Big, Beautiful trillion-dollar war budget!
House passes key policy bill, which could lead to
historic defense spending, and for what?
Sep 12, 2025
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/trillion-dollar-defense-budget/
The House of Representatives on Wednesday passed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA),
paving the way for upwards of $848 billion in Pentagon spending. This, combined
with additional funding contained in the so-called “Big, Beautiful Bill,” would
push the Defense Department budget past $1 trillion for the first time.
That’s far more, adjusted for inflation, than peak
levels reached at the height of the Cold War or the War in Vietnam.
And if the NDAA authorizations are turned into actual
appropriations, huge sums of money will be wasted — on dysfunctional or
obsolete systems like F-35s and $13 billion aircraft carriers that are
increasingly vulnerable to high tech missiles. And the potentially most
wasteful program of all would be President Trump’s “Golden Dome,” a costly pipe dream that most scientists who are
not on the payroll of the Pentagon or the arms industry will tell you can never
work.
Despite being a policy bill, the NDAA passed by the
House is also silent about our misguided, dangerous “cover the globe” military
strategy, which is more likely to draw us into unnecessary wars than it is to
defend U.S. residents or anyone else.
House Armed Services Committee Chair Mike Rogers
(R-Ala.) marketed the NDAA under the tired old slogan of “Peace Through Strength.” As research by the
Costs of War Project at Brown University has demonstrated, America’s wars (and record Pentagon budgets) of
this century have brought neither peace nor strength. Instead, they have cost
at least $8 trillion, hundreds of thousands killed and displaced on all sides,
and a devastating impact on veterans, including a huge number of physical and
psychological injuries.
Activities that the bill amply funds include keeping
troops in the U.S.-Mexico border. It also gives lip service to “cutting red
tape” in the purchase of weapons, but that may include weakening the Pentagon’s
independent testing office, one of the few sources of trustworthy analysis of the cost and performance of major arms
systems. The House NDAA also endorses increased military cooperation with Israel, and replenishing war reserves that have been used to
fuel Israel’s ongoing civilian slaughter and destruction of Gaza and attacks
on Iran and Qatar.
The appropriations committees occasionally trim back
the NDAA’s spending recommendations but doing that in the prevailing climate in
Washington would be an uphill climb.
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