Pentagon emphasizes ‘continuity’ in $849.8B FY25 budget request, amid political deadlock (2024)

Pentagon emphasizes ‘continuity’ in $849.8B FY25 budget request, amid political deadlock (1)

The Biden administration delivered its FY25 budget request to Capitol Hill today and it includes $895.2 billion for national defense coffers. (US Army/Sgt. 1st Class Marisol Walker)

WASHINGTON — Even as fiscal 2024 appropriations languish in lawmakers’ hands, the White House today sent Capitol Hill its budget request for FY25, with $895.2 billion in discretionary funds directed towards national defense.

While crafting the request, the Biden administration had constraints: it was working within the budget caps lawmakers approved when they passed the Fiscal Responsibility Act (FRA) last year. That means the Department of Defense’s (DoD’s) portion hovers around $849.8 billion, or about a 1 percent increase over the FY24 request. In real terms, factoring in inflation, department leaders were forced to trim $10 billion dollars from the previous year’s plan.

“You’re gonna see a lot of continuity in this strategy, priorities, goals, programs [and] the topline for that matter: So, continuity more so than surprise,” a senior defense official told reporters March 8 during a budget preview event at the Pentagon.

“It is an increase over last year [but] it is not enough of an increase to cover inflation and that, again, would presumably not have been a surprise to anybody who drafted the caps or voted for the caps in the FRA: inflation has to come down quite a bit, but it hasn’t come down to 1 percent, so there will be an issue there,” the official later added. The tentative plan is to deal with the cuts and then get the department back “on course” with higher funding levels in FY26 and beyond.

For more coverage of the FY25 budget release, click here.

The department has not yet released its FY25 justification documents detailing the exact areas and programs it wants to cut to help pay the bills, but the defense official noted that almost $2 billion in savings comes, in part, from personnel, including trimming about 5,700 spots from end strength. In total, the plan calls for just over 2 million uniformed personnel next year, with the Army coming in at 943,100, Air Force with 494,700, Navy with 390,000, Marine Corps with 204,800, and the Space Force with 9,800.

Congressional Inaction Impacts Spending

Additional insights into DoD’s FY25 spending proposal will emerge over the coming days and weeks as more documents are released, and as officials make their way to Capitol Hill to testify before lawmakers.

However, while the figures presented today provide insight into the priorities for the White House and the services, at this point the plan is hypothetical, dependent on several moving parts in Congress — or, more accurately, parts that aren’t moving.

Lawmakers have not yet passed an FY24 defense spending bill, and since that new fiscal year kicked off on Oct. 1, 2023, the DoD has been operating on a string of continuing resolutions that maintain its funding at FY23 levels. A separate $105 billion supplemental spending request that includes military aid for Ukraine and Israel, and supports US activities for both, has also been in a standstill for months on the hill.

Although it remains unclear if or when Congress will pass either of those bills, DoD inked its FY25 request based on the assumption both will be approved. If they aren’t, or are greatly altered, that will upend this latest request.

“We don’t start with a clean sheet of paper each year,” the senior defense official said.

“We kind of depend on having [that] ‘24 bill finish and finish in a way that looks a lot like what we asked for. Otherwise, we’re going to have to go back to the drawing board on a couple of fronts,” they later added.

Additionally, the department did not factor in the cost of continuing to support Ukraine, Israel or operations in the Red Sea in its FY25 spending request, which means it will likely need another supplemental spending bill next year.

As just one example, the Navy has been expending a lot of ordnance in the Red Sea in recent months as it bats down incoming threats, a situation that has no clear end date. Rear Adm. Ben Reynolds, the deputy assistant secretary of the Navy for budget, told reporters that as his service built its portion of the budget anticipating another supplemental request to backfill those rounds.

“We can’t say at this moment what parameters would be included for a supplemental, but the ‘25 budget that is being presented does not anticipate the current expenditure of missiles in the Red Sea, or those additional operations costs,” Reynolds added.

By The Numbers

Although so much is in flux, at least as it stands and according to briefing slides, the Pentagon’s FY25 budget request includes $167.5 billion for weapon procurement, $143.2 billion for research and development efforts, $339.6 billion for operations and maintenance, $181 billion for military personnel, $17.5 billion for military construction and $45.5 billion for other programs.

When it comes to emerging tech, those numbers include $17.2 billion for science and technology, $1.8 billion for artificial intelligence, $1.4 billion for combined joint all domain command and control (CJADC2), $450 million for Rapid Defense Experimentation Reserve initiative (RDER) and $144 million for the Office of Strategic Capital.

