OFF THE WIRE
By Halimah Abdullah
The Department of Defense plans to scale down the nation’s Army to 
its pre-World War II size and do away with an entire class of Air Force 
attack jets in an attempt to cut military spending, which mushroomed 
after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, according to reports.
The plan, backed by Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, as first reported 
by The New York Times, positions the military to handle any enemy but 
will leave the armed forces with much fewer resources to take on lengthy
 missions abroad. The dwindled budget also reflects the current 
political climate, with a President who has pledged to pull back from 
extended and expensive wars abroad in an era of federal funding 
cutbacks.
The budget is to be presented Monday.
Hagel proposes cutting the Army to 440,000 to 450,000 troops, 
according to the Times. Army troop levels already were supposed to go 
down to 490,000, from their height of 570,000 after the 9/11 attacks.
The budget, does, however, protect funding for cyberwarfare and 
special operations, a reflection of the evolving way in which the U.S. 
has approached fighting overseas, using tactics that don’t necessarily 
rely so heavily on land fighters. The proposal also preserves money for 
controversial and costly F-35 fighter planes.
The proposed cuts will probably draw sharp criticism from some 
members of Congress, especially those with large Army bases in their 
states and districts, or whose economies depend on building and 
servicing parts for the Air Force planes that will be eliminated.