Iran War Spending: Republicans Want $95 Billion, No End in Sight
House Republicans filed legislation to authorize $95 billion in new federal spending to fund the Iran war, election-related measures, and farm aid, per NBC News — the third reconciliation package in as many months, and the clearest signal yet that Washington has no exit timeline.
Iran War Spending: Republicans Want $95 Billion, No End in Sight
House Republicans filed legislation to authorize $95 billion in new federal spending to fund the Iran war, election-related measures, and farm aid, per NBC News — the third reconciliation package in as many months, and the clearest signal yet that Washington has no exit timeline.
The bill allocates $90 billion directly to military operations, with the remainder split between domestic election infrastructure and agricultural support. It arrives on the fifth consecutive day of direct exchange — U.S. strikes on Iranian targets, Iranian strikes on American military installations in the region — with neither side offering anything resembling a de-escalation framework, according to the New York Times.
The strategic picture is deteriorating faster than the political one. Five months of contradictory statements, false claims of progress, and abrupt reversals have left the administration in a weaker negotiating position than it held at the outset, according to The Guardian. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Global energy markets are pricing in a prolonged disruption. And Congress is now being asked to fund an open-ended conflict with a nine-figure appropriation and no defined objective.
The $95 billion number matters not just as a budget line but as a commitment. When you put that much money behind something, you've told the market — and the enemy — that you're staying. That's either resolve or momentum. The difference between the two is whether you know where you're going.
One move you can make now: if your business carries exposure to energy costs, check your contract force majeure clauses today. The Hormuz closure is a qualifying event under most standard commercial agreements.