Now that DOD and other federal agencies will finish the fiscal year at 2024 spending levels, top Republican appropriators have sent detailed spending suggestions to the Pentagon, Defense News reported.
The document recommends reductions on some weapons systems and the service departments’ climate change-related programming, while boosting some personnel accounts. But the spending plan is not binding.
“Congress ceded a significant degree of authority to the executive branch in the FY25 defense budget, and they can’t get that back by issuing a letter that basically says, ‘This is what we intended,’” American Enterprise Institute Senior Fellow Todd Harrison told Defense News.
Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Sean Potter