Pentagon Seeks to Spend Entire $153 Billion Trump Boost in 2026
The Pentagon has told Congress in a long-delayed formal plan that it aims to spend the entire $153 billion in extra defense money tucked into President Trump’s signature domestic policy bill within a single year, 2026, even though lawmakers originally appropriated it to be used over five. In its report to the House and Senate Armed Services Committees—months after blowing an August deadline—the Defense Department says it is "working to accelerate" spending "if that can be done without sacrificing effectiveness," laying out priorities that include buying more than a dozen new ships, expanding weapons manufacturing and aggressively integrating artificial intelligence into military systems. That windfall would land on top of roughly $900 billion in regular annual Pentagon funding Congress later approved, and it comes as Trump has proposed boosting military spending by more than 50% in 2027 and is massing ships and aircraft near Iran for a possible strike. Republicans sold the $153 billion add-on as a "generational investment" in modernization and troop quality of life, while Democrats warned it could function as a wide‑open slush fund for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth because the statute imposed few binding guardrails. The fact that the department is now racing to obligate all of it in one year, after months of silence, will fuel questions on Capitol Hill and online about whether oversight is meaningful or whether billions will simply be sprayed into Pentagon and contractor coffers under the cover of urgency.
📌 Key Facts
- Republicans’ domestic policy bill last summer added $153 billion in extra Pentagon funding, originally spread over five years.
- In a long-delayed report requested by the Armed Services Committees, the Pentagon says it is 'working to accelerate' and spend all $153 billion in 2026 if it can do so 'without sacrificing effectiveness.'
- The department cites priorities including purchasing over a dozen new ships, boosting weapons production and integrating artificial intelligence into military capabilities.
- The $153 billion is on top of about $900 billion in regular annual defense spending that Congress later authorized.
- The push comes as Trump has proposed increasing military spending by more than half in 2027 and is positioning U.S. forces for a possible attack on Iran.
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