CRS calculated average strength from DOD's monthly "Boots on the Ground" reports, and operational costs from DOD's Cost of War reports. Operational costs include military personnel and operation and maintenance obligations excluding funds to train Afghan and Iraq security forces, coalition support, and other flexible funds set up to meet special war needs.

Compared to the peak in FY2008, U.S. troop levels in Iraq dropped by

The pace of the troop withdrawal in Afghanistan is similar to Iraq. Compared to the peak troop strength of 98,300 during the Afghan surge in FY2010, troop levels dropped by

So, in both operations, compared to peak strength during their respective troop surges, during their respective withdrawals, the number of U.S. troops initially declined gradually and then fell by roughly a third, two-thirds, and then 90% from the peak level before the final withdrawal (Figure 8).114

Comparing Operational Costs and Strength

Total operational costs in Iraq rose steadily while troop strength remained fairly stable. At the same time, operational costs in Afghanistan closely mirrored changes in troop strength. In both cases, operating tempo rose before and during troop surges.

Both wars included fairly steep declines in troop strength from peak levels that occurred during FY2008 in Iraq and FY2011 in Afghanistan. While operational costs in Iraq declined proportionately, those in Afghanistan continued to rise sharply, showing a clear discrepancy between DOD's current FY2015 request and the Iraq experience (Figure 8).

Although operational costs in Afghanistan have generally exceeded those in Iraq because of the high costs of transportation and other logistical difficulties, these factors alone would not appear to explain the higher costs during the withdrawal in DOD's FY2015 request, given similarities in costs in both theaters in FY2009-2011.

Comparing Investment Costs and Troop Strength

Investment cost changed roughly in parallel with troop strength since FY2005 in both Iraq and Afghanistan. In earlier years, investment in Iraq grew sharply even as troop strength remained stable, presumably reflecting the new guidance from Deputy Secretary England redefining the scope of war costs as well as a buildup in repair and replacement costs (Figure 9).

Figure 9. Changes in Troop Strength and Investment Cost

In Iraq and in Afghanistan, FY2005-FY2015 Request

Sources: CRS calculated average strength from DOD's monthly "Boots on the Ground" reports, and investment costs (procurement, RDT&E, and military construction) from DOD's Cost of War reports.

Afghanistan's investment costs grew with troop strength after FY2009, and then remained roughly level between FY2009 and FY2011 even though strength grew. In both wars, investment spending declined fairly rapidly with troop strength, though more slowly in Afghanistan (Figure 9).

Flexible Funding and the New Counterterrorism Partnership Fund (CTPF)

One of the more controversial issues in the FY2015 request is the Administration's proposal to set up the new Counterterrorism Partnership Fund (CTPF) intended to allow DOD and other agencies "to respond more nimbly to evolving terrorist threats from South Asia to the Sahel" by building "partnership capacity."115

DOD's CTPF is a $4 billion OCO-designated transfer account available for three years. Monies could be spent in any appropriation account, in any geographical location, for a variety of general purposes, and notwithstanding any other provision of law. The Administration argues that this broad flexibility is necessary. Budget justification materials provide nonbinding illustrative funding allocations and Congress could only participate in allocation decisions by raising objections after receiving notifications 15 days in advance of transferring funds.116

The CTPF has raised congressional concerns because of the amount requested and the flexibility to apply the funds for broadly-defined purposes after enactment, including an illustrative allocation of $500 million to train and equip Syrian opposition groups fighting the Islamic State (IS).

The Administration is also requesting funds for a less controversial new European reassurance initiative (ERI) to help "reassure NATO allies and bolster the security and capacity of U.S. partners" and counter recent Russian actions in the Ukraine for more specific activities such as increasing the number of bilateral and multilateral exercises in Europe, building partner capacity with newer Eastern European NATO members and expanding U.S. presence through additional pre-positioning of U.S. equipment.117

The issue for Congress is the amount of flexibility to give DOD to respond to needs that it cannot define when appropriations are requested. From the Administration's perspective, the trade-off is between flexibility and acting quickly. From a congressional perspective, the trade-off is between flexibility and congressional oversight.

Unlike individual appropriation accounts where funds are used for specific types of purposes and expenses, or specific items, flexible funding generally appropriates a lump sum or sets an overall cap on the amount of money that can be spent and then permits an agency to move the monies to different accounts for different purposes depending on how needs develop. To assess the CTPF proposal, CRS compared it with other flexible funds for war approved by Congress since the 9/11 attacks.

Rationales for Flexible Funding

Since the 9/11 attacks, Congress established 10 new, specific accounts and set a dozen new spending caps within other accounts to provide DOD with flexibility to conduct various war-related activities that do not neatly fit into traditional accounts that cover specific types of expenses (e.g., military personnel). Funding has either been provided in a lump sum or can be drawn from other accounts up to a certain cap. In some cases funds are available for a year and in others for more than one year, which enhances flexibility.

To establish the scope of the program, Congress generally defines purposes and criteria for use of the funds, countries eligible, types of security assistance provided, and notification before or after funds are obligated. Congress has typically revised Administration requests by reducing the funding amounts, narrowing flexibility, and requiring more detailed notification and reporting. In light of this history and congressional concerns, the Administration's FY2015 proposals for the Counterterrorism Partnership Fund (CTPF) and the European Reassurance Initiative (ER) may also be modified.

Flexible funds have played an important role in war funding, making up a significant share of total funding ranging from a high of 100% in FY2001 immediately after the 9/11 attacks to a low of 7% in FY2003. Between FY2005 and FY2014, flexible war funding fluctuated between 15% and 23% of total DOD war funding. After FY2008, the share of flexible funding enacted declined, presumably reflecting less uncertainty as war needs decline. The FY2015 DOD request reverses this trend, rising to 26% of war funding (Table 9).

Congress has approved these lump-sum flexible funds in the past 13 years to enable DOD to respond to different types of uncertainties in wartime operations and needs

Table 9. DOD'S Flexible Funds for War

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority

Accounts/Caps

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015 Req.

Total: FY2001-F2015

Early Stages of War

68.558

Defense Emergency Response Fund (DERF)*

22.934

15.296

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

38.230

Iraq Freedom Fund (IFF)*

0

0

15.678

1.988

3.800

4.659

0.406

3.797

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

30.328

Train and Equip: Emergency/OCO designated

26.728

Coalition Support spending cap

0

0

1.400

1.150

1.220

0.935

1.100

1.100

1.200

1.570

1.600

1.690

1.650

1.257

1.660

17.532

Pakistan Counterinsurgency Fund account

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.400

0

0.800

0

0

0

0

1.200

10 U.S.C. Sec. 127d Global Lift and Sustain cap

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.038

0.004

0.005

0.010

0.007

0.036

0.063

na

0.211

Afghanistan and Iraq Lift & Sustain, Sec. 1234, FY2008 NDAA as amended

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

.400

.400

.400

.400

.450

na

na

na

2.050

Afghanistan Lift & Sustain, Sec. 1216, FY2013 NDAA

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

.450

.450

.450

1.350

Sec. 1208 Support Foreign and Irregular Forces cap

0

0

0

0

0.025

0.025

0.025

0.025

0.025

0.04

0.045

0.05

0.05

0.05

0.05

0.410

Counterterrorism Partnership Fd (CTPF)

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

4.000

4.000

Train and Equip: Base Budget

[4.254]

Global Security Contingency Fund cap (DOD)

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0.200]

[.200]

[0.200]

[0.030]

[.630]

Sec. 1203 Build Counterterrorism Capacity in Yemen and African Nations cap

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

0

[.150]

[0.150]

[0.150]

[.450]

Sec. 1206 Build capacity of Foreign Forces cap/Global Train & Equip

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0.200]

[0.300]

[0.300]

[0.350]

[0.350]

[0.350]

[0.350]

[.274]

[0.350]

[0.350]

[3.174]

Sec. 1208 Support Foreign Forces Diasarming Lord's Resistance Army cap

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[0]

[.050]

[.050]

[.050]

[.050]

[.200]

Special War Needs: Training Afghan and Iraq Security Forces

146.176

Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF)

ns

ns

0

[.348]

1.285

1.908

7.406

2.750

5.607

9.167

11.619

10.200

5.124

4.727

4.109

63.902

Iraq Security Forces Fund Fd (ISFF)

ns

ns

0

[5.000]

5.700

3.007

5.542

3.000

1.000

1.500

1.500

0

0

0

0

21.249

Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) Fund transfer account

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

16.83

6.243

7.404

3.415

2.2

0

0

0

36.092

Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Fund (JIEDDF)

0

0

0

0

0

1.958

4.400

4.197

3.117

1.762

2.791

2.385

1.449

0.879

0.379

23.317

Strategic Reserve Readiness Fund acc't

0

0

0

0

0

0

1.615

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1.615

Reconstruction

10.348

Commander's. Emergency Response Program (CERP) cap

0

0

0

0.180

0.854

0.923

0.956

1.727

1.200

1.200

0.500

0.400

0.200

0.030

0.015

8.185

Task Force for Business and Stability Operations*

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.179

0.121

0

0.300

Afghanistan Infrastructure Fund (AIF)

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.400

0.400

0.325

0.199

0

1.324

Natural Resources Risk Remediation Fd*

0

0

0.489

0

0

0

0.050

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.539

Transfer Cap and Other

73.500

War Transfer Cap*

ns

ns

2.000

3.00

4.500

4.500

6.500

6.500

6.500

4.500

4.000

4.000

3.500

4.000

4.000

57.500

Overseas Contingency Ops Transfer Fund (OCOTF)*

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

4.643

0

0

0.582

0.0

0.0

5.225

National Guard and Reserve Equipment

0

0

0

0

0

1.000

0.000

1.743

0.950

0.950

0.850

1.000

1.500

1.000

0.000

8.993

Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq cap

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.508

0.209

0.140

0.857

Europ. Reassurance Initiative Fund (ERI)

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.925

0.925

Flexible DOD War

22.934

15.296

19.567

6.318

17.359

18.890

27.975

41.683

26.221

32.702

27.485

22.282

15.053

12.429

15.333

321.525

Total DOD War

22.934

16.870

72.536

90.776

75.642

115.763

166.272

186.908

145.689

162.390

158.788

115.083

81.973

85.191

58.574

1,555.389

Flexible Share

100.0%

90.7%

27.0%

7.0%

22.9%

16.3%

16.8%

22.3%

18.0%

20.1%

17.3%

19.4%

18.4%

14.6%

26.2%

20.7%

OCO Train & Equip

0

0

1.400

1.150

1.220

0.960

1.125

1.563

2.029

2.015

2.855

2.197

2.187

1.763

6.265

26.728

Base Budget Train & Equip

0

0

0

0

0.025

0.325

0.425

0.425

0.525

0.540

0.395

0.650

0.800

0.663

0.543

5.316

Total Train and Equip

0

0

1.400

1.150

1.270

1.285

1.550

1.988

2.254

2.555

3.250

2.847

2.986

2.426

6.808

32.044

Sources: National Defense Authorization Acts and DOD appropriations acts for relevant years. Defense Institute of Security Assistance Management, Security Cooperation Programs Through Fiscal Year 2014, Revision 14.8; http://www.disam.dsca.mil/documents/pubs/security_cooperation_programs_20140806.

Notes: * indicates transfer fund where monies are moved into other accounts during execution. Shares calculated reflect only those authorities funded in the war budget and designated as either emergency or OCO. Bracketed indicate base budget funds that are not included in the totals for war funding. Funding levels are appropriations not authorizations.

Flexibility at the Beginning of Hostilities

Congress has been willing to provide the greatest flexibility about where, how, and for what funds can be spent at the beginning of hostilities. Shortly after the 9/11 attacks, Congress appropriated $40 billion to the Emergency Response Fund (ERF) for the entire government. Of this total, $10 billion was available immediately, another $10 billion within 15 days after the Administration submitted a planned allocation, and the remaining $20 billion as specified in a subsequent appropriations act.118

DOD's funds to conduct operations in Afghanistan and respond to the attacks on the Pentagon and New York City were transferred to the Defense Emergency Response Fund (DERF), a newly established account. Initially, the Administration reported allocations of defense funds according to a new set of categories for wartime needs, such as "Increased Situational Awareness" (intelligence) and "Increased Worldwide posture" (operations) rather than traditional appropriations accounts.119 These new categories were largely replaced by traditional appropriation accounts in the FY2002 Supplemental that allocated the last $20 billion.120

At the beginning of the Iraq invasion, the Administration requested that $75 billion be appropriated to the DERF to provide the maximum flexibility. Although Congress provided $15.6 billion in the newly-established Iraq Freedom Fund (IFF) flexible account, $59.3 billion, or most of the request, was provided in traditional appropriation accounts. DOD was given flexibility in the new IFF account to distribute funds after enactment and then report to Congress.121

As the Afghan and Iraq wars continued, Congress insisted that DOD receive war funding primarily in traditional accounts. For example, in FY2004 when the Administration requested $25 billion in "contingent emergency funds" to be allocated in a later request, Congress appropriated the funds to specific accounts.122

Congress and the FY2015 Counterterrorism Partnership Fund (CTPF)

The Administration is arguing that the same broad flexibility requested in the CTPF is necessary to respond quickly to unanticipated crises in any part of the world.123 The rationale for the CTPF is:

In July 2014 congressional hearings by the House Budget Committee and the House Armed Services Committee, Members raised concerns that the funds could be "slush funds" with little control over their use, that the proposal "lack[ed] detail and is too broad in scope," would not be subject to other provisions of law, allowed the funds to be spent in any country, lacked restrictions on how the funds could be spent, and included limited congressional oversight. Some Members asked why the Administration did not simply ask to expand currently available authorities to provide logistical support to nations participating in complementary counterterrorism efforts.125

DOD witnesses, Deputy Secretary Robert Work and Vice-Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral James Winnefeld defended the proposals, stating they were intended to "increase flexibility" beyond that already available in order to respond to an unanticipated "fast-moving situation ... or unexpected problems," that proposed spending would be subject to rigorous interagency review, and that Congress could participate because of 15-day advance notifications in line with other flexible funds.126

In the FY2015 Continuing Resolution (CR; H.J.Res. 124/P.L. 113-64) appropriating funds until December 11, 2014, Congress provided limited authority for the Syria Train-and-Equip part of the CTPF request. It would allow DOD to train vetted insurgent groups fighting the Islamic State under certain conditions:

Much of the debate has focused on the Train-and-Equip provision for Syria, where a U.S. train-and-equip program could be complicated by the complex dynamics among non-governmental Syrian groups with varying political goals.128 CTPF funds could also be used for any counterterrorism partner, including Somalia, Cameroon, Chad, Liberia, and Nigeria to Yemen or other countries not listed in budget justification materials.129 While the four congressional defense committees could participate in allocation decisions under the CR because of DOD's regulatory requirement that transfers be approved by those committees, other Members would not have a voice.

The $500 million request for a Crisis Response Fund for "small combat operations" would allow the Administration to begin military operations without the need to seek appropriations.130 This could raise concerns about whether a potentially new conflict was authorized by current Authorizations of the Use of Force or was justified by the Administration as conducted under the President's power as Commander-in-Chief.131

On November 10, 2014, the Administration requested $5.0 billion for DOD in an FY2015 supplemental to combat the Islamic State, including additional authority to Train and Equip Iraqi forces (see "The New Request to Counter the Islamic State").

NDAA Draft FY2015 Conference Version

The CR anticipated that Congress may revise this Train-and-Equip authority in the National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4435, S. 2430).132 The draft conference version of the FY2015 NDAA (H.R. 3797), passed by the House by a vote of 300-119 on December 4, 2014, extended the language in the CR, continuing to rely on reprogramming to fund Syria Train-and-Equip activities. H.R. 3797 also reduced the DOD CTPF request from $4.0 billion to $1.3 billion for a two-year program to build partnership capacity in the Middle East and Africa (except for Iraq, separately funded) but required DOD to rely on existing authorities. The conference bill also added congressional oversight and reporting requirements.133

Precedents for CTPF Are More Specific

While the Administration cites precedents for the CTPF, the proposed statutory language is broader than other flexible funds approved by Congress.134 In its scope, the CTPF request most resembles the two funds set up at the beginning of the Afghan and Iraq war, the DERF and the IFF. In terms of its purpose—building partnerships to counter terrorism—the following flexible funds created after the 9/11 attacks appear to be closer precedents. Some of these flexible funds are financed in the base budget and others with emergency/OCO-designated funds, but all are more specifically defined with lower spending levels than the CTPF (see Table 9).

In each of these cases, Congress restricted the Administration's requests for broadly-defined authorities, (i.e., eliminated statutory clauses "notwithstanding other provisions of law" that exempted the authority from all other laws), reduced spending limits, and added reporting requirements. Generally, authorized funding levels were set for one, two, or several years, requiring Congress to revisit the program's parameters; in a few cases, the amount was set for each fiscal year.141

Some of these Train-and-Equip authorities were funded within other accounts up to statutory caps, and could require some trade-offs with other programs if the amount was not anticipated in DOD's budgeting. Setting caps provides less flexibility than providing specifically dedicated funding in a separate appropriation account.

