(CNN) -- Here we go: A new round of confrontation 
between the White House and Congress over the federal budget is in the 
offing, this time in a new attempt to avert the looming "sequestration" 
process.
What is sequestration? 
It's a series of 
automatic, across-the-board cuts to government agencies, totaling $1.2 
trillion over 10 years. The cuts would be split 50-50 between defense 
and domestic discretionary spending.
It's all part of attempts
 to get a handle on the growth of the U.S. national debt, which exploded
 upward when the 2007 recession hit and now stands at more than $16 
trillion. The sequester has been coming for more than a year, with 
Congress pushing it back to March 1 as part of the fiscal cliff deal at 
the end of the last session.
Why does this seem familiar? 
It started with the 2011 
standoff over the U.S. debt ceiling, when Republicans in Congress 
demanded spending cuts in exchange for giving the Obama administration
 the needed legal headroom to pay the federal government's obligations 
to its bondholders. In the end, Congress and the administration agreed 
to more than $2 trillion in cuts. About $1 trillion of that was laid out
 in the debt-ceiling bill and the rest imposed through sequestration -- a
 kind of fiscal doomsday device that Congress would have to disarm by 
coming up with an equal amount of spending reductions elsewhere.
What were they thinking? 
The plan was that a 
special congressional panel, dubbed the "super committee," would find a 
less painful way to cut spending. It failed in November 2011. That left 
federal agencies facing what outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta called "legislative madness" in the form of harsh cuts that no one wanted.
"For those of you who 
have ever seen 'Blazing Saddles,' it is the scene of the sheriff putting
 the gun to his head in order to establish law and order," Panetta said 
in a speech at Washington's Georgetown University. "That is 
sequestration."
But for many 
conservatives, sequestration is a feature, not a bug. It's "the first 
chance we have for real savings and deficit reduction," the tea 
party-aligned lobbying group FreedomWorks tells supporters on its website.
"President Obama already
 agreed to the sequester savings when he signed the debt ceiling bargain
 into law," FreedomWorks says. "He needs to follow through."
Where will the cuts fall? 
More than $500 billion 
will be cut from the Defense Department and other national security 
agencies, with the rest cut on the domestic side -- national parks, 
federal courts, the FBI, food inspections and housing aid. While the 
Pentagon has laid out plans ranging from furloughs of hundreds of 
thousands of civilian workers to combat readiness training and weapons 
maintenance, the White House budget office hasn't specified which 
domestic agencies would take the biggest hits.
Panetta says that the 
$46 billion in spending cuts for 2013 would cut sharply into military 
readiness -- and the longer the cuts are pushed back, the deeper they'll
 have to be to achieve the required savings.
So now what? 
Congress put off the 
sequester until March 1 as part of the last-minute fiscal cliff deal on 
New Year's Day. Without that agreement, economists warned that the 
one-two punch of sequestration and the expiration of the 2001 and 2003 
Bush tax cuts could have thrown a still-struggling U.S. economy into 
reverse.
Even with the fiscal 
cliff deal, the austerity moves already were slowing the economy, Obama 
suggested over the weekend. The Commerce Department said a large cut in 
federal spending, primarily on defense, contributed to the 0.1% decrease
 in gross domestic product seen in the last quarter of 2012.
"Washington cannot 
continually operate under a cloud of crisis. That freezes up consumers,"
 Obama said during a pre-Super Bowl interview with CBS. "It gets 
businesses worried. We can't afford these self-inflicted wounds."
Tuesday, Obama urged 
Congress to pass a short-term deal that puts off the cuts, allowing some
 breathing room for a long-term deficit reduction plan. But Obama said 
any deal should include more revenue from ending some tax breaks -- a 
stance that inflamed Republicans who already had to swallow a tax 
increase for top earners in the fiscal cliff deal.
"I don't like the 
sequester. I think it's taking a meat ax to our government, a meat ax to
 many programs that will weaken our national defense," House Speaker 
John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Wednesday. But, he added, "Americans do not 
support sacrificing real spending cuts for more tax hikes."
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