As part of proposed spending under the “integrated deterrence” umbrella, the department seeks $49.2 billion for nuclear modernization, $28.4 billion for missile defeat and defense, and $9.8 billion for hypersonic and long-range subsonic missiles longer-range weapons. Space and space-based systems receive $33.7 billion, to include $4.7 billion for the development of Resilient Missile Warning/Missile Tracking architectures.

“This budget procures a lethal survivable mix of networked long-range weapons and maximizes procurement of critical maritime strike capabilities that directly address the priority national security challenges,” a senior military official explained. “These investments grow the department’s… [jet fighter]capability and field operational multi-domain hypersonic capabilities beginning in the mid-2020s.”

Also included in the total budget request is $33.7 billion for “vital space capabilities” with $14.5 billion for cyberspace activities.

This new request funds the Air Force with $188.1 billion, with dollars for scaled-back buys of both the F-35 and F-15EX fighter jets.The Navy’s $257.6 billion topline budget includes $8.2 billion for Virginia Class Submarines, with plans to buy one next year. The Army’s $185.9 billion portion redirects canceled Future Attack Reconnaissance Aircraft (FARA) dollars to other aviation initiatives and includes funding to field two additional Mid-Range Capability battalions next year, a move bringing the total up to three battalions. As for the newest service, the Space Force, it’s portion of the request sits at $29.4 billion.

The request also includes $9.9 billion for the Pacific Deterrence Initiative and $2.9 billion for the Europe Deterrence Initiative, two pots of regional-specific money that have proven popular with Congress.

Mixing It Up

While continuity is being touted as an FY25 budget theme, officials did highlight a few changes and areas of note:

  • In FY24, the services requested that seven programs receive authority and/or dollars to support multi-year munitions buys. The department’s FY25 budget assumes that lawmakers will approve those, and it has budgeted accordingly. If lawmakers don’t signoff and approve the funds, the services may need to trim the number of those weapons they purchase next year to account for the higher per unit price point. Additionally, the department is not asking to initiate any new multi-year buys in FY25, but to only pursue the ones it already requested.
  • When Congress approved the FY23 National Defense Authorization Act, it included a provision enabling the administration to send $1 billion military in aid to Taiwan each year via the Presidential Drawdown Authority, which takes weapons from existing Pentagon stocks and ships them overseas. For the first time, the FY25 budget request includes $500 million to replenish US stocks. Ideally, [we] want something closer to $1 billion but we have a $10 billion cap reduction that I talked about, so $500 [million] we thought was a good start,” the senior defense official said. While the administration is moving forward with this plan for Taiwan, they are not requesting similar dollars inside the base budget to backfill weapons sent to Ukraine. In order to do that, lawmakers would need to approve similar legislation to that it inked out in 2023 for Taiwan.
  • For the past couple of decades, the Missile Defense Agency participated in DoD’s budget roll out briefings. However, Inside Defense first reported that will not happen this year. While MDA’s budget is “no more or less classified” than it previously was, the senior defense official noted that there are other defense agencies with bigger budgets that don’t brief reporters during the budget roll out process. “This just puts them more in line with many other peers,” the official added.
  • After the FY24 budget was submitted to Congress, the Pentagon unveiled its new Replicator initiative aimed at quickly scaling and fielding different drones. The department is remaining mum about just which platforms it selected for the first tranche and, as of now, will not detail which ones have been selected or provide a line item in the budget request.

Breaking Defense’s Justin Katz contributed to this reporting.

Pentagon emphasizes ‘continuity’ in $849.8B FY25 budget request, amid political deadlock (2024)

FAQs

What is the budget for the DOD in fy25? ›

Fiscal Year 2025 Defense Appropriations Bill

The Defense Appropriations Bill provides a total discretionary allocation of $833.053 billion, which is $8.57 billion (1%) above the Fiscal Year 2024 level and consistent with the limit set in law by the Fiscal Responsibility Act.

What is the dod budget for fy 2025? ›

Last month the Defense Department released its fiscal year 2025 budget request, about $849.8 billion in all, and now Congress has invited DOD leaders of all stripes to Capitol Hill to discuss what's in the budget and what the department's thoughts were when creating that budget.

What is the black budget of the Pentagon? ›

The black budget is mostly classified because of security reasons. A black budget can be complicated to calculate, but in the United States it has been estimated to be over US$50 billion a year, taking up approximately 7 percent of the US$700 billion military budget.