With the exception of support for Pakistan's counterterror operations on the border with Afghanistan to reimburse logistical support, funding levels for other partnership-building activities are below the CTPF request, ranging from a low of $25 million a year for Sec. 1207 activities for irregular forces working with U.S. special operations teams to $350 million for Sec. 1206 Global Train-and-Equip activities to train and aid counterterrorism efforts of other countries (Table 9).

The Administration's FY2015 DOD request of $4 billion is roughly five times as much as the sum of other Train-and-Equip authorities, excluding funds that reimburse Pakistan border operations.142 Funds in the CTPF would also be additional appropriations rather than drawn from other accounts and would be available for three years rather than one year. An additional $1.0 billion is also requested for the State Department to use for its own set of tools for broadly defined goals.143

Do Train-and-Equip Programs Work: The Effectiveness Issue

In deciding whether to approve the Administration's proposal to "scale up" Train-and-Equip programs for counterterrorism partners, a key question is whether earlier similar programs have been effective. Despite extensive studies, there does not appear to be any consensus that such programs are generally successful. Rather, a wide variety of problems have been identified, ranging from the "patchwork" of current legal authorities to the complexities of U.S. intervention in another country's military whose goals, operating practices, and political constraints may be very different.

In a 2013 study, the RAND Corporation found that there were 165 security cooperation programs, requiring DOD professionals to pull together a "patchwork" of ways to build partner capacity and provide security assistance. Together, the RAND study suggested, this patchwork "is more a tangled web, with holes, overlaps, and confusions," where several funding sources and programs may support individual events or initiatives by DOD and the State Department.144 This study argues that the lack of multi-year, flexible authorities, limitations and regional focus of particular authorities, and coordination and congressional reporting requirements "hinder[s] effective planning and efficient execution." It also recommends expanding authority to build partnership authority and counterterrorism training.145

At the same time, the study acknowledges that evaluating the effectiveness of current programs is difficult because of data limitations, lack of assessments, and the long time horizon for partnership efforts. The study also observes that showing the relationship between upgrading indigenous forces and reducing the need for U.S. combat forces to intervene—the underlying rationale for the CTPF—"is not a straightforward endeavor."146

Another problem identified in two other RAND studies is that most assessments "if they are done at all, are largely conducted by the same organizations that executed the activities," and "are subject to concerns about bias," or by program managers who lack the longevity needed to evaluate these programs. While officials claim that relationships improve with partnership programs, that does not necessarily mean that Train-and-Equip programs were effective in improving military capabilities.147

In response to criticism, DOD conducted assessments of several Sec. 1206 programs. While DOD found a general improvement in the ability of recipients to conduct counterterrorism or stability operations using the equipment provided, there were limitations in "absorptive capacity" and the sustainability of programs (particularly for training and logistics) as Sec. 1206 funding was withdrawn.148

An ambitious statistical evaluation of 29 partner nations since World War II by RAND found several factors key to success:

The study did not, however, identify whether these conditions were generally the case.149 In more recent cases, Train-and-Equip programs are more likely to be initiated in failing or unstable states.

A recent 2014 RAND study reiterates the importance of the factors cited in its 2013 study, but emphasizes the difficulties in ensuring that the goals of the United States and partner nations are compatible, particularly when the United States is working with insurgency groups or non-state actors whose control of forces and support from the general population may be problematic, factors relevant to Syria. Other complications are the difficulty in getting consistent, long-term support from both the legislative and executive branches of government, and unanticipated consequences of U.S. intervention. At the same time, the study concludes that doing nothing could also be harmful.150

In January 2014, President Obama acknowledged the uncertainties in the effectiveness of Train-and-Equip programs for insurgency groups, noting that when the CIA looked for examples of cases when U.S. financing and supplying of arms to an insurgency worked out well, "they couldn't come up with much."151 Overt Train-and-Equip operations could be equally if not more problematic.

Training Afghan and Iraqi Security Forces

In some ways, U.S. efforts over the past decade to train and support operations, and pay and equip armed and police forces of the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF) and Iraq Security Forces Funds (ISFF), are much larger versions of Train-and-Equip programs. While other Train-and-Equip programs are intended to substitute for U.S. forces before intervention, ASFF and ISFF funding is intended to create capable, independent forces to enable the United States forces to leave.152

U.S. funding requests generally reflect plans to develop security forces by a certain date.153 Initially funded at $150 million, annual support of the ASFF peaked at $11.6 billion in FY2010. Since then, funding has declined to $4 billion-$5 billion a year, a level DOD predicts is likely to continue to be needed for several years in light of the limited resources of the Afghan government (Table 10).

Funding for the ISFF fluctuated between $3.0 billion and $5.7 billion between FY2004 and FY2008. In 2008, Congress became reluctant to pay for Iraqi security forces as Iraqi government revenues rose with the upswing in oil prices.154 After that, funding fell to about $1 billion annually to zero in FY2012, as Iraqis took over funding and operational responsibility and U.S. troops withdrew (Table 10).

In addition to requiring Iraq to share the burden of rebuilding Iraqi security forces in the FY2008 Supplemental (P.L. 110-252), Congress adopted other restrictions in funding "infrastructure" projects, including those to rebuild security forces in the FY2008 Supplemental, and required reports on the readiness and transfer of responsibility to Iraqi units, as well as the overall cost to train both Iraqi and Afghan security forces.155 The Administration did not provide estimates of total costs for either Iraq or Afghanistan.156

Over the years, Congress and others have voiced many concerns about these training programs, including the performance of contractors; coordination between DOD, State Department, and NATO coalition efforts; shortages in trainers; government corruption; absenteeism; illiteracy; and high levels of attrition of local forces. Other concerns center on the capabilities of indigenous forces to conduct operations, and maintain and sustain security forces. As the United States withdraws forces in Afghanistan, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan (SIGAR) raised the issue of how to conduct oversight. Despite such concerns, Congress has generally provided DOD with most, if not all, of the funds requested because the withdrawal of U.S. troops depends on the success of these efforts.157

Table 10. Funding for the ASFF and the ISFF, FY2004-FY2015 Request

In Billions of Dollars

 

Fiscal Year

Account

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

12

13

14

15

04-14

04-15 Req.

Afghan. Security Forces Funda

0.3

1.3

1.9

7.4

2.8

5.6

9.2

11.6

10.2

5.1

4.7

4.1

60.1

64.3

Iraq Security Forces Funda

5.0

5.7

3.0

5.5

3.0

1.0

1.0

1.5

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

25.7

25.7

Total

5.3

7.0

4.9

12.9

5.8

6.6

10.2

13.1

10.2

5.1

4.7

4.1

85.9

90.0

Sources: Public laws, congressional appropriations reports, DOD budget justification materials, and DOD Cost of War Update Reports; FY2013 is post-sequestration level. Reflects budget authority as originally appropriated, excluding later rescissions.

Notes:

a. Appropriated to the State Department appropriations in FY2004 but transferred to DOD for implementation.

Assessing Iraq Security Forces

Beginning in 2005, Congress required a report entitled "Measuring Stability and Security in Iraq" that assessed the training and development of the Iraqi security forces, including both the armed services, the police, and other paramilitary forces that together reportedly total 666,500.158 In late November 2014, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi reported that Iraqi security forces paid salaries to 50,000 "ghost" soldiers not in military service.159

In its June 2010 report, the last report issued as U.S. troops were transitioning to advising and assisting Iraqi forces, the security environment was characterized as stable but "fragile," with declining levels of violence despite activities by some Sunni insurgents, Al Qaeda in Iraq, and Shia extremist groups. The report complimented the Iraqi security forces on providing security during the March 7, 2010, elections. Despite some logistics and sustainment issues, DOD predicted that the Iraqi security forces would reach Minimum Essential Capability (MEC), the level needed for internal security, when U.S. forces left.160

Overall, the report concluded:

In spite of progress this period, challenges remain. Violent extremist networks, while significantly degraded, are still able to execute attacks. Tensions will remain high until the government is seated. Iraq remains fragile, primarily because many underlying sources of political instability have yet to be resolved.161

In a November 2011 hearing, when it was clear that all U.S. forces would withdraw from Iraq by the end of December 2011 because a Bilateral Security Agreement with the Iraqi government that would exempt U.S. forces from Iraqi law could not be reached, then-Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta remained confident of the abilities of Iraqi security forces stating that

While these groups remain capable of conducting these types [high-profile] of attacks, they do not enjoy widespread support among the Iraqi population, and more importantly, the Iraqis have developed some of the most capable counterterrorism forces in the region.162

Iraqi officials and Iraqi public opinion (particularly Sunnis) were not optimistic about the Iraqi Security Forces' capabilities and legitimacies, as reported in an extensive after-action RAND report commissioned by DOD.163

After U.S. troops left, the United States continued its security relationship through arms sales administered by the Office of Security Cooperation–Iraq and the State Department, which took over police training.164 In the spring of 2013, the Chief of the Office of Security Cooperation, General Robert Caslen, voiced confidence about the capabilities of the Iraqi Navy, Air Force, and Counter-Terrorism Service, though with some concerns about Iraqi Army units stationed in cities where they competed with provincial governments and the Iraqi police.165

Some observers suggest that the weaknesses in the Iraqi security forces did not become apparent until 2013 because they did not face significant challenges from insurgencies. A December 2013 study by the Center for Strategic and International Affairs noted deterioration in Iraqi military capabilities, a push by President Maliki to install loyalists and marginalize Sunnis, and considerable corruption in both the armed forces and the police.166

After a November 2013 visit where Prime Minister Maliki requested more U.S. military help to counter rising threats from internal insurgencies and spillover from the Syrian civil war, Senators John McCain, Carl Levin, James Inhofe, Robert Menendez, Bob Corker, and Lindsey Graham wrote to President Obama that "Prime Minister Maliki's mismanagement of Iraqi politics is contributing to the recent surge in violence," and that additional U.S. arms sales should be part of a comprehensive Iraqi strategy that addresses the political sources of current violence.167

Although the United States increased arms sales, the weaknesses in the Iraqi military became apparent between December 2013 and February 2014 when Iraqi Security Forces proved unable to recapture Fallujah and Ramadi from Islamic State forces.168 By May 2014 the Iraqi Army had still not recaptured Fallujah and barely held onto to Ramadi despite dispatching 42,000 troops, and was plagued by mass desertions and an inability to gain the loyalty of Sunni tribesman in Anbar province.169 The collapse of Iraqi security forces was not anticipated and may reflect an underestimate by the United States of the effects of endemic corruption, President Maliki's sectarianism, and the limitations of the Train-and-Equip program in ensuring that Iraqi security forces could provide adequate logistical support or sustain operations in the face of insurgent attacks.

Assessing Afghan Security Forces

Congress also required a detailed assessment of the Afghan security forces in the semi-annual Section 1230 report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan in the FY2008 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 110-181). While the latest report describes progress by the Afghans in taking over security responsibilities from U.S. troops, it also acknowledges serious longstanding problems from corruption and personnel attrition.170

Similar to the Iraq experience, corruption in Afghan security forces remains a serious concern, including both contractual corruption and the buying and selling of officer billets. At the same time, sectarian divisions are seen as less of a problem with Afghan army and police units generally being balanced ethnically.171 In terms of capabilities, the Afghan security forces show some of the same weaknesses as Iraqi security forces—in logistics, sustainment, officer quality, and contract administration.172 In addition, Afghan security forces face persistent problems in attrition, where about 30% of personnel need to be replaced each year.173

Although Afghan security forces continue to be tested by Taliban insurgent attacks, some observers remain concerned that the U.S. troop withdrawal may occur at a time when Afghan security forces may not be able to sustain its forces without U.S. support. An extensive evaluation required by the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act raised familiar concerns about weaknesses in Afghan logistical, contracting, intelligence, and communication capabilities, and concluded that Afghan security forces would not be able to effectively meet an enhanced Taliban threat in the next few years if the planned reduction in U.S. and allied assistance occurred.174

The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan (SIGAR) also reported buildup in unobligated balances, signaling slower-than-anticipated execution of plans, as well as changes in the size of Afghan security forces, prompting some reductions by Congress. The SIGAR has also voiced concerns about the difficulty in maintaining oversight of U.S. funding for ASFF and other reconstruction funding as the U.S. presence shrinks.175

Meeting Unanticipated Wartime Needs Quickly

In the past 13 years, Congress has set up and provided appropriations in a lump sum to special accounts to meet unanticipated wartime needs as quickly as possible.

Wartime Reconstruction Accounts

Congress created two other wartime programs intended to improve relationships between U.S. troops and the local population by funding local reconstruction needs. The first, the Commander's Emergency Response Program (CERP), was established in 2003, to provide funds to local commanders to "respond to urgent humanitarian relief and reconstruction requirements within their area of responsibilities ... that will immediately assist the Iraqi people ... and fund a similar program to assist the people of Afghanistan."176 Funding for this program peaked at $1.2 billion in FY2007 and has fallen steadily as U.S. troops have been withdrawn from Iraq and Afghanistan (Table 9).

Over the years, as concerns rose about the size and effectiveness of CERP projects, Congress expanded reporting requirements, and set up the Afghan Infrastructure Fund (AIF) in FY2011 to fund larger projects. The Special Inspector Generals for Iraq and for Afghanistan criticized CERP for its selection of projects, corruption, management problems, and effectiveness. The IGs also raised concerns about whether the Afghan or Iraqi government would continue to fund larger reconstruction projects after U.S. support ended. The Task Force for Business and Stability Operations was established as a separate account in FY2011 to stimulate private sector growth by encouraging foreign investment in Afghanistan.177

Traditional Transfer Authority

For the past decade, Congress has set annual caps on transfers between DOD accounts for both non-war funds and emergency or OCO-designated funds. DOD can transfer funds from one account to another if the activity is for a higher priority and based on unforeseen military requirements, after receiving written approval from the four congressional defense committees. DOD can also reprogram funds within an account from one activity to another, as long as the purpose remains the same.178

For the base budget, transfer caps are generally between $3 billion and $4 billion, or less than 1% of total DOD base budget funding. Recognizing the greater uncertainty in predicting wartime spending, DOD appropriations acts have typically set a cap for war funds of about $4 billion, or about 3.5% of total war funds in a year, over three times the cap set for base budget funds.179

The New Request to Counter the Islamic State

On November 10, 2014, the Administration submitted a FY2015 budget amendment of $5.5 billion in OCO funds—$5 billion for DOD and $520 million for the Department of State—to support efforts to combat the Islamic State (IS) after its takeover of territory in Iraq and Syria. The November amendment would increase DOD's OCO request from $58.6 billion to $63.6 billion (Table 13).

Several budgetary and policy questions may be raised about the new $5.0 billion budget amendment funding military action against the Islamic State:

Department of Defense Request

As of November 20, 2014, DOD estimated that $855 million had been spent to conduct the IS campaign, an average of $8.1 million a day.181 Initially, DOD financed airstrikes and the deployment of U.S. military personnel to Iraq to conduct an assessment and provide advice using OCO funds already appropriated for FY2014. Starting October 1, 2014, DOD tapped OCO-designated funds in the FY2015 CR. For example, DOD used OCO-designated FY2015 Navy O&M and Air Force O&M funds to conduct air strikes in Iraq and Syria, based on the type of expenses involved. This practice of relying on current funding until supplemental funding is provided later in the year is known as "cash flowing."

Starting October 1, 2014, incremental costs of the new Iraq and Syria operations (named Operation Inherent Resolve) are being paid for from funds appropriated by Congress in the FY2015 Continuing Resolution (CR, H.J.Res. 124/P.L. 113-164). Under the CR, OCO for DOD is appropriated at a rate of operations based on the $85.4 billion in OCO funds enacted in FY2014. This is $26.6 billion above the FY2015 request of $58.6 billion.

On November 10, 2014, DOD submitted an amendment to its FY2015 OCO request for an additional $5.0 billion (Table 11).

Table 11. DOD's OCO Funding: FY2014 Enacted to FY2015 Supplemental Request

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority

Title

FY2014 Enacted
(P.L. 113-76)

FY2015
Requesta

FY2015 CR (H.J.Res. 24)b

FY2015 Amendmentc

Total
FY2015 Req.

Military Personnel

8.15

5.45

8.15

0.14

5.60

Operation and Maintenance

69.68

42.07

69.68

2.32

44.38

Procurement

7.11

6.03

7.11

0.83

6.86

RDT&E

0.14

0.08

0.14

0.14

0.22

Military Construction

0.00

0.05

0.00

0.00

0.05

Family Housing

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

Revolving and Mgt. Funds

0.26

0.09

0.26

0.00

0.09

Iraq Train and Equip

0.00

0.00

0.00

1.62

1.62

Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund (CTPF)

0.00

4.00

0.00

0.00

4.00

European Reassurance Initiative (ERI)

0.00

0.93

0.00

0.00

0.93

Total OCO

85.34

58.69

85.34

5.05

63.74

Rescissions

na

-0.12

na

0.00

-0.12

Total OCO Adjusted

85.35

58.57

85.35

5.05

63.62

Source: Table 1 in Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Amendment, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, June 2014, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf, and DOD, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) Fiscal Year (FY) 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Budget Amendment Update, November 2014, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY15_OCO_Budget_Amendment_Update.pdf.

