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NEWS | June 21, 2011

Gates, Mullen protect family programs from budget cuts

By Jim Garamone American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON - Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates told the service chiefs to "fence" two areas in the budget options the military is contemplating: training and family programs.

"I don't want any money taken out of those," he told the Senate Appropriations Committee Wednesday.

Gates and Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the nation has an obligation to take care of those service members wounded physically and mentally in the wars.

Gates has moved money for wounded warriors from the supplemental requests and overseas contingency funds.

"All of that money has been shifted into the base budget knowing that we will deal with this problem for many, many years to come," he said. "So for our part, in addition to [Veterans Affairs], we have tried to make sure that the funds for these programs have been protected and will be protected in the future."

Mullen said the country is just now starting to understand the costs of the wars. He used Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., as an example, saying that many of the service members at that base have deployed - some multiple times.

"Many of those units have had only a year between deployments up to now," he said. "Now, they're going to have two, and I think they've been compartmentalizing challenges, and they're going to start unpacking that. And it's going to be pretty tough now that we're back home."

The military health system and the Veterans Affairs Department need to get at traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress now, Mullen said. "The more quickly we get at the problem, the less likely the damage or the damage is reduced significantly, and yet there's still a great deal on the TBI side that we don't understand."

Mullen said the relationship between DOD, VA and the civilian communities must get stronger to take care of these men and women.

He called on the senators to protect the money to care for wounded service members.

"When we get into budget crunches like this, this incredible amount of money that we put into family programs, into medical research, it's some of the first money that budget types like to take out historically," he said. "We like airplanes before we would keep our family programs intact, and that's something the secretary of defense and I have talked about. Unless we watch that very carefully, it will not be there when we need it."

The money and the care must be sustained, Mullen said.