House panel votes to cut European missile funds

Wed May 14, 2008 7:20pm EDT
 
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By Jim Wolf

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A House of Representatives committee voted on Wednesday to withhold more than 50 percent of the funds sought by the Bush administration to start building missile-defense sites in Poland and the Czech Republic.

The Democratic-controlled House Armed Services Committee cut $233 million in research and development and $140 million for military construction projects, pending approval from the two countries for the projects, among other things.

The action was part of the committee's version of a $540 billon-plus fiscal 2009 defense policy bill. A Republican-led effort to restore the cuts failed along party lines, despite an appeal to lawmakers from Defense Secretary Robert Gates.

The Senate Armed Services Committee agreed two weeks ago to fully fund President George W. Bush's request for more than $710 million to start deploying up to 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and a tracking radar in the Czech Republic.

Eventually, differences between the House and Senate bills must be ironed out and signed by the president to take effect.

Boeing Co would install the interceptors; Raytheon Co would build the radar system.

Gates, in a letter to the House panel's top Democrat and Republican, said full funding without restrictions would spur Poland and the Czech Republic to conclude the necessary bilateral missile-defense deals with the United States.

It also would send "a strong message to Iran that the United States and NATO are serious about developing effective missile defenses, and to Russia that there is bipartisan support for going forward with or without Moscow's cooperation," Gates wrote in the letter dated April 30.  Continued...

 

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