Pentagon Doesn’t Know What to Do With $500 Bn

Trump is pushing for another $500 billion for the Pentagon as he moves the U.S. to the brink of war with Iran. But Pentagon officials are reportedly uncertain about where to put the money, “because the amount is so large.”

Aerial view of the Pentagon. (National Archives)

By Jake Johnson
Common Dreams

Pentagon officials are reportedly struggling to devise a plan to spend the extra $500 billion that U.S. President Donald Trump wants to give the bloated, fraud-ridden agency in the next fiscal year, vindicating criticism of the funding proposal as immensely wasteful.

The Washington Post reported that “White House aides and defense officials have run into logistical challenges surrounding where to put the money, because the amount is so large.”

The extra $500 billion, endorsed by the top Republican on the House Armed Services Committee, would push annual U.S. military spending to a staggering $1.5 trillion. Republicans enacted unprecedented cuts to federal nutrition assistance and Medicaid last summer.

The Post noted that “the increase in military spending alone would amount to one of the biggest federal programs. One Democratic plan to expand Medicare to cover dental, vision, and hearing benefits would cost $350 billion over the next decade, by comparison.”

Pete Hegseth, before becoming Secretary of War, at a Turning Point USA event, 2018. (Gage Skidmore, Wikimedia, Creative Commons ASA- 2.0)

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget has estimated that a $1.5 trillion annual military budget would add $5.8 trillion to the national debt over the next decade.

“This is ridiculous,” Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) wrote in response to the Post‘s reporting. “Or we could build 3 million new homes, lower the Medicare age, or add dental, vision, and hearing coverage. Not another cent for private defense contractors and forever wars.”

According to the Post:

“The Pentagon has been grappling with how to rapidly replenish expensive munitions that it has relied on heavily, including Tomahawk cruise missiles, Patriot missile-defense interceptors and ship-launched munitions known as Standard Missile-6s, or SM-6s.

It also is wrestling with how to upgrade its Cold War-era nuclear weapons program with expensive next-generation systems like the B-21 bomber and the Columbia-class submarine. The aircraft, with an estimated cost of about $700 million each, is expected to replace the Air Force’s fleet of B-1 and B-2 bombers. The Columbia-class submarines are expected to cost at least $9 billion each.”

Trump is pushing for another $500 billion for the Pentagon as he moves the U.S. to the brink of war with Iran, potentially another expensive and deadly conflict in the Middle East.

The New York Times reported Sunday that “Trump has told advisers that if diplomacy or any initial targeted U.S. attack does not lead Iran to give in to his demands that it give up its nuclear program, he will consider a much bigger attack in coming months intended to drive that country’s leaders from power.”

The Pentagon has failed eight consecutive audits of its books and is the only major federal agency that has not passed an independent audit. Roughly half of the Pentagon’s annual spending goes to private military contractors.

Little girls on a street in Camden, New Jersey, 2017. (Carol M. Highsmith’s America Project, Library of Congress)

“Trump’s call for a $500 billion increase in Pentagon spending is a terrible idea that would starve the American people of resources needed to address critical issues across the U.S.

American voters are fed up with inflation, health care costs, housing prices, and unemployment,” Robert Weissman, co-president of Public Citizensaid earlier this month in response to the proposal.

“The Pentagon has repeatedly failed audits and has wasted hundreds of billions of dollars on fraudulent defense contractors who abuse the system and steal from taxpayers,” said Weissman.

“Trump has added to this wasteful legacy by spending vast sums of money on national guard deployments across the U.S., military intervention in Venezuela, and by pushing a ‘Golden Dome’ boondoggle.

Congress must stop pouring more money into a trillion-dollar Pentagon budget beset with fraud and waste, at the expense of priority human needs.”

Jake Johnson is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.

This article is from Common Dreams.

Views expressed in this article and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

6 comments for “Pentagon Doesn’t Know What to Do With $500 Bn

  1. WillD
    February 27, 2026 at 01:59

    Well, here’s a suggestion. Give it the to the victims of the many US conflicts around the world. I know it would need a few trillion more, but any amount is better than nothing..

  2. John Puma
    February 26, 2026 at 15:46

    I’m sure Mr Elon “shrink government” Musk wouldn’t mind a bit fatter version of the contract he’s reportedly getting from the Pentagon for Grok “development.”

  3. common sense
    February 26, 2026 at 15:14

    Counting a trillion, second by second, will take about 33.000 years.

  4. Doggie Bags & Poop Scoopers For Sailors
    February 26, 2026 at 14:47

    We are at a point now where trump says the most outrageous numbers , ideas , and our represenatives are the normal .
    This has gone on like this for a long time but trump laughs with this absolute over the top nonsense as the reps think we are that stupid .
    Yes we are that stupid .
    Dumbest batch of Antisemericans we are .

  5. Tom Welsh
    February 26, 2026 at 14:36

    It’s almost as if the chief executive were prey to grandiose narcissism combined with terrible fears of impotence. Which can’t be alleviated when his biggest and bestest warship can’t fight because it has tummy trouble.

  6. Drew Hunkins
    February 26, 2026 at 13:13

    So pathetic. These militarist ignoramuses have failed how many annual audits in a row now, 12, 13?!

    Meanwhile, we can’t have Med4All US citizens; it’s just totally unworkable, unfeasible, unreasonable.

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