You rejected the claim that the increase was unprecedented. You then edited your post to add that you hadn't actually been referring to the
increase; rather you had been referring to the amount, which you claimed (according to my figures) had only been exceeded once, though you expected it had been exceeded other times.
Your original quote:
What you wrote clearly refers to the "increase" as unprecedented; however, I'll grant that that's not what you meant to say.
You appear to believe that I've scored some sort of an "own goal," but in fact you have merely demonstrated that you use "statistics the way a drunk uses a lamppost--for support, rather than illumination." (variously attributed) According to a Congressional Research Service
report, DoD's costs for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, plus the costs of additional security (e.g., increased combat air patrols) in FY 2003 totalled US $77.4 billion. Deflating that back to Year 2000 dollars yields about US $72 billion. Looking at my source figures, it appears that I neglected to deflate the original FY 2003 defense budget back to Year 2000 dollars, which makes the 2003 increase even less remarkable. So let's also reconsider your purported 33% increase from FY 2001 to FY 2003.
2001 military spending: $297.5 (3.0%)
2002 military spending: $330.8 (3.4%)
2003 military spending: $374.5 (3.7%)
Billions of US dollars (percent of GDP)
Now, we see that the actual, inflation-adjusted increase from 2001 to 2003 is $77 billion, or about 26%, not 33% as you claimed. (Penalty kick for exaggerating by using non-inflation adjusted numbers!

) Further, of that $77 billion, $72 billion is directly traceable to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and increased security costs. Most of this money is sunk and has contributed little or nothing to the PNAC goals (unless I missed the part in the report about fighting extended ground wars in the Middle East as one of the goals).
This entire issue serves to illustrate your twisting of the PNAC memo to support your conspiracist agenda. You claim that the September 11 attacks brought about the PNAC objective of increased military spending--however, the objective was not increased military spending for its own sake; it was rather the military transformation that would have required this increased military spending.
Also, you are committing the logical fallacy of affirming the consequent.
"If the PNAC plan had been implemented, military spending would have increased substantially."
"Military spending increased substantially."
"Therefore, the PNAC plan was implemented."
Ook! Ook! Eee! Eee!