Pentagon Seeks $74 Billion Drone Surge In Trump 2027 Defense Budget
The Pentagon is seeking a $74 billion surge in drone spending in the Trump administration's 2027 defense budget.
Defense officials are pushing the boost to pay for drones and air-defense systems the military says have been used in fighting with Iran. Pentagon leaders say the money is aimed at replacing and expanding systems that were expended or stressed during recent operations.
The request will have to be included in the administration's formal 2027 defense submission and then debated and approved by Congress before any funds are obligated. Public reaction online has already begun to surface, with some users stressing urgent security needs and others warning about the scale and pace of new weapons spending.
đ Key Facts
- Trump administration proposes a $1.5 trillion 2027 defense budget.
- Pentagon wants to more than triple drone-related spending to over $74 billion, including nearly $54 billion for military drones.
- Budget calls for $21 billion in anti-drone systems and more than $30 billion in munitions such as Patriot, THAAD and precision missiles.
- Plan adds 44,500 troops, more than $2 billion for U.S.-Mexico border operations, and the largest shipbuilding request since 1962.
- Officials say the blueprint was drafted before the Iran war and excludes operational war costs, despite critically low interceptor stockpiles.
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