Pentagon wants over $200 billion to fund Trumps Iran war
ThePentagonreportedly wants Congress to approve more than $200 billion in supplemental funding for US President Donald Trump’s unauthorized and deeply unpopular war on Iran as the administration weighs deploying thousands of additional troops to the Middle East, signaling a drawn-out conflict and a possible ground invasion. TheWashington Postreportedlate Wednesday that the Pentagon has asked theWhite…
ThePentagonreportedly wants Congress to approve more than $200 billion in supplemental funding for US President Donald Trump’s unauthorized and deeply unpopular war on Iran as the administration weighs deploying thousands of additional troops to the Middle East, signaling a drawn-out conflict and a possible ground invasion.
TheWashington Postreportedlate Wednesday that the Pentagon has asked theWhite Houseto sign off on the supplemental funding request as the financial and human costs of the Iran war balloon. The $200 billion figure, which drew immediate backlash and vows of opposition from several Democratic lawmakers, is quadruple the numberwidely floatedin recent days as the department’s likely supplemental request.
“This should be an absolute nonstarter,” said Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) in response to the Post’s reporting. “The best way to end this war, protect our troops, save civilian lives, and rein in a lawless administration is to cut off funding. I’m a hell no.”
Sen.Ruben Gallego(D-Ariz.) wrote onsocial mediathat “at the height of combat theIraq Warcost around $140 billion per year.”
“If the Pentagon is asking for $200 billion they are asking for a long war,” Gallego added. “The answer is a simple no.”
Any funding package would need 60 votes to get through theUS Senate, requiring some Democratic support. As of this writing, neither Senate Minority LeaderChuck Schumer(D-NY) nor House Minority LeaderHakeem Jeffries(D-NY) has responded to reports of the Pentagon’s request.
The Post reported Wednesday that “it remains unclear how much the White House will ultimately ask congressional lawmakers to approve,” and that “some White House officials do not think the Pentagon’s request has a realistic shot of being approved in Congress.”
Prior to the start of the Iran assault, Trump called for a $1.5 trillionUS militarybudgetfor the coming fiscal year even after the Pentagon failed itseighth consecutive audit.
The Pentagon’s push for $200 billion in Iran war funding comes after US investigatorsreportedly determinedthat American forces were responsible for the bombing—on the first day of the war—of an Iranian elementary school that killed around 175 people, mostly youngchildren.
News of the Pentagon’s funding request came as Reutersreportedthat theTrump administrationis “considering deploying thousands of US troops to reinforce its operation in the Middle East, as the US military prepares for possible next steps in its campaign against Iran.”
“The deployments could help provide Trump with additional options as he weighs expanding US operations, with the Iran war well into its third week,” Reuters reported. “Those options include securing safe passage foroiltankers through the Strait of Hormuz, a mission that would be accomplished primarily through air and naval forces, the sources said. But securing the Strait could also mean deploying US troops to Iran’s shoreline, said four sources, including two US officials.”
“The Trump administration has also discussed options to send ground forces to Iran’s Kharg Island, the hub for 90% of Iran’s oil exports,” Reuters added. “One of the officials said such an operation would be very risky. Iran has the ability to reach the island with missiles and drones.”
Dylan Williams, vice president for government affairs at the Center for International Policy, said Wednesday that “we are seeing the Iran war become a quagmire in real time.”
“Asking US taxpayers to spend $50 billion on a war Trump claims we have already won was outrageous enough,” said Williams. “Quadrupling that within a week shows a total lack of understanding or control over what he has gotten us into.”
Foreign policy journalist Laura Rozen, author of the diplomatic newsletter Just Security, wroteWednesday that “Trump blundered into what he thought would be a few day ‘excursion’ as he calls it, maybeVenezuela2.0.”
“That is not what Israel had in mind, the military has hit all of its targets,” Rozen added. “He has no idea what he is doing, his intelligence and other aides were appointed not to tell him anything he does not want to hear; not a single one of them can explain what the goal is. CongressionalRepublicanshave their heads deep in the sand, and now talk of a $200 billion Pentagon supplemental and sending more potential ground troops.”
Iran’s foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi,highlightedthe Post’s reporting on social media and called $200 billion “the tip of the iceberg.”
“Ordinary Americans can thankBenjamin Netanyahuand his lackeys in Congress for the trillion-dollar ‘Israel First tax’ that’s about to hit the US economy,” he wrote.
Originally published by Common Dreams, this article is republished under a Creative Commons license.