Notes:

a. Reflects DOD amended OCO request for Afghan war and Office of Security Cooperation-Iraq, submitted June 2014.

b. Estimates of annualized budget authority. The FY2015 CR provides OCO budget authority at a rate for operations through December 11, 2014.

c. Reflects DOD's FY2015 amended OCO request of November 10, 2014, to conduct Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR) against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in Syria and Iraq. Except for the FY2015 amendment, there are no funds to counter IS.

The November 10, 2014, amended DOD/OCO FY2015 request of $5.0 billion is for:

New Iraq Train-and-Equip Authority

Under its request for broad authority to train and equip Iraqi and other security forces, DOD would

provide assistance to military and other security forces of, or associated with, the Government of Iraq, including Kurdish and tribal security forces, with a national security mission, to counter the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, including the provision o0f equipment, supplies, services, training, facility and infrastructure repair, renovation, construction, and stipends.... 183

The Administration is also requesting authority for the Secretary of Defense to waive "any other provision of law that would otherwise prohibit, restrict, limit or otherwise constrain the obligation or expenditure of [these] funds."184 Typically, Congress has not accepted this kind of exception.

In order to be fully obligated, the proposal would require Iraqi, Kurdish, and tribal security forces to contribute 40% of the $1.6 billion DOD request (including in-kind contributions), with at least half of that contribution to come from the government of Iraq. Arms sales could not count toward the contribution.185 DOD obligations would be capped at 60% of the total or $972 million until the 40% ($647 million) contribution—in cash or in-kind—from Iraq and Kurdish and tribal security forces is received. The draft conference agreement of the FY2015 NDAA deletes the exclusion of arms sales, which would presumably permit arms sales to count as part of the contribution. The Secretary of Defense would monitor the contribution level.186

The Administration is also asking to expand current coalition support authorities to include reimbursing Iraq for logistical support of U.S. forces. In addition, $15 million more would be provided for "emergencies and extraordinary payments" for "confidential military purposes," typically intelligence support.187

Like the Syria Train-and-Equip authority already proposed, the new Iraqi Train-and-Equip authority would be used with not only the Iraq army and police force, but also Kurdish and tribal groups. It could encounter some of the same difficulties and politico-military complications of the proposed Syria Train-and-Equip authority temporarily authorized in the FY2015 CR. Another potential issue is the likelihood of success. Previous U.S. efforts to train and equip foreign militaries—both covert by the CIA and overt—have often proved problematic (See the section "Do Train-and-Equip Programs Work: The Effectiveness Issue.")

Additional U.S. Military Personnel

DOD's additional request would increase U.S. troop strength in and around Iraq and Afghanistan by some 4,000 in FY2015, including troops providing training and assistance in Iraq as well as providing additional support in the region. If the overall FY2015 OCO request is approved, troop strength in and around Iraq and Afghanistan would total 79,047 including 64,482 providing in-theater support (Table 12).

Table 12. U.S. Military Strength, FY2014-FY2015, Amended OCO

 

FY2014 Enacted

FY2015 CR

FY2015 Request

FY2015 Supp.

Total FY2015 Req.

Afghanistan (OEF)

37,234

ns

11,661

0

11,661

Iraq (OIR)

0

ns

0

2,904

2,904

In-theater Support

61,071

ns

63,309

1,173

64,482

Total

98,305

ns

74,970

4,077

79,047

Sources: Figure 2 in Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Amendment, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, June 2014, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf; and DOD, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) Fiscal Year (FY) 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Budget Amendment Update, November 2014, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY15_OCO_Budget_Amendment_Update.pdf.

Notes: Figures reflect average strength.

a. Figure 2 in the FY2015 November request appears to include an error, showing 2,577 as the sum of 2,904 additional troops in Iraq and 1,173 providing in-theater support; this table corrects that error.

Predicting Future Costs

Predicting future costs of the new U.S. role in countering the Islamic State is difficult because of the nature of the air campaign and uncertainties about whether the U.S. mission may expand. Compared to other, earlier air campaigns, counter-ISIL operations are more episodic and reactive because targets are less predictable. U.S. operations in Libya during Operation Odyssey Dawn in 2011 focused on supporting other coalition partners' air operations, with some interdiction of pro-Qadhafi units threatening civilian populations. Earlier, during Operation Allied Force in Serbia and Kosovo (1999), air operations targeted infrastructure, particularly military bases and airfields, along with electrical and broadcast centers.

Figure 10. U.S. Airstrikes in Iraq, August 8, 2014-November 24, 2014

Sources: CRS compilation of data from DOD press releases; see also DOD website on Operation Inherent Resolve, http://www.defense.gov/home/features/2014/0814_iraq/.

By contrast, ISIL has few fixed facilities, and attacks tend to focus on "targets of opportunity," which can be units or trucks and other equipment supporting ISIL operations (Figure 10 and Figure 11). Compared to an attack on a base or infrastructure, it can be difficult to determine the effect of a given attack. This kind of operation also provides a challenge to estimating costs. With a fixed target set, it is comparatively straightforward to determine the number of strikes and re-strikes required to destroy the targets and prevent their reconstitution. In the current situation, the number and type of strikes largely depend on the level of ISIL activity so that extrapolating future costs from experience may not be accurate.188

Figure 11. U.S. Air Strikes in Syria, September 22-November 24, 2014

Sources: CRS compilation of data from DOD press releases; see also DOD website on Operation Inherent Resolve, http://www.defense.gov/home/features/2014/0814_iraq/.

Future War Costs and Paying for an "Enduring Presence"

The President's Afghanistan withdrawal plan calls for:

According to recent reports, the Administration is considering keeping more U.S. troops in Afghanistan at least into the spring of 2014 to make up for shortages in training capacity due to delays in commitments of ISAF allies to commit troops. There may also be pressure to retain troops because of the Administration's recent agreement to expand the mission of U.S. forces to include providing air support and sometimes accompanying Iraqi ground troops on operations.190

At the September 4, 2014, Wales summit, International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), made up of United States and its allies supporting Afghanistan, "reaffirmed their commitment" to Operation Resolute Support, the "non-combat train, advise, and assist mission in Afghanistan beyond 2014." There were no specific funding commitments beyond 2015. If the Afghan government signed a Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA), ISAF agreed to "contribute significantly to the financial sustainment of the ANSF [Afghan National Security Force] throughout the decade of transformation."191 On September 30, 2014, the United States and Afghanistan signed the Bilateral Security Agreement, the day after President Ghani succeeded President Karzai, who had been unwilling to sign the agreement.192

In light of this potential, long-term commitment, and the current presence of over 60,000 U.S. troops in the region, Congress may have to face the issue of whether and how much DOD funding would be needed in later years and whether those funds should continue to be designated as OCO—and exempt from budget limits—or whether paying for a U.S. "enduring presence" mission like the U.S. military in South Korea or Japan should be carried in the base budget.

Post-withdrawal expenses that might or might not be considered "OCO" could possibly include the cost of

In August, 2014, press reports suggested that DOD would soon issue "migration guidance" to the services for the FY2016 budget that would identify areas currently funded as OCO that would be folded back into the base budget.193 More recently, DOD Deputy Secretary Robert Work suggested that OCO funding should be continued but under stricter rules.194 Recently, DOD Comptroller Mike McCord suggested that DOD is negotiating with OMB to retain the OCO budget for the next couple of years in order to fund global counterterrorism while dealing with spending limits imposed by the BCA. Some observers cite the Islamic State (IS) threat along with Russian actions in the Ukraine as justifications for continuing OCO-designated funding.195

Although Congress did not consider the Administration's request for funding above BCA caps in DOD's FY2015 budget request, some Members are calling for lifting sequester caps in later years.196 Assuming that current BCA budget caps are maintained, DOD would need to reduce its planned funding for the FY2012-FY2021 decade by $176 billion or 3.3% to meet BCA caps. Under these caps, DOD's funding would grow from $496 billion in FY2015 to $499 billion in FY2016, essentially a spending freeze that would not cover inflation. After that, DOD funding is slated to increase by about $12 billion annually under the sequester caps until FY2021, a "real" freeze that would largely cover inflation. The migration of some or all OCO-designated costs to the base budget would increase budgetary pressures.

Questions That Could Be Raised

There are several questions that Congress may wish to raise about future war costs.

Alternate Residual War Funding Projections

Below are several projections of residual war costs that may reflect responses to these questions, as well as expectations about developments in Afghanistan.

One uncertainty is whether Afghan security forces will be capable of sustaining gains against the Taliban achieved in partnership with ISAF forces once U.S. and ISAF troops withdraw. Drawdown supporters cite the most recent DOD report that says that the Afghan National Security Forces (ANSF) have increasingly demonstrated their ability to plan and conduct independent and combined operations that employed multiple ANSF capabilities, disrupted the insurgency, protected the populace, and prevented the Taliban from disrupting recent national elections or holding "any significant terrain."197 This report also notes a decline in enemy-initiated attacks by some 30%, with 80% of these attacks occurring in regions where 46% of the population lives.198

Others argue that Afghanistan may have difficulty sustaining its security once ISAF troops leave because the "overall trend is one of escalating violence and insurgent attacks" with continuing fighting, as well as because the ability of the insurgents to mount larger assaults reduces the likelihood of peace talks.199 Other assessments conclude that the security environment will become increasingly challenging after ISAF forces leave.200

Table 13 shows several projections of long-term war costs, based on somewhat different scenarios or rationales:

Administration's FY2015 Plan

The Administration's original FY2015 projection shows war funding falling from $85 billion in FY2015 to a series of $30 billion annual placeholders from FY2016-FY2021. 203 There is no war funding shown for the rest of the decade. The Administration does not cite any particular scenario in terms of troop levels in Afghanistan or the region. Instead, the Administration has argued that the uncertainties are too great to estimate war spending beyond the request year. Each year, however, the placeholder figure has declined as the President has announced decreases in troop levels.

In the past several years, the Administration has also proposed a multiyear $450 billion cap on war funding over the next 10 years that has not, up to now, achieved legislative traction, and is no longer congruent with the latest 10-year total of $265 billion. The Administration's FY2015 Mid-Session July 2014 update reflects the specific $58.6 billion DOD war request submitted in June 2014 and increases the annual placeholder figure from $30 billion to $33 billion (Table 13).204

Table 13. Alternative Residual War Funding Projections: FY2016-FY2024

In Billions of Dollars of Budget Authority

Projections

Fiscal Year

Total

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

2023

2024

15-19

15-24

Administration FY2015 Plan

159

127

93

92

85

30

30

30

30

30

30

0

0

0

205

265

CBO Baseline Estimatea

159

127

99

86

87

89

90

92

94

96

98

0

0

0

452

646

CBO Alternative: 30K troops by 2017b

159

127

99

86

58

44

30

30

30

30

30

30

30

30

191

340

FY2015 OMB Mid-Session Updatec

159

127

93

92

59

33

33

33

33

33

33

0

0

0

199

265

Sources: OMB, Table 28-1, Analytical Perspectives; CBO, Budget and Economic Outlook, August 2014 update.

Notes: The Administration and CBO's figures do not distinguish between DOD and war costs of State/USAID.

CBO's Baseline Estimate

CBO is required to provide a baseline estimate each year, which reflects either the latest enacted level increased to cover inflation or statutory requirements.205 There are no statutory controls on future war funding, so CBO's projection extrapolates from the latest enacted level, in this case the $86 billion appropriated in FY2014 with increases to cover inflation. Under this scenario, war costs rise from $87 billion in FY2015 to $98 billion in FY2021 and total $646 billion over the next ten years (Table 13).

In the past several years, both the Administration and some Members have proposed using "savings" from this baseline projection (or current services level) of war funding to "pay for" other legislative changes. Typically, savings are calculated by subtracting a proposed statutory cap over 10 years from CBO's baseline projection, with the difference or "savings" allocated to other purposes from deficit reduction to expanded benefits for veterans.206

These proposals are criticized by some analysts as "budget gimmickry." CBO has pointed out that since war spending is appropriated in annual discretionary spending, a multi-year cap would not be binding. Moreover, war spending reflects policy decisions about planned troop levels rather than continuing indefinitely at the same level.207

CBO's Alternative Policy Projection

Because of these considerations, CBO has also produced alternative policy projections of war spending that reflect specific assumptions about future troop levels. In FY2015, for example, CBO's alternative war funding projection assumes that troops will decline from about 100,000 U.S. troops deployed in country and in the region in 2014 to 70,000 in 2015, 50,000 in 2016, and 30,000 in 2017, remaining at that level through FY2024. These CBO estimates do not reflect troop levels in particular countries and include proportionate reductions in diplomatic operations and foreign aid.

Under this alternative scenario, CBO projects annual war funding would decline from $58 billion in FY2015 to $30 billion in FY2017, and continue at that level for the rest of the decade. This estimate totals $340 billion in budget authority over 10 years, about half of the $646 billion in CBO's baseline estimate. CBO does not provide any additional details about the basis for its war cost estimate, which averages about $1 million per troop (Table 13).

CRS Analysis

Another way to analyze future war costs is to build from the "bottom up" by looking at the following key factors that affected Iraq withdrawal costs, particularly

Assuming that U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan decline as the President has announced, the cost of in-country forces could decline from $11 billion in the FY2015 request to about $1 billion in FY2017.208 If the number of troops providing in-theater presence declines by about 25% based on the Iraq experience, then those costs could decline from $18 billion now to about $11 billion by FY2019.209

Another post-withdrawal cost could be reset expenses for two to three years after U.S. troops leave. Based on the Iraq experience, reset costs may fall rapidly once U.S. troops leave from $9.0 billion in the FY2015 request to $4.0 billion in FY2016 and $2.0 billion in FY2015.

Helping to pay for Afghan security forces could be another long-term cost. While the United States has not committed to specific funding amounts, both the 2012 Strategic Partnership Agreement and the NATO Wales summit communique this year call for ISAF nations "to contribute significantly" to sustaining Afghan security forces" through "the decade of transformation." 210 U.S. defense officials have estimated this commitment at $4.0 billion annually as long as the Afghan forces remain at current levels.

Taking these factors and historical experience into account, this CRS analysis suggests that U.S. war costs could fall from the $58 billion request in FY2015 to about $25 billion in FY2016 and then gradually decline to $20 billion in FY2017 and $15 billion for the rest of the decade.

Congressional Options to Affect Military Operations

In light of the new U.S. operation against the Islamic State, as well as some uncertainty about the nature of continued U.S. operations during the last stages of withdrawal from Afghanistan, Congress has voted on several amendments designed to place limits on military operations. Some concerns have been raised in response to recent press reports, saying that the President is permitting the military to broaden its mission to support Afghan security forces after December 2014 from "train and assist" to include air support and airstrikes in support of Afghan combat missions and in some circumstances, to accompany Afghan forces in ground operations against the Taliban.211

In drafting such amendments, Congress has turned to experience from Vietnam, Cambodia, and Iraq to look for options. In the past, Congress has considered both funding and non-funding options. Most observers would maintain that restrictions tied to appropriations have been more effective.212 Restrictive funding options generally prohibit the obligation or expenditure of current or previously appropriated funds for certain purposes. Obligations occur when the government pays military or civilian personnel, or the services sign contracts or place orders to buy goods or services. Expenditures, or outlays, take place when payment is provided.

The Vietnam Experience

Past attempts or provisions to restrict funding have followed several patterns, including those that cut off funding

Other non-funding approaches to restrict military operations have

One or both houses may also state a "sense of the Congress," or non-binding resolution that does not need to be signed by the President, that U.S. military operations should be limited, wound down, or ended or forces withdrawn.

While only a handful of provisions have been enacted, congressional consideration of these various limiting provisions did place pressure on the Administration at the time, influencing the course of events. For example, the well-known Cooper-Church provision that prohibited the introduction of U.S. ground troops into Cambodia was enacted in early 1971 after U.S. forces had invaded and then been withdrawn from Cambodia. That provision was intended to prevent the reintroduction of troops.213 Although President Nixon did not reintroduce U.S. troops, the United States continued to bomb Cambodia for the next three years.

Later in 1973, Congress passed two provisions that prohibited the obligation or expenditures of "any funds in this or any previous law on or after August 15, 1973" for combat "in or over or from off the shores of North Vietnam, South Vietnam, Laos, or Cambodia."214 The final version of that provision reflected negotiations between the Administration and Congress about when the prohibition would go into effect, with August 15, 1973, set in the enacted version. Bombing did, in fact, stop on that day.

