$29 billion in US Military Funding Tucked Inside Proposed Coronavirus Relief Package

Foreign Affairs

Washington: The Republicans’ proposed Coronavirus relief package in the Senate includes $29 billion for the Pentagon, including nearly $8 billion in procurement and acquisition funding for major weapons and aircraft programs.

The appropriations legislation would fund Navy expeditionary medical ships, an expeditionary fast transport ship and P-8 Poseidon maritime surveillance aircraft; F-35A Joint Strike Fighter stealth jets, C-130J Hercules transport aircraft and A-10 Warthog wing replacements for the Air Force; and Strykers and new AH-64 Apache helicopters for the army, as well as missile defense programs, according to a draft proposal released August 3.

The proposal contains $29 billion in funding for the Pentagon overall; it would also reimburse defense companies for Coronavirus-related expenditures — such as those incurred during stop-work orders — as authorized by the CARES Act.

The Senate proposal would restore some programs that were slashed in the 2020 defence budget in order to redirect funding to the southern border wall.

In February, the Trump administration sought a reprogramming request for $3.8 billion from military aircraft and shipbuilding funds in the Fiscal 2020 National Defence Authorization Act; some of the programs targeted for reduction at the time had been overfunded by Congress, officials said at levels above the military’s original request.

Army Lt. Col. Chris Mitchell, a Pentagon spokesman, told Task & Purpose that $3.5 billion of that money has already been obligated toward the wall construction effort, which has led to disputes among lawmakers and the White House.

Many Senate Democrats were quick to oppose the latest legislation, with many businesses shuttered and millions of people out of work during the pandemic.

Senate Appropriations Committee Vice Chairman Patrick Leahy, called the package a “wish list” for the Defense Department instead of much-needed relief for American citizens.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Massachusetts, a longtime critic of the defense industry, called the bill “obscene.”

“Senate Republicans are using COVID-19 relief as cover to shovel $30 billion to defence contractors while gutting unemployment insurance, providing zero dollars for state and local governments, and doing absolutely nothing on the looming eviction crisis,” she said in a statement.