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Trump to demand foreign aid cut, more defense spending

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President Donald Trump will ask Congress for more money to spend on defence

On the eve of his first congressional address Tuesday President Donald Trump offered a taste of his upcoming budget, announcing he would ask Congress for a nearly 10 percent rise in defense spending and a large cut in foreign aid.

Previewing measures designed to back up campaign promises with dollars and cents, Trump promised a fiscal plan focused on “public safety and national security.”

An administration official said Trump’s plan would include a $54 billion increase in defense spending and a corresponding decrease in non-military programs.

“Most federal agencies will see a reduction as a result,” the official said. There will be a “large reduction in foreign aid,” he added, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Trump has put security threats front and center of his administration and insisted a blunt, muscular response is the only remedy.

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He has promised to build a wall on the Mexican border, deport unauthorized immigrants and wipe jihadists off the “face of the earth.”

His budget proposal — which must ultimately be approved by Congress — doubles down on that ethos.

It would substantially increase US defense spending — already by far the highest in the world — although there were no details about how the extra funds would be spent.

‘Keeping Americans safe’

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Trump claimed his budget “follows through on my promise on keeping Americans safe.”

“It will include a historic increase in defense spending to rebuild the depleted military of the United States of America at a time we most need it,” Trump said.

Republican Senator John McCain argued that the increase was less significant than Trump suggested, representing a three percent rise over projections for fiscal year 2018.

President Donald Trump of US

“We can and must do better,” he said.

But others raised questions about the impact of planned cuts at the State Department and the Environmental Protection Agency.

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Foreign aid accounts for less than one percent of US federal spending, and reducing it would not be enough to compensate for a big rise in defense spending.

“It is a fairly small part of the discretionary budget, but it is still consistent with what the President said,” Trump budget tsar Mick Mulvaney said.

“We are taking his words and turning them into policies and dollars.”

Jonathan Katz, who until recently was deputy assistant administrator of USAID, told AFP that Trump’s proposed cuts could damage US interests and influence on the world stage.

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Foreign assistance offers “great value for money” and makes a “huge contribution to security, the economy and overall safety of Americans,” he said.

Katz, now with the German Marshall Fund, said foreign assistance is vital for everything from preventing pandemics to developing economies that eventually become trade partners.

“If there are no resources to address an Ebola outbreak, how does that help the wellbeing of Americans?”

“Having the resources also gives the United States a seat at the table,” he added.

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Mark Toner, the acting State Department spokesman, said the agency would work with the White House to review budget priorities.

“The department remains committed to a US foreign policy that advances the security and prosperity of the American people,” he said.

More than 120 retired admirals and generals — including retired General David Petraeus, a former CIA director, and retired Admiral James Stavridis, an ex NATO supreme allied commander — urged Trump on Monday not to slash spending on diplomacy and development aid, according to CNN.

State Department funding is “critical to keeping America safe,” the news network quoted the military brass as saying in their letter to congressional leaders, two cabinet officials and Trump’s national security adviser.

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Keystone statement

Trump’s comments came a day before he addresses a joint session of Congress — a crucial agenda-setting moment for new presidents.

His initial budget outline did not include proposals for mandatory spending or tax proposals, which make up the bulk of government outlays and receipts.

The nearly $4 trillion annual federal budget is a declaration of intent that puts the president’s policy goals down in black and white.

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It also separates affordable campaign promises from the fanciful and is the final arbiter after turf wars between departments and powerful interest groups.

Trump has promised to cut waste and duplication in federal spending.

President after president has made similar promises upon coming to office, before delving into a text that runs in the thousands of pages and tossing the plan into the thicket of Congress.

Trump has numerous campaign promises to pay for, but faces a national debt set to hit $20 trillion on his watch and a deficit at 3.1 percent of GDP and rising.

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His promises — from building a wall on the Mexican border to stepping up the deportation of undocumented immigrants — carry an estimated price tag of $5.3 trillion, according to the non-partisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

AFP/YAHOO

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