Several well-known proposals that were not enacted—two McGovern-Hatfield amendments and an earlier Cooper-Church amendment—were also part of this Vietnam-era jockeying between the Administration and Congress. One McGovern-Hatfield amendment prohibited expenditure of previously appropriated funds after a specified date "in or over Indochina," except for the purpose of withdrawing troops or protecting our Indochinese allies, while another also prohibited spending funds to support more than a specified number of troops unless the president notified the Congress of the need for a 60-day extension. The earlier Cooper-Church amendment prohibited the expenditure of any funds after July 1, 1970, to retain troops in Cambodia "unless specifically authorized by law hereafter."215

Generally, Congress continued to provide funds for U.S. troops in Vietnam at the requested levels as the Nixon Administration reduced troop levels. Overall, funding restrictions, it might be said, have generally proven more effective than the War Powers Act, which has been challenged by the executive branch on constitutional grounds.216

Restrictions Proposed More Recently

During the current Congress, the House voted on the following resolutions and amendments that would place limits on military operations in Iraq, Afghanistan, or Syria:

In the 112th Congress, before President Obama announced the most recent troop withdrawal plan for Afghanistan, amendments were considered to limit funds to withdrawal costs:

During the House debate over the FY2010 Supplemental (H.R. 4899), three amendments were voted on to restrict funding or troop levels for the Afghan war, similar to Vietnam-era amendments:

Appendix A. U.S. Troop Levels in Afghanistan and Iraq, FY2001-FY2015

Table A-1 shows monthly U.S. troops deployed in-country in Afghanistan and in Iraq from January 2002-September 2014 based on reports prepared by the Joint Staff and provided to Congress and CRS.226 Beginning in May 2008, DOD began to include the total number of U.S. troops deployed not only in-country but also in the surrounding area to provide in-theater support, as well as those conducting other counterterror operations.

Table A-1. Boots on the Ground for Afghanistan/Operation Enduring Freedom and Iraq/
Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation New Dawn

December 2001-September 2014

 

Jan.

Feb.

Mar.

Apr.

May

Jun.

Jul.

Aug.

Sep.

Oct.

Nov.

Dec.

2001: Afghanistan: Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF)

In-Country

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

in-Theater Support

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

OEF TOTAL

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

2001: Iraq: Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation New Dawn (OND)

In-Country

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

0

0

0

In-Theater Support

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

OIF/OND TOTAL

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

2001: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

In-Theater Support

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

OEF & OIF/OND Total

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

na

na

na

2002: OEF

In-Country

4,100

4,200

5,000

6,600

6,900

7,300

8,900

9,500

10,400

10,500

10,200

9,700

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2002: OIF/OND

In-Country

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2002: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

4,100

4,200

5,000

6,600

6,900

7,300

8,900

9,500

10,400

10,500

10,200

9,700

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF & OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2003: OEF

In-Country

9,800

9,500

11,450

9,300

9,900

10,900

10,900

12,700

9,800

12,100

12,000

13,100

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF Total

9,800

9,500

11,450

9,300

9,900

10,900

10,900

12,700

9,800

12,100

12,000

13,100

2003: OIF/OND

In-Country

0

0

0

93,900

145,700

147,400

149,400

146,000

130,300

136,900

131,300

123,700

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2003: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

9,800

9,500

11,450

103,200

155,600

158,300

160,300

158,700

140,100

149,000

143,300

136,800

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF & OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2004: OEF

In-Country

13,500

12,300

14,100

19,500

17,700

17,800

17,400

15,700

16,800

17,500

15,765

18,300

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2004: OIF/OND

In-Country

126,900

108,400

119,600

131,700

139,800

144,300

140,600

126,800

137,700

134,600

132,837

142,600

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2004: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

140,400

120,700

133,700

151,200

157,500

162,100

158,000

142,500

154,500

152,100

148,602

160,900

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF & OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2005: OEF

In-Country

17,222

20,300

19,409

18,991

19,044

19,200

17,836

17,833

17,830

17,827

17,824

17,821

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2005: OIF/OND

In-Country

150,682

161,200

144,875

144,776

137,157

141,100

136,475

140,776

145,078

149,379

153,681

157,982

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2005: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

167,904

181,500

164,284

163,767

156,201

160,300

154,311

158,609

162,908

167,206

171,505

175,803

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF & OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2006: OEF

In-Country

18,457

20,297

22,628

21,845

22,990

21,733

22,103

20,764

18,611

19,090

19,791

20,502

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2006: OIF/OND

In-Country

153,239

137,365

129,713

129,467

130,231

128,789

124,876

131,057

140,264

139,421

147,796

133,718

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OIF/OND Total

153,239

137,365

129,713

129,467

130,231

128,789

124,876

131,057

140,264

139,421

147,796

133,718

2006: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

171,696

157,662

152,341

151,312

153,221

150,522

146,979

151,821

158,875

158,511

167,587

154,220

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF & OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2007: OEF

In-Country

20,947

25,876

24,842

24,310

24,060

26,480

23,881

24,008

24,056

24,615

24,474

24,780

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2007: OIF/OND

In-Country

128,569

134,754

137,976

144,486

144,202

150,336

156,247

157,674

165,607

164,353

164,424

161,783

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2007: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

149,516

160,630

162,818

168,796

168,262

176,816

180,128

181,682

189,663

188,968

188,898

186,563

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

OEF & OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

na

2008: OEF

In-Country

26,607

28,050

28,650

33,000

35,602

33,902

33,600

34,200

33,750

33,125

32,813

32,500

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

13,398

14,348

13,500

13,300

13,350

12,925

12,713

12,500

OEF Total

na

na

na

na

49,000

48,250

47,100

47,500

47,100

46,050

45,525

45,000

2008: OIF/OND

In-Country

155,846

158,400

159,700

162,400

158,900

153,300

147,400

145,000

146,900

147,700

148,100

148,500

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

33,950

28,760

32,100

27,900

35,400

33,250

32,175

31,100

OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

192,850

182,060

179,500

172,900

182,300

180,950

180,275

179,600

2008: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

182,453

186,450

188,350

195,400

194,502

187,202

181,000

179,200

180,650

180,825

180,913

181,000

In-Theater Support

na

na

na

na

47,348

43,108

45,600

41,200

48,750

46,175

44,888

43,600

OEF & OIF/OND Total

na

na

na

na

241,850

230,310

226,600

220,400

229,400

227,000

225,800

224,600

2009: OEF

In-Country

32,800

35,900

38,350

39,000

44,600

55,100

56,500

62,600

62,300

65,800

67,500

69,000

In-Theater Support

13,600

13,200

13,950

15,200

13,800

14,600

14,400

14,500

16,300

15,400

15,400

15,500

OEF Total

46,400

49,100

52,300

54,200

58,400

69,700

70,900

77,100

78,600

81,200

82,900

84,500

2009: OIF/OND

In-Country

147,700

146,400

141,300

139,400

134,200

134,500

132,300

132,600

129,200

120,300

119,700

114,300

In-Theater Support

25,400

29,300

27,450

26,400

30,000

28,000

27,700

30,800

31,400

29,700

29,100

28,500

OIF/OND Total

173,100

175,700

168,750

165,800

164,200

162,500

160,000

163,400

160,600

150,000

148,800

142,800

2009: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

180,500

182,300

179,650

178,400

178,800

189,600

188,800

195,200

191,500

186,100

187,200

183,300

In-Theater Support

39,000

42,500

41,400

41,600

43,800

42,600

42,100

45,300

47,700

45,100

44,500

44,000

OEF & OIF/OND Total

219,500

224,800

221,050

220,000

222,600

232,200

230,900

240,500

239,200

231,200

231,700

227,300

2010: OEF

In-Country

70,200

74,600

79,100

87,600

89,700

93,800

89,300

90,800

96,600

96,200

97,600

96,900

In-Theater Support

15,400

16,200

2,200

3,200

16,700

17,800

25,600

26,700

25,000

28,300

31,600

26,800

OEF Total

85,600

90,800

81,300

90,800

106,400

111,600

114,900

117,500

121,600

124,500

129,200

123,700

2010: OIF/OND

In-Country

112,400

101,100

95,900

98,850

94,250

88,320

80,620

60,710

48,810

47,810

48,410

47,305

In-Theater Support

30,000

28,500

27,400

29,100

27,000

27,610

27,110

37,410

35,520

36,010

39,000

42,100

OIF/OND Total

142,400

129,600

123,300

127,950

121,250

115,930

107,730

98,120

84,330

83,820

87,410

89,405

2010: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

182,600

175,700

175,000

186,450

183,950

182,120

169,920

151,510

145,410

144,010

146,010

144,205

In-Theater Support

45,400

44,700

29,600

32,300

43,700

45,410

52,710

64,110

60,520

64,310

70,600

68,900

OEF & OIF/OND Total

228,000

220,400

204,600

218,750

227,650

227,530

222,630

215,620

205,930

208,320

216,610

213,105

2011: OEF

In-Country

96,700

99,500

99,800

99,300

99,500

98,900

98,500

98,100

98,200

97,800

97,700

94,100

In-Theater Support

26,000

31,500

29,800

32,100

31,100

33,000

33,000

33,000

27,700

31,400

28,300

27,000

OEF Total

122,700

131,000

129,600

131,400

130,600

131,900

131,500

131,100

125,900

129,200

126,000

121,100

2011: OIF/OND

In-Country

46,705

46,805

45,660

46,360

48,110

46,010

45,510

45,605

44,755

42,455

33,835

11,455

In-Theater Support

28,700

32,500

42,150

32,050

32,600

38,300

33,700

32,800

29,700

36,650

44,700

42,855

OIF/OND Total

75,405

79,305

87,810

78,410

80,710

84,310

79,210

78,405

74,455

79,105

78,535

54,310

2011: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

143,405

146,305

145,460

145,660

147,610

144,910

144,010

143,705

142,955

140,255

131,535

105,555

In-Theater Support

54,700

64,000

71,950

64,150

63,700

71,300

66,700

65,800

57,400

68,050

73,000

69,855

OEF & OIF/OND Total

198,105

210,305

217,410

209,810

211,310

216,210

210,710

209,505

200,355

208,305

204,535

175,410

2012: OEF

In-Country

88,300

89,300

88,200

88,000

87,400

85,600

85,300

84,000

76,500

65,900

66,000

65,800

In-Theater Support

67,900

68,800

68,300

69,900

69,000

70,900

66,200

66,600

68,800

72,700

69,900

68,500

OEF Total

156,200

158,100

156,500

157,900

156,400

156,500

151,500

150,600

145,300

138,600

135,900

134,300

2012: OIF/OND

Iraq In-Country

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

OIF In-Theater Support

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

OIF/OND Total

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2012: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

88,300

89,300

88,200

88,000

87,400

85,600

85,300

84,000

76,500

65,900

66,000

65,800

In-Theater Support

67,900

68,800

68,300

69,900

69,000

70,900

66,200

66,600

68,800

72,700

69,900

68,500

OEF & OIF/OND Total

156,200

158,100

156,500

157,900

156,400

156,500

151,500

150,600

145,300

138,600

135,900

134,300

2013: OEF

In-Country

65,300

66,800

65,700

63,500

63,500

61,300

60,000

60,900

55,800

51,200

48,000

43,300

In-Theater Support

64,000

63,600

64,700

63,700

63,600

60,400

57,500

59,800

66,400

68,800

66,000

61,800

OEF Total

129,300

130,400

130,400

127,200

127,100

121,700

117,500

120,700

122,200

120,000

114,000

105,100

2013: OIF/OND

In-Country

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

In-Theater Support

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

OIF/OND Total

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

2013: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

65,300

66,800

65,700

63,500

63,500

61,300

60,000

60,900

55,800

51,200

48,000

43,300

In-Theater Support

64,000

63,600

64,700

63,700

63,600

60,400

57,500

59,800

66,400

68,800

66,000

61,800

OEF & OIF/OND Total

129,300

130,400

130,400

127,200

127,100

121,700

117,500

120,700

122,200

120,000

114,000

105,100

2014: OEF

In-Country

37,600

33,200

33,200

32,900

32,500

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In-Theater Support

62,100

60,700

60,100

60,800

59,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OEF Total

99,700

93,900

93,300

93,700

91,500

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2014: OIF/OND

In-Country

0

0

0

0

0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In-Theater Support

0

0

0

0

0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OIF/OND Total

0

0

0

0

0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2014: Totals: OEF, OIF/OND

In-Country

37,600

33,200

33,200

32,900

32,500

31,400

30,400

29,600

27,800

 

 

 

In-Theater Support

62,100

60,700

60,100

60,800

59,000

56,200

57,200

58,000

57,100

 

 

 

OEF and OIF/OND Total

99,700

93,900

93,300

93,700

91,500

87,600

87,600

87,600

84,900

 

 

 

Source: CRS calculations from DOD, Joint Staff, Summary and Monthly Boots on the Ground Reports to Congress, as originally requested in H.Rept. 111-230 accompanying H.R. 3230, Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2010. Boots on the Ground data first available in January 2002. Total by operation (OEF/OIF/OND) not available in Boots on the Ground Report until 2008.

Appendix B. OMB Criteria for War Costs

In February 2009, at the beginning of the Obama administration, OMB issued new budget guidance to DOD providing criteria for expenses to be considered as appropriate for war funding. Revised in September 2010 to clarify the distinctions, the letter states that the criteria "for deciding whether funding properly belongs in the base budget or in the budget for overseas contingency operations (OCO) ... have been very successful in delineating between these two sources of funding," according to OMB (see below).227

September 9, 2010

The Honorable Robert Hale
Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) 1100 Defense Pentagon
Washington, D.C. 20301-1100

Dear Mr. Hale:

In early 2009 OMB and the Department developed criteria for deciding whether funding properly belongs in the base budget or in the budget for overseas contingency operations (OCO). These criteria have been very successful in delineating between these two sources of funding and have facilitated the development of coherent and defensible OCO funding requests. Since then, and in close collaboration with Comptroller representatives, we have developed updated criteria that build on our experience in the subsequent two budget cycles. This update clarifies language, eliminates areas of confusion and provides guidance for areas previously unanticipated.

The enclosure to this letter contains the updated criteria and replaces the 2009 criteria.

OMB will use these updated criteria when reviewing the Department's budget submissions.

We recognize that in developing these updated criteria several policy issues arose that remain unresolved. These will be addressed in the FY 2012 budget review.

Please contact. 202-395-3879 if you have any questions about these criteria

Steven M. Kosiak Associate Director for Defense and Foreign Affairs

Table B-1. Criteria for War/Overseas Contingency Operations Funding Requests

Item

Definition of Criteria

Geographic area covered/"Theater of operations"(for non-classified war/overseas contingency operations funding)

Geographic areas in which combat or direct combat support operations occur: Iraq , Afghanistan, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, the Horn of Africa, Persian Gulf and Gulf nations, Arabian Sea, the Indian Ocean, the Philippines, and other countries on a case-by-case basis. Note: OCO budget items must also meet the criteria below.

Inclusions

Major Equipment (General)

Replacement of losses that have occurred but only for items not already programmed for replacement in the Future Years Defense Plan (FYDP)—no accelerations.

Accelerations can be made in the base budget.

Replacement or repair to original capability (to upgraded capability if that is currently available) of equipment returning from theater. The replacement may be a similar end item if the original item is no longer in production. Incremental cost of non-war related upgrades, if made, should be included in the base.

Purchase of specialized, theater-specific equipment.

Funding must be obligated within 12 months.

Ground Equipment Replacement

Combat losses and washouts (returning equipment that is not economical to repair); replacement of equipment given to coalition partners, if consistent with approved policy; in-theater stocks above customary eouipping levels on a case-bv-case basis.

Equipment Modifications (Enhancements)

Operationally required modifications to equipment used in theater or in direct support of combat operations, for which funding can be obligated in 12 months, and that is not already programmed in FYDP.

Munitions

Replenishment of munitions expended in combat operations in theater. Training ammunition for theater-unique training events is allowed. Forecasted expenditures are not allowed. Case-by-case assessment for munitions where existing stocks are insufficient to sustain theater combat operations.

Aircraft Replacement

Combat losses, defined as losses by accident or by enemy action that occur in the theater of ooerations.

Military Construction

Facilities and infrastructure in the theater of operations in direct support of combat operations. The level of construction should be the minimum to meet operational requirements. At non-enduring locations, facilities and infrastructure for temporary use are covered. At enduring locations, construction requirements must be tied to surge operations or major changes in operational requirements and will be considered on a case-by-case basis.

Research and Development

Projects required for combat operations in these specific theaters that can be delivered in 12 months.

Operations

Direct War costs:

  • transport of personnel, equipment, and supplies to, from, and within the theater of operations;
  • deployment-specific training and preparation for units and personnel (military and civilian) to assume their directed missions as defined in the orders for deployment into the theater of operations;

Within the theater, the incremental costs above the funding programmed in the base budget:

  • to support commanders in the conduct of their directed missions (to include Emergency Response Programs);
  • to build and maintain temporary facilities;
  • to provide food, fuel, supplies. contracted services and other support; and
  • to cover the operational costs of coalition partners supporting U.S. military missions, as mutually agreed.

