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3 False Claims From Trump’s Naval Academy Speech

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In a commencement speech on Friday, President Trump told Annapolis graduates that the military had received “no money” before him and that troops had just received their first pay raise in 10 years.
WHAT WAS SAID
THE FACTS
Technically, Mr. Trump did not repeal the defense sequester, which refers to limits placed on military spending enacted in 2011. Congress effectively erased mandated caps in February, but that doesn’t mean that the military received “no money” at all before then.
In 2011, in response to a debt ceiling crisis, lawmakers reached a bipartisan agreement to reduce deficits by at least $2.1 trillion over the next decade. In addition to limits on domestic spending, limits were placed on the Pentagon’s base budget, but not its wartime spending.
Congress increased spending caps by $32 billion in 2013 and $40 billion in 2015, referred to by budget watchers as “ partial sequester relief .” In February, the cap was blown off entirely, when Mr. Trump signed a budget deal that raised it by $165 billion over two years. Effectively, that ended the sequester without repealing the original law.
From 2012 to 2017, the Pentagon’s annual budget had decreased as a percent of the economy. But it still hovered around $600 billion — a far cry from “no money” at all.
The United States’ military spending has consistently outstripped the rest of the world’s. In fact, it has been higher than the next seven to 11 countries combined since 2012, according to data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
WHAT WAS SAID
THE FACTS
In 2016, the United States Navy had 275 active ships in its fleet. Mr. Trump’s plans to increase that number to 355 would amount to just 80 more.
His claim that the Navy would have a larger fleet “very soon” is also inaccurate. In a February news conference, Rear Adm. Brian Luther estimated that the Navy expected to reach 326 ships by the 2023 fiscal year and 355 by the 2050s — decades after Mr. Trump’s potential second term in office.
WHAT WAS SAID
THE FACTS
Troops have received a pay raise every year for the last 10 years, and nearly every year since 1945. In the past decade, the increases have ranged from 1 percent in 2014 and 2015 to 3.9 percent in 2009.
The last time the military did not receive a pay raise was in 1983. And that was because the raise became effective at the start of the 1984 calendar year, rather than the fiscal year, which started in October 1983, according to the Congressional Research Service.
Military pay increases are, by law, tied to the employment cost index, which measures private-sector wages — although the president or Congress can ask for more or less.
Congress enacted a pay increase of 2.4 percent in 2018, and 2.1 percent in 2017 — though Mr. Trump’s budgets requested lower figures. The White House requested a 2.9 pay raise for 2019. That legislation passed the House, and the Senate is working on its version.
Sources: Congressional Research Service, the Navy, the Pentagon, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute

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