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The U.S. Military is Almost Out of Money (or So They Say)

Pentagon sources told NBC News that the military may start “parking jets and turning off exercises” if Congress doesn't give them more money

The U.S. Military is Almost Out of Money (or So They Say)

The Pentagon, headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense.

J. David Ake/Getty Images

The budget of the American Department of Defense is eternally bloated. Like a ballooned whale carcass that is fed on by a frenzy of contractors, corporations, and ever-growing military operations, the DOD is the heart of a financial ecosystem that spans the globe. With nearly a trillion dollars allocated annually to its function, it’s a bit of a shock that the Trump administration is claiming the so-called “Department of War” is about to run out of cash.

According to sources who spoke to NBC News, the Pentagon is warning lawmakers that it could soon run out of cash on hand should Congress not approve pending supplemental funding requests. So what spending is driving the budget shortfall? Primarily, Trump’s war with Iran.


After initially claiming that the war with Iran would cost roughly $25 billion, the total estimated cost of the war — which Trump put back in active gear on Wednesday — has ballooned to over an estimated $132 billion.

While the outright cost of operations is one thing, the DOD is also broadcasting to Congress that it will need additional funds to restock arms stockpiles and weapons systems that have been depleted.

We may need to start “parking jets and turning off exercises” one former Pentagon official told NBC News.

In the background, Trump is demanding another 44-percent increase in annual Pentagon funds from Congress — on top of the $150 billion already authorized by the “Big Beautiful Bill” in July of last year. The move would balloon the budget of America’s military apparatus to over $1.5 trillion in annual spending. The DOD itself is requesting $67 billion in emergency supplemental funding from Congress.

The demands have gridlocked Congressional Republicans, who are facing tough reelection bids in the upcoming midterms, and are wary of dumping billions more into Trump’s deeply unpopular Iranian quagmire.

But the president himself is escalating the pressure to comply. “The WAR DEPARTMENT has never been ‘HOTTER.’ We need to keep it that way, which is why, when Congress returns, we must pass Reconciliation 3.0, with 350 Billion Dollars for Defense, plus THE SAVE AMERICA ACT,” Trump wrote Tuesday on Truth Social. “I am calling on House and Senate Leadership to make this their Number One Priority, and ensure that 350 Billion Dollars in Recon 3.0 moves out of the Budget Committee as soon as Congress is back in session.”

In a rare move, both chambers of Congress condemned the war against Iran via separate non-binding resolutions in June. Despite widespread popular support, a clear lack of funds, and nausea from his own party, Trump refuses to bow out of the conflict. On Wednesday — during a press conference at the annual NATO summit — Trump declared that the barely-there ceasefire and peace talks with Iran were over. That night, the U.S. military renewed its bombing campaign against Iranian targets around the Strait of Hormuz. The president celebrated by posting dozens of videos of these explosions on his social media — tax dollars aflame.

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