- Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg told lawmakers in private calls this week that the Pentagon needs $80 billion to cover Iran war costs and other non-war expenses, with a full supplemental request — including farm and disaster relief — potentially arriving on Capitol Hill within days.
- Pentagon leaders have warned the military could begin running out of operations funding this summer unless Congress acts, with the Iran war, Venezuela incursion, and southern-border deployments having rapidly depleted munitions stocks and strained budgets within the existing ~$1 trillion FY2026 defense budget.
- The war has already cost an estimated $29 billion as of mid-May, with that figure now likely higher; lawmakers’ key concern is that the US burned through munitions stocks that may be needed to defend Taiwan or confront other threats.
- The path through Congress is treacherous: Democrats and some Republicans demand a formal war authorization vote before approving funds, Republicans lack the 60 Senate votes needed to bypass the filibuster, and using budget reconciliation to sidestep the 60-vote rule faces resistance from senior GOP appropriators.
What Happened?
Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg has been calling lawmakers this week to brief them on a forthcoming $80 billion supplemental spending request — the Pentagon’s bill for the Iran war, the Venezuela operation, repeated anti-drug-cartel strikes in the Caribbean and Pacific, and southern-border troop deployments. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth separately met with senior Republican senators on Capitol Hill this week to discuss funding needs. A full supplemental package — expected to include non-defense priorities such as farm and disaster relief — could be sent to Congress within days. The Pentagon previously pegged the Iran war’s cost at $29 billion as of mid-May; the current total is almost certainly higher. The Trump administration never sought congressional authorization for the Iran war, a legal dispute that is now entangled with the funding fight.
Why It Matters?
A $80 billion request lands against an already strained fiscal backdrop and a politically fractured Congress. Lawmakers have been pressing the Trump administration for a comprehensive war price tag for months, fueled in part by concerns that depleted munitions stockpiles — particularly air-defense interceptors and precision-guided munitions — have left the US less able to respond to a Taiwan contingency or other flash points. The authorization dispute adds a further layer of complexity: Democrats argue the Iran war is constitutionally illegal without congressional approval, and some Republicans have set their own conditions for a vote. Senator Murphy flatly stated there are “not 60 votes in the Senate for a supplemental,” which means Republicans would either need bipartisan support or must thread the needle of budget reconciliation — a route senior GOP appropriators have already signaled they oppose.
What’s Next?
The White House and OMB must clear the supplemental request before it formally reaches Congress. Once it does, the debate will almost certainly revive the war-authorization fight, with Democrats using the funding vote as leverage to demand a legal blessing for the conflict. Senate Republicans could attempt reconciliation, but internal resistance makes that path uncertain. Meanwhile, the Pentagon has warned that without new funds, the services will begin curtailing training exercises and other readiness priorities this summer — a hard deadline that may force Congress’s hand regardless of the political complications.
Source: The Wall Street Journal










