The dramatic increase in funding for the European Reassurance Initiative reflects sustained assurance to allies and a way to bolster NATO’s much-needed defense capabilities following Russia’s aggression in Ukraine, President Obama said in a? Feb. 2 statement. The Defense Department’s Fiscal 2017 budget request, which will officially be released on Feb. 9, quadruples funding for the ERI, requesting $3.4 billion, said Defense Secretary Ash Carter in a Feb. 2 speech in Washington, D.C. The funding “should make clear that America will stand firm with its allies in defending not just NATO territory but also shared principles of international law and order,” Obama said in the statement. The ERI was established in 2014 to increase the US presence in Europe and to preposition equipment across Europe. The increased funding will allow the Pentagon to augment its force presence, conduct additional training, preposition additional Army stock in Europe, improve infrastructure, and build the capacity of allies in Central and Eastern Europe, according to a White House factsheet. (See also Forward and Ready, East and South from the September 2015 issue of Air Force Magazine.)
A provision in the fiscal 2025 defense policy bill will require the Defense Department to include the military occupational specialty of service members who die by suicide in its annual report on suicide deaths, though it remains to be seen how much data the department will actually disclose.