Trump's $1.5 trillion military budget: What taxpayers are getting

Trump’s $1.5 trillion military budget: What taxpayers are getting

Spread the love

The Pentagon’s top budget official said Tuesday that the agency’s failure to pass eight consecutive audits shouldn’t stop Congress from approving the largest military budget in American history, a $1.5 trillion request that represents a 42% increase over current spending.

Pentagon acting comptroller Jules “Jay” Hurst defended the Department of War’s audit record at a news briefing Tuesday, saying the problem wasn’t sloppy spending but the complexity of tracking decades-old assets.

“Tracking obligations has never been an issue for us passing an audit,” he told reporters. “We buy a nuclear missile in the 1970s and then we have to account for the present-day value, which includes every single repair or modification we made of that missile over 50-plus years. That’s the kind of stuff that makes it hard for the department to get an audit; it’s not tracking our funding in the year of execution.”

Hurst said he expects the Department of War to pass an audit by 2028, before the end of Trump’s second term.

The $1.5 trillion request does not include costs related to the ongoing conflict in Iran or the special operation in Venezuela that led to the capture of former leader Nicolás Maduro. Trump is expected to request up to $100 billion more from Congress in a separate supplemental funding bill for Iran operations.

According to Department of War budget documents released Tuesday, the proposal includes: $17.9 billion to begin building the Golden Dome missile defense shield; $65.8 billion for 18 new battle force ships and 16 support ships—the largest shipbuilding request since 1962; more than $74 billion for drone and counter-drone technologies, tripling FY26 spending and marking the largest such investment ever; more than $75 billion for the Space Force; $71.4 billion for the nuclear enterprise, including $16.2 billion for Columbia-class submarines, $6.1 billion for the B-21 stealth bomber, and $4.6 billion for the Sentinel ICBM program; $102 billion to grow air power, a 26% increase over FY26, including ramping F-35 procurement to 85 aircraft; $64.5 billion for land power including missiles, armored vehicles, and helicopters; over $20 billion for cyber capabilities; and $756.8 billion in defense industrial base investments to expand production capacity and supply chains.

The budget also proposes $21.5 billion to repair and construct military barracks and family housing, and $45.7 billion for military medical readiness and healthcare.

Hurst said the investment could generate more than 800,000 American jobs, many in manufacturing and engineering. He cited the F-35 fighter jet program, which costs $80 million to $100 million per aircraft and relies on 2,100 suppliers, as an example of how defense spending ripples through the broader economy.

“As we drastically increase the number of munitions and weapons systems we buy, the department needs to make investments to solidify America’s industrial base,” Hurst said. “Large defense firms are critical to our national security, but they rely on tens of thousands of small- and medium-sized businesses that provide the parts, components and materials to larger firms.”

The budget also calls for adding 44,000 service members and a $5.8 billion military pay raise – 7% for the most junior troops at E-5 and below, 6% for E-6 to O-3, and 5% for O-4 and above.

When the budget was first released earlier this month, Republican leaders on the Senate and House Armed Services Committees praised it as a necessary response. U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., and U.S. Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., called it essential to confront growing global threats, while Senate Democrat Jack Reed of Rhode Island called it a “bloated, undisciplined budget” and said the Pentagon “doesn’t lack funding, but it currently lacks responsible civilian leadership and management.”

Not all Republicans were on board. Rep. Chip Roy, R-Texas, a fiscal conservative, told NOTUS the defense increases need to be offset elsewhere.

“We need to not grow deficits,” Roy said. “So if we have to prioritize defense, then we need to, you know, de-prioritize other things.”

House Democrats on the Defense Spending Reduction Caucus were sharper in their criticism. Reps. Mark Pocan, D-Wis., and Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., said in a statement earlier this month that the proposal “could be the most egregious waste of taxpayer dollars we have ever seen,” calling it a “giveaway to defense contractors at the expense of the American people.” They also tied the audit issue directly to the budget, saying, “we cannot justify continuing to increase the Pentagon’s budget when the agency cannot even successfully pass a fiscal audit. No other federal agency is allowed to operate this way.”

The budget request lands as the nation’s fiscal outlook grows increasingly precarious. Earlier this month, the Government Accountability Office warned Congress that the federal government is on an “unsustainable fiscal path,” cautioning that a persistent gap between spending and revenue threatens U.S. economic stability. The national debt stands at $39 trillion, and in fiscal year 2025 alone, the deficit reached $1.7 trillion, about 6% of GDP. Last May, the U.S. lost its final AAA credit rating when Moody’s downgraded the country, after similar downgrades by Fitch in 2023 and S&P Global in 2011.

