Gates goes after military health care

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Gates goes after military health care

WASHINGTON – Defense Secretary Robert Gates is betting that Americans' frustration with a ballooning deficit will finally allow him to trim one of the government's most politically protected entitlement programs: the military's $50 billion-a-year health care system.

The defense chief has tried to push similar proposals through Congress before and failed. And this year's pitch is a particularly fraught with political risk. President Barack Obama is defending his own health care plan from threats of repeal in the House, while Republicans are looking for ways ahead of the 2012 election to discredit the administration's commitment to the troops.

The military health care program, set up in the 1960s and known as TRICARE, has exploded in cost in recent years with some 10 million individuals now eligible for coverage, including active-duty personnel, retirees, reservists and their families. The price tag has climbed from $19 billion a year a decade ago to its current $50 billion.

Last month, Congress voted to extend coverage of children of service members and retirees until the age of 26, putting the program in line with new requirements for civilian policies.

Gates has been blunt about what he regards as the need to rein in the soaring costs of the program.

"Leaving aside the sacred obligation we have to America's wounded warriors, health care costs are eating the Defense Department alive," Gates said.

But cutting the U.S. defense budget is never a simple task, and Gates' broader spending plans have already drawn fire from Congress.

"I remain committed to applying more fiscal responsibility and accountability to the Department of Defense, but I will not stand idly by and watch the White House gut defense when Americans are deployed in harm's way," Rep. Buck McKeon, R-Calif., the new chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said of Gates' broader proposal to cut $78 billion from the Pentagon budget over the next five years.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110107/ap_on_re_us/us_pentagon_budget_cuts

and people really support obamacare....weird
 
I'm discussing something - your inexplicable adoration of Dick Cheney.

Try to keep up, Yurtsie...

way to stay on topic onceler and way to spread the lies

Anyone notice how onceler never really discusses anything, and just throws out lame, uber-partisan one-liners?
 
Gates goes after military health care

WASHINGTON – Defense Secretary Robert Gates is betting that Americans' frustration with a ballooning deficit will finally allow him to trim one of the government's most politically protected entitlement programs: the military's $50 billion-a-year health care system.

The defense chief has tried to push similar proposals through Congress before and failed. And this year's pitch is a particularly fraught with political risk. President Barack Obama is defending his own health care plan from threats of repeal in the House, while Republicans are looking for ways ahead of the 2012 election to discredit the administration's commitment to the troops.

The military health care program, set up in the 1960s and known as TRICARE, has exploded in cost in recent years with some 10 million individuals now eligible for coverage, including active-duty personnel, retirees, reservists and their families. The price tag has climbed from $19 billion a year a decade ago to its current $50 billion.

Last month, Congress voted to extend coverage of children of service members and retirees until the age of 26, putting the program in line with new requirements for civilian policies.

Gates has been blunt about what he regards as the need to rein in the soaring costs of the program.

"Leaving aside the sacred obligation we have to America's wounded warriors, health care costs are eating the Defense Department alive," Gates said.

But cutting the U.S. defense budget is never a simple task, and Gates' broader spending plans have already drawn fire from Congress.

"I remain committed to applying more fiscal responsibility and accountability to the Department of Defense, but I will not stand idly by and watch the White House gut defense when Americans are deployed in harm's way," Rep. Buck McKeon, R-Calif., the new chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, said of Gates' broader proposal to cut $78 billion from the Pentagon budget over the next five years.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110107/ap_on_re_us/us_pentagon_budget_cuts

and people really support obamacare....weird

Then there's the pensions. After 20 years of service they "retire" at 40, collect their pension while pursuing another career.
 
they also need to reduce the medical care for law enforcement. I'm tired of hearing about officers going to the ER and getting 3 days off with workmens comp for a scratch they got when they tackled a 15 year old kid.
 
Because the cost is ridiculous compared to the services you receive. A modern day saying about going to medical(TRICARE) is it'll be faster to just buy some Motrin and a gallon of water (don't drink base water).

Where is Cypress? He used to hype up how good Tricare was.
 
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