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Congress slashes military IT funding

WASHINGTON, May 1 (UPI) -- Congress has slashed $341 million from U.S. military high-tech programs.

The House Armed Services Terrorism Subcommittee slashed $341 million from a variety of information technology programs as it approved its portion of the fiscal 2007 defense authorization bill Thursday, CongressDaily reported Friday.

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The cut represents only about 1 percent of the Pentagon's $31 billion budget request for information technology programs in the next fiscal year. But Terrorism Subcommittee ranking member Martin Meehan, D-Mass., said some programs would be affected more than others. For example, the Pentagon's Business Transformation Account would be cut by $50 million, which he said is a reduction of 15 percent.

Meehan vowed to try and restore the funding when the defense bill is voted on by the full House Armed Services Committee, probably next week. If that fails, he said he will try to restore the funding in conference with the Senate.

"I get a sense that they just wanted to find $350 million in cuts and picked IT. I think that's a mistake," he said after the markup. "I think as we engage the Senate in a conference committee, I think that we have a chance of getting the money put back in."

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The panel has slashed information technology funding the last four years, CongressDaily said.

"Any cuts to military technology must be done in a well-researched and thoughtful manner," added Rep. Ellen Tauscher, D-Calif. "These cuts will raise questions about the effectiveness of our programs and their eventual execution -- a situation we can ill-afford."

Overall, the subcommittee unanimously approved about $40 billion in fiscal 2007 Pentagon spending, an increase of about $15.7 million from what President George W, Bush requested.

One of the largest increases went to the Special Operations Command, which would get $183 million added to a $7 billion request, congressional aides told CongressDaily.

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