Indirect War Costs: Indirect war costs incurred outside the theater of operations will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

Health

Short-term care directly related to combat. Infrastructure that is only to be used during the current conflict.

Personnel (Incremental Pay)

Incremental special pays and allowances for Service members and civilians deployed to a combat zone; incremental pay. special pays and allowances for Reserve Component personnel mobilized to support war missions.

Special Operations Command

Operations and equipment that meet the criteria in this guidance.

Prepositioned Supplies and Equipment

Resetting in-theater stocks of supplies and equipment to pre-war levels. Excludes costs for reconfiguring prepositioned sets or for maintaining them.

Security Force Funding

Training, equipping, and sustaining Iraqi and Afghan military and police forces.

Fuel

War fuel costs, and funding to ensure that logistical support to combat operations is not degraded due to cash losses in DoD's baseline fuel program. Would fund enough of any base fuel shortfall attributable to fuel price increases to maintain sufficient on-hand cash for the Defense Working Capital Funds to cover seven days' disbursements. (This would enable the Fund to partially cover losses attributable to fuel cost increases.)

Exclusions. From war/overseas contingency funding! - Appropriately funded in the base budget

Training equipment

Training vehicles, aircraft, ammunition, and simulators. Exception: training base stocks of specialized, theater-specific equipment that is required to support combat operations in the theater of operations, and support to deployment-specific training described above.

Equipment Service Life

Extension Programs (SLEPs)

Acceleration of SLEPs already in the FYDP.

Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC)

BRAC projects.

Family Support Initiatives

Family support initiatives to include the construction of childcare facilities; funding private-public partnerships to expand military families' access to childcare; and support for service members' spouses professional development.

Industrial Base Capacity

Programs to maintain industrial base capacity (e.g. "war-stoooers").

Personnel

Recruiting and retention bonuses to maintain end-strength. Basic Pay and the Basic allowances for Housing and Subsistence for permanently authorized end strength. Individual augmentees will be decided on a case-by-case basis.

Office of Security Cooperation

Support for the personnel, operations, or the construction or maintenance of facilities, at U.S. Offices of Security Cooperation in-theater.

Special Situations

Reprogrammings and paybacks

Items proposed for increases in reprogramrnings or as payback for prior reprogrammings must meet the criteria above.

Source: OMB.

Appendix C. War Appropriations by Public Law and Agency

The table below shows enacted appropriations by act from FY2001-FY2014.

Table C-1. Defense Department, Foreign Operations Funding, and VA Medical Funding for Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Activities, FY2001-FY2014

(in billions of dollars of budget authority)

Name of Law

Public
Law Number

Date Enacted

DOD Funds

State/
USAID

VA Medical

Total cost

FY2001 Emerg. Supp. Approp. Act for Recovery from and Response to Terrorist Attacks on the United States

P.L. 107-38

9/18/01

13.6

0.3

0

13.9

FY2002 Dept. of Defense and Emergency Terrorism Response Act

P.L. 107-117

1/10/02

3.4

0

0

3.4

FY2002 Emergency Supplemental

P.L. 107-206

8/2/02

13.8

0.4

0

14.1

FY2002 Regular Foreign Operations

P.L. 107-115

1/10/02

0.0

0.2

0

0.2

FY2003 Consolidated Appropriations

P.L. 108-7

2/20/03

10.0

0.4

0

10.4

FY2003 Emergency Supplemental

P.L. 108-11

4/16/03

62.6

3.4

0

66.0

P.L. 107-248

10/23/02

7.1

0

0

7.1

FY2004 DOD Appropriations Acta

P.L. 108-87

9/30/03

-3-.5

0

0

-3-.5

FY2004 Emergency Supplemental

P.L. 108-106

11/6/03

64.9

21.2

0

86.1

FY2004 Foreign Operations Appropriations

P.L. 108-199

1/23/04

0

0.5

0

0.5

FY2005 DOD Appropriations Actb

P.L. 108-287

8/5/04

25.0

0.7

0

25.7

FY2005 DOD Appropriations Act

P.L. 108-287

8/5/04

2.1

0

0

2.1

FY2005 Consolidated Approps.

P.L. 108-447

12/8/04

0

1.0

0

1.0

FY2005 Supplemental Approps.c

P.L. 109-13

5/11/05

75.9

3.1

0

79.0

FY2006 Interior and Rel. Ag. Approps.d

P.L. 109-54

8/2/05

0

0

0.2

0.2

FY2006 Foreign Operations Approps.

P.L. 109-102

11/14/05

0

1.0

0

1.0

FY2006 Science, State, and Rel. Agencies Appropriations Act

P.L. 109-108

11/22/05

0

0.1

0

0.1

FY2006 Military Quality of Life and Veterans Affairsd

P.L. 109-114

11/30/05

0

0

0.4

0.4

FY2006 DOD Approps Act

P.L. 109-148

12/30/05

50.0

0

0

50.0

FY2006 DOD Appropriations Act

P.L. 109-148

12/30/05

0.8

0

0

0.8

FY2006 Emergency Supplemental

P.L. 109-234

6/15/06

66.0

3.2

0

69.2

FY2007 DOD Appropriations Acte

P.L. 109-289

9/29/06

70.5

0

0

70.5

FY2007 Continuing Resolutionf

P.L. 110-5

2/15/07

0

1.3

0.6

1.8

FY2007 Supplemental

P.L. 110-28

5/25/07

94.5

3.8

0.4

98.7

FY2008 Continuing Resolution

P.L. 110-92

9/29/07

5.2

0

0

5.2

FY2008 DOD Appropriations Act

P.L. 110-116

11/13/07

11.6

0

0

11.6

FY2008 Consolidated Approps. Act

P.L. 110-161

12/26/07

70.0

2.3

0.9

73.2

FY2008 Supplemental Approps. Actg

P.L. 110-252

6/30/08

157.9

5.0

0.4

163.2

FY2009 Consolidated Security, Disaster Assistance, and Continuing Appropriations Act

P.L. 110-329

9/30/08

2.5

0

1.5

4.0

FY2009 Omnibus Appropriations Act

P.L. 111-8

3/11/09

0

1.1

0

1.1

FY2009 Supplemental Appropriations Act

P.L. 111-32

6/24/09

80.0

2.5

0

82.5

FY2010 Consolidated Appropriations Act

P.L. 111-117

12/16/09

1.4

4.8

2.0

8.2

FY2010 DOD Appropriations Act, Title IX

P.L. 111-118

12/19/09

127.3

0

0

127.3

FY2010 Supplemental

P.L. 111-212

7/27/10

30.8

3.4

0

34.2

FY2011 Defense Appropriations and Full Year Continuing Resolution

P.L. 112-10

4/15/11

158.9

5.4

2.3

166.5

FY2012 Consolidated Appropriations Act

P.L. 112-74

12/23/11

115.2

11.5

2.9

129.6

FY2013 Consolidated and Continuing Appropriations Act Post-sequester

P.L. 113-6

3/26/13

82.1

9.2

3.2

94.5

FY2014 Consolidated Appropriations Act

P.L. 113-76 1

1/17/14

85.3

6.0

3.7

95.0

Sources: CRS calculations based on public laws, reports, explanatory statements, and DOD documents.

Notes: NA = Not applicable. Numbers may not add to totals due to rounding. DOD's regular appropriations bills included a separate Title IX for additional emergency appropriations for war costs from FY2005-FY2010 to "bridge" the gap between the beginning of the fiscal year and passage of a supplemental.

a. FY2003 Appropriations Act included $7.1 billion in regular FY2003 defense appropriations for GWOT that DOD cannot track; the FY2004 DOD Appropriations Act rescinded $3.5 billion in FY2003 war monies.

b. Reflects funds obligated for Operation Noble Eagle from DOD's regular appropriations as reported by the Defense Finance Accounting Service.

c. Excludes funds for Tsunami relief.

d. Includes VA medical funds for Iraq and Afghan veterans in emergency funding in Interior bill and in regular VA appropriations.

e. Title IX funds in FY2005 do not include a $1.8 billion scoring adjustment that reverses the previous rescission of FY2004 funds because this did not change wartime monies.

f. State Department figures for foreign and diplomatic operations; CRS estimates for VA medical.

g. The FY2008 Supplemental included funds for both FY2008 and bridge funds for FY2009.

Appendix D. War Funding by Function, FY2009-FY2015

Since FY2009, DOD has provided a functional breakdown of war costs, which helps to compare changes in troop levels and changes in war costs. The categories range from operational costs to coalition support.228 Table D-1 combines these elements into three major categories:

Operational Costs and Troop Levels

While overall costs may not rise or fall with troop levels, operational costs would be expected to change roughly proportionately. In the case of Iraq, both overall and operational costs fell by about 90%, in line with troop strength. As troop strength fell from 140,000 in FY2009 to 9,180 in FY2012, overall funding fell from $89.1 billion in FY2009 to $9.6 billion in FY2012 when all U.S. troops were out of Iraq (Table D-1).

In the case of the Afghan drawdown, neither overall nor operational costs have fallen proportionately since the FY2011 peak in strength. As of the FY2015 request, average strength is slated to fall by 88% and total cost by 56% since that peak. While operational costs would fall slightly faster, by 62%, the decline lags decreases in troop strength. DOD has suggested that operational costs remain high because of the need to dismantle bases and dispose of equipment as troop levels fall as would also have been the case in Iraq.

One source of the disparity between Afghanistan and Iraq may be the $18 billion cost for over 60,000 U.S. troops currently providing in-theater support. While the number of in-theater support troops declined as U.S. troops left Iraq, some troops in neighboring countries like Kuwait remained and their cost was allocated to OEF (Figure 2). In FY2015, DOD projects an increase in these support troop levels to 63,000. The persistence of these support troops raises the question of whether the cost of these troops is more appropriately considered an "enduring" cost that could transition into DOD's base budget.

Reset—repair or replacing war-worn equipment—costs in Afghanistan are projected to remain high during the withdrawal, increasing from $8.4 billion in FY2014 to 9.2 billion in FY2015, unlike the Iraq experience when these costs fell rapidly from $8.9 billion in FY2011 to $1.6 billion in FY2012 (Table D-1). While DOD may argue that more equipment may have accumulated in Afghanistan over the past 13 years of war, these high levels of funding for reset could also reflect "forward financing," or providing funds before the work can be executed by the depots.230

Based on Army budget repair plans—and the bulk of equipment returned from Afghanistan goes to Army depots—the amount of orders estimated to carry over from one fiscal year to the next is expected to be $3.5 billion in FY2014 and $2.9 billion in FY2015. Both these levels exceed DOD criteria for appropriate carryover levels.231 In the past, Congress has reduced funding when carryover levels are high, questioning whether plans can be executed.

As would be expected, operational costs make up the bulk of war costs in both the Afghan and Iraq war, generally an average of 65% in Afghanistan and over 70% in Iraq. The share for reset in Iraq rose as equipment was more heavily used and as the definition of war expense broadened, and then decreased as the definition narrowed and equipment was used less heavily as the U.S. mission shifted to "train and assist," and the number of troops fell. The FY2015 request for Afghanistan does not follow this pattern.

Programmatic costs cover a wide range of tools that support troop operations indirectly and so do not necessarily reflect the pace of war operations. The largest amounts for the training of Afghan and Iraq security forces reflect both policy decisions about the size of the Afghan and Iraq armies and police, as well as the U.S. commitment to equipping and training those forces.

Other tools, like coalition support to reimburse primarily Pakistan for its logistical costs of conducting counterterror operations that support the United States, have been funded between $1.0 billion and $2.0 billion over the years. A local tool, the Commanders' Emergency Response Fund (CERP), is intended to help U.S. commanding officers win the support of local populations by providing funds for local development projects, and generally reflects the pace of operations and troop levels. Funds to research and buy new systems to defeat Improvised Explosive Devices or land mines grew as it became clear that this was the weapon of choice for insurgents.

Table D-1. Functional Breakdown for the Afghan and Iraq Wars

FY2009-FY2015 Request in Billions of Dollars

By Category

Afghan War/OEF

Iraq War/OIF and OND

Fiscal Year

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

Average Troop Strength and Cost from Peak: 2011= Afghanistan, 2009 = Iraq

In-Country Strength

43,800

84,000

98,350

89,450

62,760

37,320

11,660

140,160

96,000

46,570

9,180

0

0

0

Change since peak in

Troop Strength

na

na

0%

-9%

-36%

-62%

-88%

0%

-32%

-67%

-93%

-100%

-100%

-100%

Total Cost

na

na

0%

-7%

-25%

-38%

-56%

0%

-31%

-49%

-89%

-96%

-99%

-100%

Operational Cost

na

na

0%

-13%

-27%

-39%

-62%

0%

-30%

-55%

-89%

-100%

-100%

-100%

Operational Costs in Billions of $

Operations/Force Protectionc

23.9

55.0

58.2

54.1

27.6

26.2

11.2

52.4

37.5

26.9

6.5

0

0

0

In-Theater Supportd

ns

ns

ns

ns

22.8

19.8

17.9

ns

ns

ns

ns

0.1

0.1

0.1

Force Protectione

4.7

11.4

10.3

6.1

ns

ns

ns

9.6

7.3

1.4

0.5

ns

ns

ns

Military Intelligence

1.9

4.9

6.1

5.5

4.4

ns

ns

3.0

1.0

0.8

0.3

0

ns

ns

Military Construction

0.9

2.0

1.2

0.3

0.2

0.0

ns

0.1

0

0

0

0

0

0

Subtotal: Operational

31.4

73.3

75.8

65.9

55.0

46.0

29.2

65.0

45.8

29.1

7.3

0.1

0.1

0.1

Equipment Reset and Reconstitution Costs in Billions of $

Reset Equipment and Reconstit.

6.6

8.2

12.7

11.3

9.9

8.4

9.2

16.5

8.5

8.9

1.6

1.2

0.5

0.0

Subtotal: Reset

6.6

8.2

12.7

11.3

9.9

8.4

9.2

16.5

8.5

8.9

1.6

1.2

0.5

0.0

Programmatic Support Costs in Billions of $

IED Defeat

0.7

0.9

2.4

2.4

1.6

0.9

0.4

2.7

0.9

0.4

0

0

0

0

Iraq Security Forces Fd.

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

1.0

1.0

1.5

0

0

0

0

Afghan Security Forces Fd.

5.6

9.2

11.6

11.2

5.1

4.7

4.1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Afghan Infrastructure Fd.

0

0

0.4

0.4

0.3

0.2

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Cmdrs. Emerg. Resp. Fd

0.7

1.0

0.3

0.4

0.2

0.0

0

0.7

0.2

0.2

0

0

0

0

Coalition Support

1.4

1.8

2.0

2.1

2.0

1.7

1.7

0.4

0.1

0

0

0.1

0

0

Pakistan Counterinsurgency Fd.

0.4

0.0

0.8

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Task Force for Business Stability Ops

0

0

0

0

0.2

0.1

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

Office of Sec. Cooperation-Iraq

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0.5

0.2

0.1

Subtotal: Programmatic Spt.

8.8

12.9

17.5

16.6

9.5

7.7

6.2

4.8

2.1

2.1

0.0

0.6

0.2

0.1

Other Costs in Billions of $

Temporary End Strength Army and USMC

0.0

0.0

1.0

1.8

5.8

4.7

2.3

0.0

0.0

0.9

0.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

Unexploded Ordnance

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund (CTPF)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ns

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ns

European Reassurance initiative (ERI)

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ns

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

ns

Other/Classified activitiesf

3.3

6.6

7.0

10.5

5.7

3.7

2.7

2.7

5.3

4.1

0.5

1.2

0.0

ns

Subtotal: Otherg

3.3

6.6

8.0

12.3

11.6

8.4

5.1

2.7

5.3

5.0

0.6

1.2

0.0

0.0

WAR TOTAL

50.2

100.9

114.0

106.1

86.0

70.4

49.7

89.1

61.7

45.0

9.6

3.2

0.8

0.3

Sources: Functional table in DOD's OCO Budget overviews for FY2009-FY2015. DOD did not segregate functional categories by operations before FY2009.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Gary Pagliano, Nathan Lucas, Nina Serafino, Christopher Blanchard, [author name scrubbed], Christopher Mann, and Sandra Edwards for all their help.

Footnotes

1.

White House, "Statement by the President on Afghanistan," May 27, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/27/statement-president-afghanistan.

2.

See Table S-10 in OMB, Fiscal Year 2015, Budget; http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Overview. "Summary Tables;" March 10, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2015/assets/tables.pdf. For amended request, see Office of Management and Budget, "Estimate #2—FY 2015 Budget Amendments: Department of Defense (DOD) and Department of State and Other International Programs (State/OIP) to update the FY 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations funding levels; for both DOD and State/OIP to implement the Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund and the European Reassurance Initiative; and for State/OIP peacekeeping costs in the Central African Republic."June 26, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/budget_amendments/final_fy_2015_oco_amendment_-_062414.pdf; OMB, "Fact Sheet: The Administration's Fiscal Year 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Request," June 26, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/06/26/fact-sheet-administration-s-fiscal-year-2015-overseas-contingency-operat.

