Interesting numbers as people get a better look at the deal. Of the cuts bundled into the package that's supposed to pass today, about $350billion will come out of the military "immediately", with another $600billion over the next decade. Apparently, the thinking was that if the Republican position was going to be "no new revenue or the world gets it", then their share of the deal would have to be cuts from the one big area of spending they as a party platform have thrown themselves in front of trains for since the 1970s. Admittedly, most of the math backing up that trillion dollars of military reduction is based on the assumption that Obama will continue to roll down the deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan (maybe faster, lack of detail there), and that whoever's President in the next ten years won't launch any more wars, but that's still a lot of non-critical spending being hacked out.
I have to wonder about the strategic thinking at play there. Sure, military spending has always been a "Republican" issue which others would love to take an axe to; and with the military sucking up about 20% of the budget any given year, with it's dollar-cost having about tripled in the last 15 years, it has to take some serious cuts eventually. It is "discretionary spending" after all, and more loaded with earmarks and pet spending than the rest of the budget combined (why hello there spare jet engine factory in John Boehner's back yard that even the Pentagon wants to close).
But then, one has to remember that of all private sector jobs created by government spending, it's none more than military procurement spending; funny little aspect of Keynsian economics working that Republicans never want to talk about, and Democrats never want to be seen as relying on. Though inefficient in dollar cost altogether, with the way military suppliers go out of their way to spread industrial elements to as many insecure Congressional districts as possible it's actually one of the biggest and most successful job programs the government has going. Don't let the fact that the Republican Congress has singed onto this (hopefully) fool you, they are going to call the complete package "Obama's terrorist coddling, debt spending, retreat cuts" and no one is going to say otherwise.