Specifically, at the very moment that the defense industry’s army of lobbyists is already in a
full-on panic about mild sequestration cuts to the Pentagon, Hagel is viewed by the defense-coddling D.C. establishment as a threat to defense spending — thanks to two previously little-noticed comments he made in 2011. In an interview that year with the
Financial Times about a defense budget that is
bigger than most of the rest of the world’s combined (and one that
can’t account for $2 trillion), he dared to say that said budget “has been bloated” and “needs to be pared down.” In a separate speech at the Council on Foreign Relations, he said the “Defense Department budget (is) not a jobs program — it’s not an economic development program for my state or any district.”