3.

CBO, "The Continuing Appropriations Resolution, 2015 (H.J.Res. 124), Including the Amendment in Part A of H. Rept. 113-600," as Approved by the House Committee on Rules on September 15, 2014; http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/hjres124_0.pdf. The CBO figure includes all funding designated as OCO. The CRS total includes VA Medical war-related funding, which is not designated as OCO.

4.

White House, "Fact Sheet: The Administration's Fiscal Year 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations Request," May 27, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/28/fact-sheet-administration-s-fiscal-year-2015-overseas-contingency-operat.; Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense/Comptroller, Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund and the European Reassurance Initiative, p. 12, June 2014; http://comptroller. defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_OCO_CTPF_and_%20ERI.pdf.

5.

The most well-known example is the book by Linda Bilmes and Joseph Stiglitz, The Three Trillion Dollar War (2008). Another well-known example is Eisenhower Study Group, Costs of War project at Brown University, "The Costs of War Since 2001: Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan," Executive Summary, June 2011; see http://costsofwar.org/article/economic-cost-summary.

6.

CBO, Director's Blog, "Comments on Bilmes and Stiglitz, The Three Trillion Dollar War (2008);" http://cboblog.cbo.gov/?p=79.

7.

This level matched the Administration's FY2014 request before congressional action.

8.

§1236 in Rules Committee print 113-58, House amendment to the text of S. 1847, http://www.armed-services.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/CPRT-113-HPRT-RU00-S1847.pdf

9.

Sec. 1236 in Ibid. "Appropriate" committees include armed services, appropriations, and international affairs committees of both houses.

10.

Sec. 1236(j) in Ibid.

11.

See Sec. 1236 for Iraq Train and Equip and other sections in Title XII for expansion of current Train and Equip programs rather than the Administration's proposal; Rules Committee print 113-58, House amendment to the text of S. 1847, http://www.armed-services.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/CPRT-113-HPRT-RU00-S1847.pdf.

12.

For State/USAID and VA Medical, these figures include funding in their base budgets, and for DOD funds in both Title IX of DOD's appropriations acts, and funds in supplementals. In the case of DOD, these figures also include funds transferred to war funding from DOD's base budget.

13.

All DOD war spending has been designated as either emergency or OCO. State Department/USAID spending for Afghanistan and Iraq has been appropriated in either the base budget or as emergency or OCO funding.

14.

CRS calculated this figure using DOD-provided data and "Table 2 – Non-War Programs or Programs Whose Execution Is Not Included in the DOD Cost of War Report" in Department of Defense (DoD), Estimate of Cost of War Report for each fiscal year and other information from DOD. CRS did include war-related National Intelligence Funding, which is war-related but is not implemented or tracked by DOD. All but two of the 24 bills enacted since 9/11 that provided DOD war funding was designated as either emergency or for OCO based on a CRS review.

15.

This figure does not include the cost of benefits for OEF/OIF/OND veterans, which is not available from the VA.

16.

VA does not distinguish veterans of the first Iraq war in 1991 from those from the Afghan and Iraq wars of the past 13 year in its benefit programs but does in discretionary funding for VA medical care.

17.

For details, see CRS Report RL31339, Iraq: Post-Saddam Governance and Security, by [author name scrubbed]. Some 230 U.S. military remain in Iraq as part of the Office of Security Cooperation; that number was expected to have declined to 125 in FY2014; see Department of Defense, Under Secretary of Defense, Comptroller, Addendum, Overseas Contingency Operation, May 2013, p. 9 shows military strength of 230 in FY2013 and 125 in FY2014.

18.

See CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed], and Senate Armed Services Committee, Transcript, "Hearing on Nominations of Admiral Mullen for Reappointment to the Grade of Admiral and Reappointment as chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff," September 15, 2009, p. 6. See also the White House, "Remarks by the President in Address to the Nation on the Way Forward in Afghanistan and Pakistan," Delivered at West Point, December 1, 2009; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-address-nation-way-forward-afghanistan-and-pakistan.

19.

DOD, "Press Conference with Secretary of Defense Gates," December 14, 2009; http://www.defenselink.mil/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=4333. The 21,000 increase was funded in the FY2009 Supplemental and the FY2010 DOD Appropriations Act (Title IX, P.L. 111-118, enacted December 16, 2009).

20.

White House, "Remarks by the President in Address to the Nation on the Way Forward in Afghanistan and Pakistan," Delivered at West Point, December 1, 2009; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/remarks-president-address-nation-way-forward-afghanistan-and-pakistan.

21.

White House, "Remarks by the President on the State of the Union," February 12, 2013; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/02/12/remarks-president-state-union-address.

22.

White House, "Statement by the President on Afghanistan," May 27, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/27/statement-president-afghanistan. Reuters, "Obama to Announce Afghanistan Troop Plans Shortly: Kerry," May 14, 2014; Foreign Policy, FP's Situation Report, "Where's the decision on Afghanistan?" May 22, 2013; [email address scrubbed].; USA Today, "White House scaling back military support for Afghan forces," by Jim Michaels, June 4, 2013. About 1,800 of these troops would conduct counter-terror operations.

23.

White House, "U.S.-Afghan Enduring Strategic Partnership Agreement," May 1, 2012; http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/2012.06.01u.s.-afghanistanspasignedtext.pdf. CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed].

24.

Defense One, "Close to a Deal: U.S., Afghans Agree on Single Text," by Gayle Tzemach Lemmon, August 3, 2013; New York Times, "Amid Drawdown, Fears of Taliban Resurgence and Economic Collapse," by Matthew Rosenberg, May 29, 2014, Pg. A11. CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed].

25.

Department of Defense, Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan, Sec. 1230 Report, p. 22, October 2014; http://www.defense.gov/pubs/Oct2014_Report_Final.pdf.

26.

See "Placemat" in International Security Assistance Force, "Facts and Figures," for ISAF troop levels; http://www.nato/int/isaf/docu/epub/pdf/placement.pdf. For current levels, see CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed].

27.

This is reflected in a jump from 28,000 in December 2011 for OEF support to 67,000 in January 2012 when the Iraq mission ended. The previous month, OIF in-theater support was shown as 42,900, and OIF in-theater support as 28,000. see DOD, "Boots on the Ground report," December 2011 and January 2012.

28.

DOD's new estimate for ONE is $8 billion rather than the $6.5 billion shown in an earlier DOD briefing. For more information, see CRS Report RL31187, Combating Terrorism: 2001 Congressional Debate on Emergency Supplemental Allocations (pdf), and CRS Report RL31829, Supplemental Appropriations FY2003: Iraq Conflict, Afghanistan, Global War on Terrorism, and Homeland Security, both by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

29.

See for example, Department of State, Congressional Budget Justification, Appendix 1: Department of State Operations, Fiscal Year 2015; http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/223495.pdf.

30.

Executive Budget Summary Function 150 & Other International Programs, Fiscal Year 2012, p. 143; http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/183755.pdf. State Department, "Fact Sheet, FY 2012 State and USAID - Overseas Contingency Operations," February 14, 2011; http://www.state.gov/s/d/rm/rls/fs/2011/156555.htm.

31.

CRS, Foreign Affairs Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO): Background and Current Issues, November 19, 2014; http://www.crs.gov/products/if/pdf/IF00063.pdf?Source=search.

32.

Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs, Budget Amendment Summary, Fiscal Year 2015, 7-2-14, p. vi; http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/228924.pdf.

33.

38 U.S.C. §1710(e)(1)(D) states that a veteran who served on active duty in a theater of combat operations (as determined by the Secretary of Veterans Affairs, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense) during a period of war after the Persian Gulf War, or in combat against a hostile force during a period of hostilities after November 11, 1998, is eligible for hospital care, medical services, and nursing home care for any illness, even if there is insufficient medical evidence to conclude that such condition is attributable to such service.

34.

The statutory definition of "off-budget" refers to Social Security and Postal Service revenues and spending; see OMB, FY2014 Budget, Analytical Perspectives, p. 138; http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2014/assets/31_1.pdf.

35.

Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel in House Armed Services Committee, Hearing transcript, "U.S. Strategy on ISIL," September 18, 2014.

36.

CRS Report R41965, The Budget Control Act of 2011, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed].

37.

The spending limits set in the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25) were modified in the Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-240) and the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (P.L. 113-73).

38.

See DOD monthly Cost of War briefing slides, table entitled "Funding Appropriated Through War-Related Requests, FY2001-FY2013," March 2014, and CRS calculation based on tables in Joint Explanatory Statement in Congressional Record, January 15, 2013, p. H800 to p.H806.

39.

CRS estimates reflecting DOD's 95% share of BCA caps for national defense (budget function 050) in each budget request.

40.

Department of Defense, "Estimated Impacts of Sequestration-Level Funding: Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Request;" http://www.defense.gov/pubs/2014_Estimated_Impacts_of_Sequestration-Level_Funding_April.pdf.

41.

CRS calculations comparing estimated BCA "sequester" caps with FY2015 Administration DOD plan.

42.

OMB, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget of the U.S. Government, p. 11 and p. 30, March 4, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2015/assets/budget.pdf.

43.

Within DOD appropriations acts, war-designated funding has been included in Title IX. Additional war-related military construction has been included in the Military Construction/VA appropriations acts in the same fashion.

44.

See Sec. 1503 in H.Rept. 113-446, "Howard P. 'Buck' McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015," on H.R. 4435, May 13, 2014, p. 279.

45.

See Sec. 1524 in H.R. 4435 as passed by the House, 5-22-14; http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-113hr4435eh/pdf/BILLS-113hr4435eh.pdf. This language reflects OMB's modified criteria included in a letter from OMB Program Associate Director, Steven Kosiak, to DOD Comptroller Robert Hale; these criteria have been issued as budget guidance to the Department of Defense.

46.

See p. 100 in H.Rept. 113-403, report on H.Con.Res. 96, Concurrent Resolution on the Budget, Fiscal Year," April 6, 2015, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CRPT-113hrpt403/pdf/CRPT-113hrpt403.pdf.

47.

Transcript, House Budget Committee, "Hearing on President Obama's Funding Request for Overseas Contingency Operations," July 17, 2014.

48.

Ibid.

49.

Transcript, House Armed Services Committee, "Hearing on President Obama's Proposed Fiscal 2015 Supplemental Budget Request for Overseas Contingency Operations," July 16, 2014.

50.

Ibid.

51.

Ibid.

52.

Ibid.

53.

The Senate point of order is section 314(e) of the Budget Act of 1974. See also, CRS Report R41564, Emergency Designation: Current Budget Rules and Procedures, by [author name scrubbed]

54.

See footnote 5 in CRS Report R41564, Emergency Designation: Current Budget Rules and Procedures, by [author name scrubbed] Congress first permitted an OCO designation language in the 2006 budget resolution.

55.

The concern first arose when the Army appeared to be running out of the ability to "cash flow" war costs by using its base budget funds temporarily until Congress passed the FY2004 supplemental; see CRS Memo, "Adequacy of Army's FY2004 Funding for Iraq," by [author name scrubbed], May 5, 2014; available from author. Starting that year, Congress began to include some but not necessarily all war funding in Title IX of DOD's regular appropriations. These funds were to act as a "bridge" to cover ongoing war costs in the initial months of the fiscal year. Congress continued, however, to designate these funds as emergency so that they were not subject to budget limits. See discussion in CRS Report 98-721, Introduction to the Federal Budget Process, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]

56.

DOD, Financial Management Regulations, Chapter 12, Sec. 23, "Contingency Operations," p. 23ff; http://www.dod.mil/comptroller/fmr/12/12_23.pdf.

57.

DOD, Financial Management Regulations, Chapter 12, Sec. 23, "Contingency Operations," p. 23ff; http://www.dod.mil/comptroller/fmr/12/12_23.pdf.

58.

See DOD monthly Cost of War briefing slides, table entitled "Funding Appropriated through War-related Requests, FY2001-FY2013," March 2014, and CRS analysis of congressional reports on supplementals and other war funding, and CRS calculation based on tables in Joint Explanatory Statement in Congressional Record, January 15, 2013, p. H800 to p.H806.

59.

Under Secretary of Defense, Memorandum for Secretaries of the Military Departments, "Fiscal Year (FY) 2008-2013 Program and Budget Review," July 19, 2006, p. 34-49, specifically pp. 36, 39, 41.

60.

Deputy Secretary of Defense Gordon England, Memorandum for Secretaries of the Military Departments, "Ground Rules and Process for FY'07 Spring Supplemental," October 25, 2006.

61.

See Chapter III, p. 19ff in White House, "National Security Strategy," May 2010; https://digitalndulibrary.ndu.edu/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/strategy&CISOPTR=8929&REC=1;

See Chapter III in White House, "The National Security Strategy of the United States of America," March 2006; https://digitalndulibrary.ndu.edu/cdm4/document.php?CISOROOT=/strategy&CISOPTR=5286&REC=2.

62.

CRS calculation based on Table 2-1 Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2015, April 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/FY15_Green_Book.pdf.

63.

CBO, Replacing and Repairing Equipment Used In Iraq and Afghanistan: The Army's Reset Program by Frances M. Lussier, September 2007, p. ix, pp. 35-37; available at http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=8629&sequcence=0&from=7.

64.

Stimson Center, Russell Rumbaugh, What We Bought: Defense Procurement from FY01 to FY10, p. 9, October 28, 2011; http://www.stimson.org/books-reports/what-we-bought-defense-procurement-from-fy01-to-fy10/

65.

Ibid.

66.

OMB, "Criteria for War/Overseas Contingency Operations Funding Requests," February 26, 2009, revised 2010.

67.

CRS Report R40567, Defense: FY2010 Authorization and Appropriations, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].

68.

CBO estimated that the Army's modularity initiative would only make available an additional 6,000 to 7,000 troops. The RAND study argued that the types of units created were not those most needed. RAND, Stretched Thin: Army Forces for Sustained Operations, 7-15-05; http://www.rand.org/pubs/monographs/2005/RAND_MG362.pdf. CBO, An Analysis of the Military's Ability to Sustain an Occupation in Iraq: an Update, October 5, 2005; http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/66xx/doc6682/10-05-05-IraqLetter.pdf.

69.

Secretary of the Army, "Sec. 323 report required by the FY2007 National Defense Authorization Act, P.L. 109-364," February 14, 2007, p. 4.

70.

Program Budget Decision 753, "Other Secretary of Defense Decisions," December 23, 2004, p. 1.

71.

Ibid., and CRS Report RL32476, U.S. Army's Modular Redesign: Issues for Congress, by [author name scrubbed]. CBO estimated that adding two divisions to the Army—roughly equivalent to the President's proposal—would require an additional $108 billion between FY2008 and FY2017. CBO, Budget Options, February 2007, pp. 9-10, http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/78xx/doc7821/02-23-BudgetOptions.pdf.

72.

DOD, FY2008 Global War on Terror Amendment, October 2007, http://www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2008/Supplemental/FY2008_October_Global_War_On_Terror_Amendment.pdf, pp. 48 and 49.

73.

CRS Report RS21754, Military Forces: What Is the Appropriate Size for the United States?, by [author name scrubbed]. See also DOD, "President Bush's FY 2008 Defense Budget Submission," February 5, 2007, which notes that $12.1 billion was included in the FY2008 request for these increases and $1.6 billion in the FY2008 Global War on Terror requests.

74.

Department of Defense, "Sustaining U.S. Global Leadership: Priorities for the 21st Century," p. 6, January 2012; http://www.defense.gov/news/Defense_Strategic_Guidance.pdf.

75.

White House, "Remarks by the President at the National Defense University," Washington, DC, May 23, 2013; White House, http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/05/23/remarks-president-national-defense-university. See also, Table 4 in Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Amendment, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, June 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf. Until these lower personnel levels were achieved, DOD requested and received OCO funding to pay for 49,700 Army and 15,200 Marine Corps personnel active-duty strength that are "over strength" or "above the projected end state needed by these Services [in 2017] to support the new defense strategy." See Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, Fiscal Year 2013 Overview, February 2012, pp. 6-7; http://comptroller.defense.gov/defbudget/fy2013/FY2013_Budget_Request_Overview_Book.pdf. DOD's policy called for these decreases to occur gradually over several years, primarily through attrition rather than involuntary separations, also a policy choice.

76.

For total through FY2008, see Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments, Steve Kosiak, Cost of Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and Other Military Operations, 12-15-08; http://www.csbaonline.org/4Publications/PubLibrary/R.20081215.Cost_of_the_Wars_i/R.20081215.Cost_of_the_Wars_i.pdf; for FY2009, see Table 5-11 in DOD, Fiscal Year 2010: Summary Justification, May 2009;

http://www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2010/fy2010_SSJ.pdf; for FY2010 and FY2011, see Table 8-5 in DOD, FY2011 Budget Request: Overview, February 1, 2010; http://comptroller.defense.gov/defbudget/fy2011/FY2011_Budget_Request_Overview_Book.pdf.

