Source B "First, some history. The Pentagon's budget has risen for 13 years, which is unprecedented. Between 2001 and 2009, overall spending on defense rose from $412 billion to $699 billion, a 70 percent increase, which is larger than in any comparable period since the Korean War. Including the supplementary spending on Iraq and Afghanistan, we spent $250 billion more than average U.S. defense expenditures during the Cold War-a time when the Soviet, Chinese and Eastern European militaries were arrayed against the United States and its allies. Over the past decade, when we had no serious national adversaries, U.S. defense spending has gone from about a third of total worldwide defense spending to 50 percent. In other words, we spend more on defense than the planet's remaining countries put together." -Fareed Zakaria. "Why Defense Spending Should Be Cut," Washington Post, 2011

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Source B was most likely created to A demonstrate the need for diplomacy in foreign policy. B show a specific point of view about military spending. C explain how military spending affects the environment. D promote the views of a specific political party.
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Source B
"First, some history. The Pentagon's budget has risen for 13 years, which is
unprecedented. Between 2001 and 2009, overall spending on defense rose
from $412 billon to $699 billion, a 70 percent increase, which is larger than
in any comparable period since the Korean War. Including the supplementary
spending on Iraq and Afghanistan, we spent $250 billion more than average
U.S. defense expenditures during the Cold War-a time when the Soviet,
Chinese and Eastern European militaries were arrayed against the United
States and its allies. Over the past decade, when we had no serious national
adversaries, U.S. defense spending has gone from about a third of total
worldwide defense spending to 50 percent. In other words, we spend more on
defense than the planet's remaining countries put together."
-Fareed Zakaria. "Why Defense Spending Should Be Cut," Washington
Post, 2011
Page 10 14 - Q
Transcribed Image Text:Session Source B "First, some history. The Pentagon's budget has risen for 13 years, which is unprecedented. Between 2001 and 2009, overall spending on defense rose from $412 billon to $699 billion, a 70 percent increase, which is larger than in any comparable period since the Korean War. Including the supplementary spending on Iraq and Afghanistan, we spent $250 billion more than average U.S. defense expenditures during the Cold War-a time when the Soviet, Chinese and Eastern European militaries were arrayed against the United States and its allies. Over the past decade, when we had no serious national adversaries, U.S. defense spending has gone from about a third of total worldwide defense spending to 50 percent. In other words, we spend more on defense than the planet's remaining countries put together." -Fareed Zakaria. "Why Defense Spending Should Be Cut," Washington Post, 2011 Page 10 14 - Q
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