What is the pay increase for the dod in 2025? ›

The Senate Armed Services Committee's version of the fiscal 2025 National Defense Authorization Act last week showed support for a 2% raise for DoD civilian workers and a 4.5% raise for military members.

Who spends the most on the military? ›

Although the United States spends more on defense than any other country, the Congressional Budget Office projects that defense spending as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) will decline over the coming years — from 2.9 percent of GDP in 2024 to 2.5 percent in 2034.

What percent of GDP does China spend on the military? ›

In 2022, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute estimated the China's military spending is $230 billion which accounted for 1.7% of the country total GDP.

How much does Russia spend on military? ›

Russia's official 2022 military budget is expected to be 4.7 trillion rubles ($75bn), or higher, and about $84bn for 2023, 40% more than initial military budget announced in 2021. Reuters reported that governments documents showed military spending would exceed $100bn in 2023.

Will there be a budget in 2024? ›

Budget 2024: India's Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman will present the Budget for 2024-2025 in late July amidst global uncertainties and conflicts. Business leaders have called for reduced income taxes, increased capital expenditure, and measures to control food inflation.

How large is the US military today? ›

How many people are in the military? The military includes 2,079,142 military personnel and 778,539 civilians as of September 2023. The US military's strength of 2.86 million troops is slightly greater than the population of Chicago, Illinois, the country's third-largest city.

What is the National Defense Authorization Act 2025? ›

Fiscal Year 2025 National Defense Authorization Act Requests

The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) provides authorization of appropriations for the Department of Defense (DOD) and other defense-related activities.

What is the Pentagon budget used for? ›

The military budget pays the salaries, training, and health care of uniformed and civilian personnel, maintains arms, equipment and facilities, funds operations, and develops and buys new items. The budget funds six branches of the US military: the Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Air Force, and Space Force.

What were the Pentagon Papers hiding? ›

The Pentagon Papers revealed that the U.S. had secretly enlarged the scope of its actions in the Vietnam War with coastal raids on North Vietnam and Marine Corps attacks—none of which were reported in the mainstream media.

Who broke the story of the Pentagon Papers? ›

Daniel Ellsberg was as an analyst for Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara's classified study of the war in Vietnam, a report which became known as the Pentagon Papers.

Will the VA pay increase in 2025? ›

Yes, the latest 2025 COLA increase estimate is a 3.0%, which will be applied to VA disability compensation rates effective December 1, 2024, payable beginning January 1, 2025.

How big will the 2024 military pay raise be? ›

What is the military pay raise for 2024? This year's military pay raise will be 5.2 percent, making it one of the biggest annual pay raises in the last 40 years. Military retirees and disabled veterans will also see a cost-of-living increase of 3.2 percent in their monthly checks.

What is the budget for the Pentagon in 2025? ›

On March 11, 2024, the Biden-Harris Administration submitted to Congress a proposed Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 budget request of $849.8 billion for the Department of Defense (DoD), consistent with the caps approved by Congress under the Financial Responsibility Act (FRA) of 2023.

What country has the richest military? ›

Highest military expenditure, total
RankCountrySpending (US$ bn)
World total2,443
1United States916.0
2China296.0
3Russia109.0
37 more rows

Who has the strongest military in the world? ›

Holding the top position, the United States commands the most potent military force globally. According to Global Firepower, with a Power Index of 0.0699, it demonstrates unparalleled capabilities in defence technologies and armed forces.

Who has the most richest army in the world? ›

1. United States Of America. The American military is by far the most powerful in the entire world. The nation boasts one of the most formidable militaries in the world, with a military budget of more than $600 billion.

What is the budget for Darpa FY25? ›

The President's FY2025 budget request for DARPA is $4.369 billion.

What is the budget for the Air Force in FY25? ›

For the Air Force, the fiscal year 2025 budget request is $228.8 billion. This is 2% more than the enacted amount for fiscal year 2024, which I note does not keep up with inflation. When budgets are constrained, tradeoffs must be made, and a certain level of risk is assumed.

What was the DOD budget in 2005? ›

President Bush's budget is focused on: Winning the War on Terror by Defeating Terrorists and Their Supporters: President Bush's FY 2005 budget includes $401.7 billion for the Department of Defense, a 35% increase over FY 2001 levels and a 7% increase over the FY 2004 enacted level.

What is the budget for the PB25? ›

Department of the Navy FY 2025 President's Budget

The Department of the Navy's (DON) FY25 President's Budget (PB25) request is $257.6B, an increase of $1.8B or 0.7% from the FY24 President's Budget request.

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