For definition, see Office of the Secretary of Defense, Report to Congress, Ground Force Equipment Repair, Replacement, and Recapitalization Requirements Resulting from Sustained Combat Operations, April 2005, p. 8; see also GAO-06-604T, Defense Logistics: Preliminary Observations on Equipment Reset Challenges and Issues for the Army and Marine Corps, p. 3. DOD, FY2008 Global War on Terror Request, February 2007, Table 3; http://www.dod.mil/comptroller/defbudget/fy2008/fy2007_supplemental/FY2008_Global_War_On_Terror_Request.pdf hereinafter, DOD, FY2008 GWOT Request.

77.

CRS, Statement of [author name scrubbed] before the House Budget Committee, "The Growing Cost of the Iraq War," October 24, 2007 http://budget.house.gov/hearings/2007/10.24Belasco_testimony.pdf.

78.

CBO Testimony by Douglas Holtz-Eakin, Director, "The Potential Costs Resulting from Increased Usage of Military Equipment in Ongoing Operations," before the Subcommittee on Readiness, House Armed Services Committee, April 6, 2005, p. 2.

79.

Statement of Peter J. Schoomaker, Chief of Staff, Department of the Army, before the House Armed Services Committee, "Reset Strategies for Ground Equipment and Rotor Craft," June 27, 2006, p.2; see also testimony of Brigadier General Charles Anderson, U.S. Army, House Armed Services Subcommittee on Readiness and Subcommittee on Air and Land Forces Hold, transcript, "Joint Hearing on Costs and Problems of Maintaining Military Equipment in Iraq," January 31, 2007, p. 6.

80.

Testimony of OMB Director Robert Portman before the House Budget Committee, Hearing on the FY2008 DOD Budget, February 6, 2007, p. 41 of transcript.

81.

See table inserted by Senator Stevens in Congressional Record, August 2, 2006, p. S8571 showing $23.7 billion for reset, including $14 billion in procurement; total funded also provided $4.9 billion for unfunded FY2006 requirement; see also DOD's Report to Congress, Long-Term Equipment Repair Costs, September 2006.

82.

Testimony of General Michael Hagee, Marine Corps Commandant before the House Armed Services Committee, "Army and Marine Corps Reset Strategies for Ground Equipment and Rotor Craft," June 27, 2006, p. 41. GAO-07-439T, Testimony of William Solis before the Subcommittee on Readiness and Air and Land Forces, House Armed Services Committee, January 31, 2007, pp. 2 and 3. In a September 2006 report to Congress, for example, annual reset requirements in FY2008 were estimated to be $13 billion for the Army and about $1 billion for the Marine Corps; see Office of the Secretary of Defense, Report to the Congress, "Long-Term Equipment Repair Costs," September 2006, pp. 24 and 25. Months earlier, in the spring of 2006, the Army estimated that reset requirements would decrease from $13 billion a year to $10.5 billion a year for the next two years and then decline to $2 billion a year if troops were withdrawn over a two-year period; see Army Briefing, "Army Equipment Reset Update," May 18, 2006, p. 8.

83.

CRS, Statement of [author name scrubbed] before the House Budget Committee, "The Rising Cost of the Iraq War," October 24, 2007; http://budget.house.gov/hearings/2007/10.24Belasco_testimony.pdf.

84.

CRS calculations based on DOD, "Cost of War Execution Report," April 30, 2010.

85.

See for example, Sec. 314 and Sec. 315 and Sec. P.L. 110-32 in the FY2009 Supplemental Appropriations Act applying to "this or any other act," and Sec. 1237 and Sec. 2806, P.L. 111-84, the FY2010 National Defense Authorization Act; see also section, "More Spending for Bases in Afghanistan Raises Questions of Permanency and Execution," in CRS Report R41232, FY2010 Supplemental for Wars, Disaster Assistance, Haiti Relief, and Other Programs, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]. These prohibitions were repeated in annual DOD appropriation and authorization acts.

86.

See for example, Department of Defense, Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan, Sec. 1230 Report, October 2014, Department of Defense, Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan; p. 5-p. 6, October 2014; http://www.defense.gov/pubs/Oct2014_Report_Final.pdf.

87.

DOD data provided to CRS for FY2001-FY2008 and tables included in DOD's monthly cost of war reports for September 2009 to June 2014.

88.

White House, Office of the Press Secretary, "Remarks by the President in the State of the Uolsternion Address," February 12, 2013; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/02/12/remarks-president-state-union-address.

89.

White House, "Statement by the President on Afghanistan," May 27, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/27/statement-president-afghanistan; White House, Press Release, "Fact Sheet: Bringing the U.S. War in Afghanistan to a Responsible End," May 27,2014.

90.

Washington Post, "U.S. plans extra troops for Afghanistan," by Missy Ryan, December 5, 2014.

91.

Washington Post, "Afghan mission for U.S. to continue under new authorities," by Karen DeYoung and Missy Ryan; http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/white-house-gives-commanders-broader-authority-to-support-afghan-troops/2014/11/22/8741f2fc-724e-11e4-ad12-3734c461eab6_story.html.

92.

CRS calculations based on Figure 1 and Table 1 in Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Amendment, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, June 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf.

93.

Testimony of DOD Comptroller, Mike McCord before the House Armed Services Committee, Transcript, "Hearing on President Obama's Proposed Fiscal 2015 Supplemental Budget Request for Overseas Contingency Operations," July 16, 2014.

94.

Department of Defense, Under Secretary of Defense, Comptroller, Addendum, Overseas Contingency Operation, May 2013, p.1.

95.

Testimony of Robert Work before House Budget Committee, Transcript, "Hearing on President Obama's Funding Request for Overseas Contingency Operations," July 17, 2014–Final.

96.

Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget Amendment, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, June 2014; p. 2, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf.

97.

Monies can be obligated or de-obligated after their lives expire to adjust already-signed contracts for up to five years, though the adjustments are generally minor.

98.

Statutory language in appropriation acts set the availability or "life" of funds in each account.

99.

Congress sets caps each year in DOD appropriations acts on the overall amount that can be transferred from base budget accounts and separately for Title IX war-designated accounts. See for example, Sec. 8005 in P.L. 113-76, FY2014 Consolidated Appropriations Act; "SEC. 8005. Upon determination by the Secretary of Defense that such action is necessary in the national interest, he may, with the approval of the Office of Management and Budget, transfer not to exceed $5,000,000,000 of working capital funds of the Department of Defense or funds made available in this Act to the Department of Defense for military functions (except military construction) between such appropriations or funds or any subdivision thereof, to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes, and for the same time period, as the appropriation or fund to which transferred." See also vol. 12, chap. 23 in Department of Defense, Financial Management Regulations, Contingency Operations; http://www.defenselink.mil/comptroller/fmr/12/12_23.pdf.

100.

CRS analysis of data in DOD's cost of war execution reports and its cumulative database as of June 2014.

101.

DOD, Comptroller, "Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Request, Various Appropriations, FY14-13 PA," September 8, 2014 (ISIL campaign); http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/execution/reprogramming/fy2014/prior1415s/14-13_PA_OCO_Request.pdf.

102.

DOD, Comptroller, August 2014, Various Appropriations, Ebola, 9-8-14; Ebola FY14-14 PA, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/execution/reprogramming/fy2014/prior1415s/14-14_PA_August_2014_Request.pdf. DOD, Comptroller, "Additional Ebola Response," Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster Assistance, 14/15 and Operation and Maintenance, Army, 14/14, 9-5-14; $500 million, Ebola, deemed OCO; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/execution/reprogramming/fy2014/prior1415s/14-17_PA_Ebola_Response.pdf. Although the three reprogrammings totaled $1.0 billion, the four Congressional defense committees capped the total at $750 million.

103.

DOD, Comptroller, "Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Request, Various Appropriations, FY14-13 PA," September 8, 2014 (ISIL campaign); http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/execution/reprogramming/fy2014/prior1415s/14-13_PA_OCO_Request.pdf. Congress ultimately placed a $750 million cap on DOD's Ebola humanitarian assistance. These factors would presumably also reduce costs anticipated in FY2015.

104.

See Appendix B, OMB, "Revised War Funding Criteria," September 2010.

105.

The BCA (P.L. 112-25) required a sequester in FY2013.

106.

Memorandum, Deputy Secretary of Defense, Ashton Carter to the services and defense agencies, "Planning for Uncertainty," January 10, 2013.

107.

Memorandum, Secretary of Defense, Chuck Hagel to the Services and defense agencies, "Furloughs," May 14, 2013.

108.

CRS calculations based on table provided by DOD tracking individual accounts from BA enacted to post-sequester funding levels, September 2013.

109.

Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, Overview, Overseas Contingency Operations, p. 2-p.3, June 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_Budget_Request_Overview_Book_Amended.pdf. See also, Testimony of Michael McCord, Under Secretary of Defense, Comptroller before House Armed Services Committee, Hearing on President Obama's Proposed Fiscal 2015 Supplemental Budget Request for Overseas Contingency Operations, June 16, 2014, pp. 3- 4, July 16, 2014.

110.

With fewer troops, the services will not need to rely on as many reservists, with the additional activation costs.

111.

See CRS, Statement of [author name scrubbed] before the House Budget Committee, Hearing on "The Rising Cost of the Iraq War," October 24, 2007; http://budget.house.gov/hearings/2007/10.24Belasco_testimony.pdf; Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan, "At What Cost: Contingency Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan," Interim Report, pp.34, June 2009; http://www.wartimecontracting.gov/docs/CWC_Interim_Report_At_What_Cost_06-10-09.pdf. Commission on wartime Contracting, Final Report, 8-31-11; http://www.sigar.mil/.

112.

See Congressional Record, Joint Explanatory Statement for H.R. 933, "Department of Defense, Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2013,'' p. 998 and p. 1240. See also troop reduction cut of $380.1 million shown on p. 794 in H.Rept. 112-331. See also congressional action in P.L. 113-118 (H.Rept. 111-118) to transfer $5.0 billion from DOD military personnel and O&M accounts to the Overseas Contingency Operations Transfer Fund (OCOTF) because "The nature of military action in Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom is expected to change significantly in fiscal year 2010. Therefore, the Services cannot accurately budget for these operations. The OCOTF account provides flexibility to transfer funds to the needed appropriation account once costs are known." (H.Rept. 111-230, p. 424)

113.

Operational costs include war funds for military personnel and O&M excluding programs like coalition support and training of Afghan and Iraq security forces; investment funds include war-designated procurement, RDT&E, and military construction.

114.

CRS calculations, based on figures shown in Figure 7.

115.

Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense/Comptroller, "Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund and the European Reassurance Initiative," June 2014, pp. 1-2; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_OCO_CTPF_and_%20ERI.pdf.

116.

Office of Management and Budget, Estimate #2—FY 2015 Budget Amendments: Department of Defense (DOD) and Department of State and Other International Programs (State/OIP) to update the FY 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations funding levels; for both DOD and State/OIP to implement the Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund and the European Reassurance Initiative; and for State/OIP peacekeeping costs in the Central African Republic.—06/26/2014, pp. 26-30; http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/budget_amendments/final_fy_2015_oco_amendment_-_062414.pdf.

117.

Ibid., p. 12-p. 27.

118.

Congress appropriated $20 billion in the government-wide Emergency Response Fund which could be spent by the President at his discretion (P.L. 107-38). In the FY2002 DOD conference report, DOD also received another $3.5 billion in the newly established Defense Emergency Response Fund (DERF) subject to allocations in H.Rept. 107-350 (p. 423).

119.

Congress appropriated $20 billion in the government-wide Emergency Response Fund which could be spent by the President at his discretion (P.L. 107-38). DOD also received another $3.5 billion in the DERF but had to follow allocations that were set in the FY2002 DOD Conference report (H.Rept. 107-350, p. 423).

120.

H.Rept. 107-593, p.17 and 128.

121.

Congress rescinded $3.5 billion of the $15.6 billion originally appropriated to the IFF and included ceilings for certain purposes, such as intelligence, within the total.

122.

CRS Report RL32422, The Administration's FY2005 Request for $25 Billion for Operations in Iraq and Afghanistan: Precedents, Options, and Congressional Action, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

123.

For President's West Point speech, see White House, Office of the Press Secretary, "Remarks by the President at the United States Military Academy Commencement Ceremony," U.S. Military Academy-West Point, West Point, New York, May 28, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/28/remarks-president-west-point-academy-commencement-ceremony.

124.

Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense/Comptroller, "Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund and the European Reassurance Initiative," June 2014, pp. 1-p. 11, http://comptroller. defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_OCO_CTPF_and_%20ERI.pdf.

125.

Some of these funds are financed in the base budget and some in OCO. House Budget Committee, Transcript, "Hearing on President Obama's Funding Request for Overseas Contingency Operations," July 17, 2014; House Armed Services Committee, Transcript, "Hearing on President Obama's Proposed Fiscal 2015 Supplemental Budget Request for Overseas Contingency Operations," July 16, 2014.

126.

House Armed Services Committee, transcript, "Hearing on President Obama's Proposed Fiscal 2015 Supplemental Budget Request for Overseas Contingency Operations," July 16, 2014.

127.

Sec. 149 (f) and Sec.101(a)(3) of the Continuing Appropriations Resolution, 2015, P.L. 113-164.

128.

CRS Report R43727, Proposed Train and Equip Authorities for Syria: In Brief, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

129.

Ibid.

130.

This practice is known as "cashflowing," where DOD finances military operations with current funds that were to be used for other purposes, in anticipation that Congress will later provide appropriations.

131.

CRS Report R43760, A New Authorization for Use of Military Force Against the Islamic State: Comparison of Current Proposals in Brief, by [author name scrubbed].

132.

For a full discussion of the budgetary and political-military issues, see CRS Report R43727, Proposed Train and Equip Authorities for Syria: In Brief, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

133.

Senate Armed Services Committee, "Fact Sheet: Highlights of the NDAA," p. 6, December 4, 2014, http://armedservices.house.gov/index.cfm/files/serve?File_id=F477F464-90AE-4B7A-AD7A-438065807D04.

134.

This authority is currently available under 10 U.S.C. Section 127d; see also in Department of Defense, Fiscal Year 2015, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense/Comptroller, "Counterterrorism Partnerships Fund and the European Reassurance Initiative," June 2014, p. 5, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY2015_OCO_CTPF_and_%20ERI.pdf .

135.

The cap is set by statute within the Defensewide O&M account. See also CRS Report R41832, Pakistan-U.S. Relations, by [author name scrubbed]. Smaller amounts were provided to neighboring countries neighboring Afghanistan who participate in the "global war on terror."

136.

Counter-insurgency funding was also provided to Pakistan in the State Department's Pakistan Counterinsurgency Capability Fund; see CRS Report R42116, Pakistan: U.S. Foreign Aid Conditions, Restrictions, and Reporting Requirements, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

137.

CRS Report R42094, The Lord's Resistance Army: The U.S. Response, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

138.

CRS Report RS22871, Department of Defense "Section 1207" Security and Stabilization Assistance: Background and Congressional Concerns, FY2006-FY2010, by [author name scrubbed].

139.

CRS Report R42541, United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS): CRS Experts, by [author name scrubbed].

140.

See 10 U.S.C. Section 127d, and DOD; email response to CRS query, November 15, 2014.

141.

CRS comparison of Administration request with enacted version.

142.

CRS excluded coalition support because this authority is reimbursement for current logistical support to U.S. operations rather than a partnership to expand capacity through train-and-equip programs.

143.

Department of State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs, "Budget Amendment Summary, Fiscal Year 2015, http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/228924.pdf. The Administration request would required "concurrence" by the Secretary of State whereas H.J.Res. 124 requires "coordination"; see Table 1 in CRS Report R43727, Proposed Train and Equip Authorities for Syria: In Brief, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

144.

RAND, "Review of Security Cooperation Mechanisms Combatant Commands Utilize to Build Partner Capacity," by Jennifer D. P. Moroney, David E. Thaler, Joe Hogler, 2013, prepared for the Joint Staff and OSD/CAPE, p. xv, p. xvi; http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR400/RR413/RAND_RR413.sum.pdf.

145.

Ibid., p. xix, p. xxi, and p. xxii.

146.

Ibid., p. xiii, and throughout.

147.

RAND, "How Successful Are U.S. Efforts to Build Capacity in Developing Countries? A Framework to Assess the Global Train and Equip '1206' Programs," by Jennifer D. P. Moroney, Beth Grill, Joe Hogler, Lianne Kennedy-Bouldali, Christorpher Paul, pp. xiii, 4, 2013; http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR400/RR413/RAND_RR413.pdf.

148.

CRS Report RS22855, Security Assistance Reform: "Section 1206" Background and Issues for Congress , by [author name scrubbed], pp. 14, 18.

149.

RAND, "What Works Best When Building Partner Capacity and Under What Circumstances?" by Christopher Paul, Colin P. Clarke, Beth Grill, Stephanie Young, Jennifer D. P. Moroney, Joe Hogler, and Christine Leah, pp. xvii-xx, 2013, http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/monographs/MG1200/MG1253z1/RAND_MG1253z1.pdf.

