The Biden Defense Budget: What’s in It

May 31, 2021

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley told lawmakers last week that the $715 billion Pentagon budget request President Joe Biden rolled out Friday is “slightly” focused more on the future than the present.

“We are trying right now to put down payments on investments that are going to pay huge dividends five, 10, 15 years from now for a future force,” Milley testified.

Here are some of the items in the budget request, according to the White House, a DOD press release, a Pentagon press briefing and other public reports.

  • As expected, the Army has the tightest numbers, with a topline of $174 billion, a drop of $1.5 billion from the current fiscal year. The Navy is allocated $207 billion, a $4.6 billion increase. The Air Force is allocated $204 billion, up by $8.8 billion. The Space Force’s budget jumps to $17.5 billion, a $2.1 billion increase.
  • The budget calls for a 2.7% pay raise for civilian and military personnel.
  • The budget cuts procurement by $8 billion, setting up a fight with many on Capitol Hill over the future of legacy weapons systems. “The budget also documents some of the tough choices we had to make, as we lessen our reliance on vulnerable systems that are no longer suited for today’s advanced-threat environment, or are too costly to sustain,” Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks told reporters Friday. Much of that money is redirected to research.
  • “Our budget requests $617 million of new investments to make our installations more resilient and the department better prepared to address this vital [climate] challenge,” Acting DOD Comptroller Anne McAndrew said. “We’re requesting $263 million to strengthen our installations, $186 million for science and technology investments, $153 million in investments to mitigate the department’s climate impacts and capitalize on DOD’s buying power, and $15 million for climate contingency and preparedness, to incorporate climate risks into war games, exercises and other planning tools to ensure we understand the impacts of climate change on the missions and are prepared to respond.”
  • Quality of life programs are allocated $8.6 billion, a 3% increase over the current year’s levels. “Taking care of our people also means providing a safe environment for our people to work, grow, and advance,” McAndrew said.
  • There is no side account for overseas operations, often characterized as a slush fund. For the first time since Sept. 11, 2001, combat costs are included in the main budget.

Stay tuned to On Base for more coverage and analysis of the fiscal year 2022 budget.

DOD photo by U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Jack Sanders

May 31, 2021

Recent News

Snap of the Week

Snap of the Week

Naval Academy plebes climb the Herndon Monument, a tradition symbolizing the successful completion of the midshipmen’s freshman year. The class of 2027 completed the climb in 2 hours, 19 minutes and 11 seconds. Navy photo by Stacy Godfrey

In Our Communities

In Our Communities

More than 74,000 residents of Whidbey Island, Washington could suffer long-term health impacts from the noise of jets stationed at Naval Air Station Whidbey Island, according to a University of Washington study, The Seattle Times reported. Researchers said the impact...

$2 Billion Aid Package Will Help Ukraine Build Its Own Weapons

$2 Billion Aid Package Will Help Ukraine Build Its Own Weapons

A new $2 billion aid package the State Department announced Thursday will help build a Ukraine Defense Enterprise Program, according to Defense News. The fund will help Ukraine buy weapons from other countries while “investing in Ukraine’s defense industrial base,...

NDAA Draft Asks for DOD Study on Privatizing Barracks

NDAA Draft Asks for DOD Study on Privatizing Barracks

The House Armed Services Committee’s draft National Defense Authorization Act indicates lawmakers may not be ready to privatize more barracks, as Military.com reported. “Members aren’t completely bought into privatizing all housing,” a senior Republican committee aide...

PAST STORIES