Домой United States USA — Political Trump’s Military Parade Could Cost $92 Million, Official Says

Trump’s Military Parade Could Cost $92 Million, Official Says

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The parade, scheduled for November, comes after years of tight budgets at the Pentagon.
WASHINGTON — The military parade ordered up by President Trump could cost more than $90 million, a Defense Department official said Thursday — a financial mandate that, if it happens, would come as the Pentagon emerges from years of required budget caps.
Department officials said the plans for the parade have not been finalized. But one official put the new potential price tag, first reported by CNBC, for the scheduled Nov. 10 event as high as $92 million, depending on how many troops are included.
Earlier estimates said the parade could cost $10 million to $30 million, about the same as one held in Washington in 1991 at the end of the Persian Gulf war.
A Defense Department official, who discussed the plans on the condition of anonymity, said that the Pentagon expects to announce the total expected cost in the coming weeks.
Soon after he was elected, Mr. Trump and his advisers floated the idea of a parade of military convoys through Washington. The committee planning his inaugural ceremony reportedly explored, but rejected, the idea of highlighting military equipment in the traditional parade, from the Capitol to the White House, after Mr. Trump was sworn in.
In July 2017 in Paris, Mr. Trump saw firsthand the full potential and grandeur of a military parade as he sat alongside President Emmanuel Macron of France and by all accounts enjoyed a Bastille Day celebration. Upon returning home, Mr. Trump told Defense Secretary Jim Mattis that he wanted a similar parade in the United States.
Mr. Mattis was not enamored of the idea, according to two other Defense Department officials. But the defense secretary, who carefully picks his battles with Mr. Trump, has since gone ahead with plans in tandem with a long-running Veterans Day parade in Washington.
Those plans call for some kind of air component, including fighter jets most likely buzzing by the Capitol and troops dismounting from helicopters. How many tanks might be rolling down Washington’s potholed streets remains unclear.
But Defense Department officials indicated it is unlikely that Mr. Mattis will cut back the number of troops in a final proposed tally because Mr. Trump has been so adamant about a huge military show.

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