150.

RAND, "Security Cooperation Amidst Political Uncertainty: An Agenda for Future Research," by Larry Hanauer and Stephanie Pezard, " July 2014 http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/working_papers/WR1000/WR1052/RAND_WR1052.pdf.

151.

David Remnick, "Going the Distance, On and Off the Road with Barack Obama," Annals of the Presidency, The New Yorker,, January 27, 2014, http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/01/27/going-the-distance-2.

152.

Office of the Secretary of Defense, Department of Defense Budget, Fiscal Year (FY) 2015, "Justification for FY 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO), Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF)," June 2014; http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/FY2015_ASFF_Justification_Book-Final.pdf.

153.

During execution, the funds are transferred to Army O&M, which implements the programs. Based on a statutory requirement, Congress receives semi-annual reports on progress in meeting such security needs.

154.

A GAO report suggested that there would be an Iraqi budget surplus of from $67 billion to $79 billion in 2008 due to oil prices; Members called for "burdensharing" by Iraq in the rebuilding of its security forces. GAO-08-1144T, Statement of Joseph A. Christoff before the House Budget Committee, "Stabilizing and Rebuilding Iraq: Iraqi Revenues, Expenditures, and Surplus," p. 3, September 16, 2008.

155.

See Explanatory Statement for H.R. 2642 in Congressional Record, May 19, 2008, p. S4337; and Sec. 1508 in S. 3001, the FY2009 National Defense Authorization Act. Sec. 9205, P.L. 110-252.

156.

See Section 1321, P.L. 110-181 Report, "United States Plan for Sustaining the Afghanistan National Security Forces," April 2010.

157.

CRS Report R41232, FY2010 Supplemental for Wars, Disaster Assistance, Haiti Relief, and Other Programs, coordinated by [author name scrubbed]; and Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, "Actions Needed to Improve the Reliability of Afghan Security Force Assessments," June 29, 2010, http://www.sigar.mil/pdf/audits/SIGAR%20Audit-10-11.pdf.

158.

The reporting ended as the U.S. presence diminished making it difficult to assess conditions. This reporting requirement was first required in H.Rept. 109-72 accompanying H.R. 1268, Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense, the Global War on Terror, and Tsunami Relief, 2005, P.L. 109-13. For the final report, see Department of Defense, Measuring Stability and Security in Iraq, June 2010, Report to Congress In accordance with the Department of Defense Supplemental Appropriations Act 2008 (Section 9204, P.L. 110-252), http://www.defense.gov/pubs/pdfs/June_9204_Sec_Def_signed_20_Aug_2010.pdf.

159.

"Investigation Finds 50,000 'Ghost' Soldiers in Iraqi Army, Prime Minister Says," Washington Post, http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/investigation-finds-50000-ghost-soldiers-in-iraqi-army-prime-minister-says/2014/11/30/d8864d6c-78ab-11e4-9721-80b3d95a28a9_story.html.

160.

DOD, Section 9204 Report, Measuring Security and Stability in Iraq, pp. vi-ix, June 2010, http://www.defense.gov/pubs/pdfs/June_9204_Sec_Def_signed_20_Aug_2010.pdf.

161.

Ibid., pp. 28- 37; quote from p. x.

162.

Statement of Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta before the Senate Armed Services Committee in hearing on "Security Issues Relating to Iraq,"112th Congress, First Session, November 15, 2011, p. 8.

163.

Ibid., p. 174.

164.

Ibid., pp. 178-179 and 191ff.

165.

Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction, Quarterly Report to the United States Congress, SIGIR Observations, p. 10, April 30, 2013, http://cybercemetery.unt.edu/archive/sigir/20131001091934/http://www.sigir.mil/files/quarterlyreports/April2013/Report_-_April_2013.pdf.

166.

Anthony H. Cordesman, Sam Khazai, and Daniel Dewit, "Shaping Iraq's Security Forces, US-Iranian Competition Series," Center for Strategic and International Affairs, pp. 10-12, December 16, 2013, http://csis.org/files/publication/131213_Iraq_Security_Forces.pdf.

167.

John McCain, "Senators Send Letter to President Obama on Iraq as PM Maliki Visits DC," press release from the Office of Senator John McCain, October 29, 2013, http://www.mccain.senate.gov/public/index.cfm/pressreleases? ID=81e7d512-8a62-4a63-a573-bf81867b9598.

168.

Loveday Morris, "Iraqi Army Struggles in Battle Against Islamist Fighters in Anbar Province," Washington Post, , http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/iraqi-army-struggles-in-battle-against-islamist-fighters-in-anbar-province/2014/02/25/b76792d2-9b00-11e3-8112-52fdf646027b_story.html.

169.

Loveday Morris, "Iraqi Army Faces Death and Desertions as It Struggles with Anbar Offensive," Washington Post, May 8, 2014; 2014, http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/iraqi-army-faces-death-and-desertions-as-it-struggles-with-anbar-offensive/2014/05/08/83720f79-6cd2-4c7c-883b-dfe181ce7a5b_story.html.

170.

For the latest quarterly report, see Department of Defense, Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan, Sec. 1230 report, April 2014, http://www.defense.gov/pubs/April_1230_Report_Final.pdf.

171.

Ibid., pp.31-32, 43, and 54.

172.

Ibid., pp. 31-35, 45.

173.

Ibid., pp. 41-43, 52-54.

174.

Executive Summary in Center for Naval Analysis, "Independent Assessment of the Afghan National Security Forces," by Jonathan Schroden et. al., January 2014, http://www.cna.org/sites/default/files/research/CNA%20Independent%20Assessment%20of%20the%20ANSF.pdf.

175.

Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction, Letter to Kerry, Hagel, Shah about oversight concerns, Special Project 14-14, October 10, 2013, http://www.sigar.mil/pdf/alerts/SIGAR_14-4-SP.pdf.

176.

Sec. 1110 in P.L. 108-106, FY2004 Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense and for the Reconstruction of Iraq and Afghanistan," November 6, 2003.

177.

For more information about these reconstruction programs, see CRS Report R40699, Afghanistan: U.S. Foreign Assistance, by [author name scrubbed].

178.

Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/CFO, Department of Defense, "Budget Execution: Processes and Flexibility," May 2012; "Budget Execution Tutorial," http://comptroller.defense.gov/BudgetExecution.aspx.

179.

For example, caps on war funding were $4 billion (4.7%) of $85 billion in FY2014, $3.5 billion (4.1%) out of $86 billion in FY2013; $4 billion (3.5%) out of $114 billion in FY2012; $3.5 billion (2.5%) out of $114 billion in FY2011; and $4 billion (3.1%) out of $128 billion in FY2010.

180.

DOD obligations for FY2014 have been slower than in the previous five years, suggesting that substantial one-year monies may lapse. In addition, DOD requested reprogrammings using $2.6 billion O&M, Army as a source because the withdrawals have been faster than anticipated. If less funds are needed in FY2014, and the withdrawal is ahead of schedule, the FY2015 request may also be over-stated.

181.

DOD, "Special Report, Operation Inherent Resolve, Targeted Operations Against ISIL Terrorists," December 8, 2014 , http://www.defense.gov/home/features/2014/0814_iraq/.

182.

DOD, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) Fiscal Year (FY) 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Budget Amendment Update, pp. 2-3, November 2014, http://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2015/amendment/FY15_OCO_Budget_Amendment_Update.pdf.

183.

Office of Management and Budget, Estimate #5—FY 2015 Budget Amendments: Department of Defense (DOD) and Department of State and Other International Programs (State/OIP) to implement the Administration's Strategy to Counter the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and update the FY 2015 Overseas Contingency Operations funding levels for both DOD and State/OIP, p. 11, November 10, 2014, http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/budget_amendments/amendment_11_10_14.pdf.

184.

Ibid., p. 12.

185.

Ibid., p. 12.

186.

Sec. 1236 in Rules Committee print 113-58, House amendment to the text of S. 1847, http://www.armed-services.senate.gov/imo/me.

187.

Ibid., p. 9.

188.

Contributed by [author name scrubbed], Foreign Affairs, Defense and Trade Division, CRS.

189.

White House, "Statement by the President on Afghanistan," May 27, 2014, http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/27/statement-president-afghanistan; CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed].

190.

"U.S. Plans Extra Troops for Afghanistan," Washington Post, December 4, 2014.

191.

White House, "Fact Sheet: Wales SummitNATO's Changing Role in Afghanistan," http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/04/fact-sheet-wales-summit-nato-s-changing-role-afghanistan.

192.

Declan Walsh and Azam Ahmed, "Mending Alliance, U.S. and Afghanistan Sign Long-Term Security Agreement," New York Times, September 30, 2014, http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/01/world/asia/afghanistan-and-us-sign-bilateral-security-agreement.html.

193.

"July deadline missed: DOD Planning To Release OCO Budget 'Migration Guidance' This Fall, Inside the Pentagon, August 14, 2014, http://insidedefense.com/Inside-the-Pentagon/Inside-the-Pentagon-08/14/2014/dod-planning-to-release-oco-budget-migration-guidance-this-fall/menu-id-148.html.

194.

Jen Judson, "Lawmakers Brace for Long-Term OCO Account," Politico Pro, Defense, October 24, 2014.

195.

"Comptroller: Pentagon Discussing Future Of OCO Budget, Increased Spending in Europe," Inside Defense, October 2014.

196.

The Administration requested $28 billion in a separate Opportunity, Growth, and Security Initiative that would have breached BCA caps, but the appropriators marked to BCA caps.

197.

Department of Defense, Report on Progress Toward Security and Stability in Afghanistan, pp. 1-2, October 2014, http://www.defense.gov/pubs/Oct2014_Report_Final.pdf.

198.

Ibid., p. 15.

199.

International Crisis Group, Afghanistan's Insurgency after the Transition, Asia Report No. 256, pp. 1-2, May 12, 2014; http://www.crisisgroup.org/~/media/Files/asia/south-asia/afghanistan/256-afghanistan-s-insurgency-after-the-transition.pdf.

200.

CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed].

201.

OMB, Table S-10 in FY2015 Mid-Session Review, July 2014 (includes amended war request, and post-sequester funding in FY2013), http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2015/assets/15msr.pdf. OMB's placeholder projections have fallen each year, mirroring policy decisions about troop levels; for example, in FY2012 President's Budget assumed a $50 billion placeholder in the outyears. See Table S-10 in OMB, FY2011 Budget, Summary Tables, http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2011/assets/tables.pdf.

202.

See Table 1-7 in CBO, Update to Budget and Economic Outlook, August 2014, http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/45653-OutlookUpdate_2014_Aug.pdf.

203.

OMB, Table S-10 in FY2015 Mid-Session Review, July 2014, http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2015/assets/15msr.pdf.

204.

OMB, Fiscal Year 2015 Budget of the U.S. Government, p. 59, March 4, 2014; http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2015/assets/budget.pdf.

205.

For the base budget, for example, CBO's baseline reflects the statutory BCA "sequester" caps.

206.

For the baseline projections for OCO, see pp. 434 and 475 of OMB, FY2014 Budget, Analytical Perspectives, http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BUDGET-2014-PER/pdf/BUDGET-2014-PER.pdf; for use of proposed "savings" from lower OCO costs, see Table S-2 and Table S-3 in OMB, FY2014 Budget, "Summary Tables," http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2014/assets/tables.pdf.

207.

CBO, Letter to Congressman Ryan, Chair, House Budget Committee, "Capping War-Related Spending," February 10, 2014, http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/CappingWar-RelatedSpending_RyanLtr.pdf. See also, CBO, Blog Post, "Can Proposed Reductions in Future War-Related Spending Be Used to Offset Proposed Deficit Increases in Other Areas?" February 1, 2012, http://www.cbo.gov/publication/423916.

208.

By 2017, U.S. troops could total 2,750, including 2,000 counterterrorism forces who may stay and a substantial embassy presence. Per-troop costs could total $500,000, the pre-surge level, though this cost could be lower because the United States would.no longer be maintaining bases or conducting operations except for counterterrorism.

209.

After the Iraq withdrawal, the number of troops providing in-theater support for Iraq decreased from a pre-surge level of some 34,000 to about 25,000, or by about 27%. If the same happened for OEF support, U.S. troops would decline from 31,000 (before the surge) to 18,000 by FY2019. Together with slightly lower support for OIF countries, total in-theater support would fall from 63,000 to 38,000 by FY2019.

210.

"U.S.-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement," May 2, 2012, pp. 3, 4, and 9; CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed]; White House, "Fact Sheet: Wales SummitNATO's Changing Role in Afghanistan," http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/04/fact-sheet-wales-summit-nato-s-changing-role-afghanistan.

211.

Mark Mazzetti and Eric Schmitt, "In a Shift, Obama Extends U.S. Role in Afghan Combat," New York Times, November 21, 2014, http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/22/us/politics/in-secret-obama-extends-us-role-in-afghan-combat.html?_r=0.

212.

For an analysis of the legal issues in restricting military operations, see CRS Report RL33837, Congressional Authority to Limit U.S. Military Operations in Iraq, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed]. For examples of past enacted and proposed restrictions, see CRS Report RL33803, Congressional Restrictions on U.S. Military Operations in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Somalia, and Kosovo: Funding and Non-Funding Approaches, by [author name scrubbed] et al. For recent proposals to restrict military operations, see CRS Report RL33900, FY2007 Supplemental Appropriations for Defense, Foreign Affairs, and Other Purposes, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].

213.

See discussion and language of the Cooper-Church amendment (Sec. 7, P.L. 91-652) in CRS Report RL33803, Congressional Restrictions on U.S. Military Operations in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Somalia, and Kosovo: Funding and Non-Funding Approaches, by [author name scrubbed] et al.

214.

One provision was included in both P.L. 93-52, the Continuing Appropriations Act of 1974, and P.L. 93-50, the Second Supplemental Appropriations Act of 1973, both enacted July 1, 1973; see CRS Report RL33803, Congressional Restrictions on U.S. Military Operations in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Somalia, and Kosovo: Funding and Non-Funding Approaches, by [author name scrubbed] et al..

215.

See H.R. 17123, H.R. 6531, and H.R. 15628 in Table 1 and Appendix of CRS Report RL33803, Congressional Restrictions on U.S. Military Operations in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Somalia, and Kosovo: Funding and Non-Funding Approaches, by [author name scrubbed] et al..

216.

CRS Report RS20775, Congressional Use of Funding Cutoffs Since 1970 Involving U.S. Military Forces and Overseas Deployments, by [author name scrubbed]; CRS Report R43760, A New Authorization for Use of Military Force Against the Islamic State: Comparison of Current Proposals in Brief, by [author name scrubbed]; and CRS Report RL31133, Declarations of War and Authorizations for the Use of Military Force: Historical Background and Legal Implications, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

217.

Congressional Record, July 25, 2014, p. H6833.

218.

Congressional Record, June 19, 2014, p. H5538, Roll Call Vote no. 332.

219.

Congressional Record, June 19, 2014; p. H5528.

220.

Congressional Record, June 19, 2014, p. H5529, Roll Call Vote no. 328.

221.

Congressional Record, May 17, 2012, pp. H3011-H3014 and H3034-H3035, and Roll Call Vote no. 264.

222.

Congressional Record, May 25, 2011, p. H3666 and Roll Call Vote no. 364.

223.

See H.Rept. 111-522, pp. 5 and 58 and Congressional Record, July 1, 2010, pp. H5358-H5407.

224.

See H.Rept. 111-522, pp. 5 and 59ff and Congressional Record, July 1, 2010, pp. H5358-H5407.

225.

Ibid.

226.

Requirement included in H.Rept. 111-230 to accompany the FY2010 DOD Appropriations Act (P.L. 110-3118).

227.

Letter from Steven M. Kosiak, Associate Director for Defense and Foreign Affairs, OMB, to Robert Hale, Under Secretary of Defense, Comptroller, "Revised War Funding Criteria," September 9, 2010.

228.

This breakdown is similar to the analysis, "Changes in Per-Troop Costs" but only covers FY2009-FY2015 because DOD has not provided data for the Afghan and Iraq war before then.

229.

The categories shown in Table D-1 reflect DOD categories used in its Overview of Contingency Operations requests between FY2009 and FY2015 though DOD does not show all categories in all years; in these cases, CRS notes the categories are na or "not available" or ns, "not specified."

230.

Though most equipment rotates with units as they deploy and redeploy, some equipment remains "in-theater" for the next unit, and would be shipped home later.

231.

While some levels of "carryover" is considered desirable to provide work when orders do not materialize, the "calculated actual carryover" is expected to exceed the "allowable" carryover in both FY2014 and FY2015 for Armdepots; see Army Working Capital Fund, Fiscal Year (FY) 2015 Budget Estimates, March 2014, p. 58; http://asafm.army.mil/Documents/OfficeDocuments/Budget/budgetmaterials/fy15//awcf.pdf.