Amid these fiscal challenges, administration officials said the defense budget was a strategic investment in national security for the coming decades.

“We are delivering on President Trump’s commitment to expand American military dominance for decades to come,” Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said in a statement. “Previous administrations underinvested in our military while our enemies grew stronger and more dangerous, so we are now changing the game. This budget builds this arsenal without compromising readiness that will ensure we remain the world’s premier fighting force, we protect the homeland, and we create peace through strength now and into the future.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Partial government shutdown imminent as Congress leaves town

Partial government shutdown imminent as Congress leaves town

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Lawmakers have left town after failing to pass the Homeland Security full-year funding bill, ensuring a partial shutdown of DHS beginning Saturday. This is the...
Illinois Quick Hits: Man sentenced for robbing postal worker

Illinois Quick Hits: Man sentenced for robbing postal worker

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A federal judge has sentenced a Chicago man to four years and three months in prison for...
Sultan in Epstein files resigns, global turmoil continues

Sultan in Epstein files resigns, global turmoil continues

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square An executive of a Dubai-based company resigned on Friday after documents released by the Justice Department tied him to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Sultan...
Temporary protected status terminated for Yemen nationals

Temporary protected status terminated for Yemen nationals

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Yemeni nationals in the U.S. on temporary protective status will have 60 days to leave the country. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced...
Advocates argue new data center restrictions might close Illinois market

Advocates argue new data center restrictions might close Illinois market

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers have proposed stricter regulations on data centers in the state, but an industry advocate says...
Illinois advocates urge senate action on SAVE Act

Illinois advocates urge senate action on SAVE Act

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois election-integrity advocates are pushing the U.S. Senate to agree with a recent House move and...
Ford returning to the Middle East as tensions rise with Iran

Ford returning to the Middle East as tensions rise with Iran

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square A second aircraft carrier is en route to the Middle East as tensions build with Iran, according to multiple reports. The USS Gerald Ford, the...
Lemon faces federal arraignment today in St. Paul church protest case

Lemon faces federal arraignment today in St. Paul church protest case

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Journalist Don Lemon is scheduled to appear in a Minnesota courtroom today to be arraigned on federal charges related to a protest that disrupted a...
Senate GOP wants companies funding lawsuits to be revealed

Senate GOP wants companies funding lawsuits to be revealed

By John O’Brien | Legal NewslineThe Center Square U.S. Senate Republicans have introduced a bill targeting companies that invest in lawsuits, proposing rules that would force them to identify themselves...
Election 2026: Cooper social post is now you see it, now you don’t

Election 2026: Cooper social post is now you see it, now you don’t

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Roy Cooper vetoed mandatory requirement of photo identification in 2018. Thursday, the U.S. Senate candidate vetoed a photo of himself presenting photo ID to cast...
Illinois Quick Hits: Chicago mugging captured on video

Illinois Quick Hits: Chicago mugging captured on video

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A video capturing an armed assault and robbery Thursday afternoon in Chicago has drawn millions of views...
January inflation cools to 2.4%, lowest since May

January inflation cools to 2.4%, lowest since May

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Consumer prices rose by 0.2% overall in January, according to recent data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Overall, the inflation rose to...
McCuskey praises federal rollback of Endangerment Finding

McCuskey praises federal rollback of Endangerment Finding

By Chris Dickerson | Legal NewslineThe Center Square West Virginia Attorney General J.B. McCuskey is praising the federal government’s decision to repeal an Obama-era scientific finding on climate change. On...
Screenshot 2026-02-04 at 2.03.49 PM

State of the College: President Namuo Pushes for Bachelor’s Degrees, Cites Record Graduation Rates

Joliet Junior College State of the College | February 4, 2026 Article Summary: JJC President Dr. Clyne Namuo highlighted the college’s legislative push to offer bachelor's degrees in applied fields...
Will County Finance Logo

Emergency Freezer Replacement Approved for Adult Detention Facility

Finance Committee Meeting | February 3, 2026 Article Summary: The committee authorized an emergency expenditure of $155,000 to replace a failed walk-in freezer system at the Adult Detention Facility (ADF)....