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The
True Cost of War In
anger and embarrassment, Congressional Republicans are scrambling to
repair a budget shortfall in veterans' medical care now that the Bush
administration has admitted it vastly underestimated the number of
returning Iraq and Afghanistan personnel needing treatment. The $1
billion-plus gaffe is considerable, with the original budget estimate
of 23,553 returned veterans needing care this year now ballooning to
103,000. American taxpayers should be even more furious than Congress. But
partisan resistance melted in a flood of political chagrin once the
administration admitted the budget error, which was first discovered in
April but only now disclosed. The explanation offered - the gaffe was
due to using dated formulas based on prewar calculations - left
Republicans sputtering all the more. All
wars necessarily involve mismanagement, even successful ones. But there
is no excuse for treating the needs of wounded and damaged warriors as
a budgetary afterthought. Congressional Republicans were far from
innocent victims of administrative ineptitude or deception. After years
of approving record tax cuts and budget deficits, they stuck to this
year's pre-election script of fictitious "budget tightening" that
underestimated inevitable expenses and shortchanged returning veterans
with higher health care enrollment fees and drug co-payments. The only
comfort for the American public is that unlike many of the war's
problems, this one can be repaired, providing partisan combat is
suspended in the Capitol. |