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    Trump Seeks $1.5 Trillion FY2027 Defense Boost With Bigger Fleet, Space and Missiles

      TL;DR: President Trump's FY2027 defense request seeks $1.5 trillion — a 42% increase — reallocating nearly $20 billion and putting $756.8 billion into new capabilities to expand the industrial base, supply chains, munitions and jobs. It funds a layered “Golden Dome” missile defense ($18B), $31.7B for readiness, +44,000 end strength, accelerated modernization (F‑47, B‑21, nuclear), and service member pay/housing. Key lines include $74B for drone/counter‑drone tech, $65.8B for shipbuilding (18 Battle Force Ships), nearly $75B for Space Force, and $20B+ for cyber, though detailed program and job breakdowns were limited.

    Budget Request Released

    The Department of War on Tuesday released President Donald J. Trump’s Fiscal Year 2027 defense budget request, seeking $1.5 trillion in total spending. The department said the proposal represents a 42% increase over current funding levels.

    Secretary of War Pete Hegseth said the request is intended to expand U.S. military capacity while maintaining readiness. “We are delivering on President Trump’s commitment to expand American military dominance for decades to come,” Hegseth said. He added that the budget is meant to protect the homeland and sustain force readiness.

    The department also said it cut nearly $20 billion in what it described as unnecessary spending and redirected that money to warfighting priorities.

    Industrial Base and Procurement

    More than half of the proposed budget, or $756.8 billion, is allocated to what the department called investments in new capabilities. According to the release, the funding would support defense industrial base expansion, supply chain investments, critical minerals and munitions production, and additional work for small and medium-sized U.S. businesses.

    The department said the plan would increase purchases of major defense articles and could create hundreds of thousands of jobs, though it did not provide a detailed breakdown in the release.

    Homeland Defense and Readiness

    The budget requests $18 billion to begin operationalizing the “Golden Dome,” a homeland missile defense effort described as a layered system that would include space-based sensors and interceptors, kinetic and non-kinetic missile defeat capabilities, and related enabling technologies.

    It also includes $2.3 billion to sustain enhanced border security efforts in coordination with the Department of Homeland Security.

    For readiness, the proposal adds $31.7 billion above FY2026 enacted levels for what the department called core readiness and readiness enablers, including cybersecurity, ship operations, flying hours, and ground readiness.

    Force Structure and Modernization

    The request includes funding for advanced platforms, including the F-47 and B-21, as well as accelerated modernization of the U.S. nuclear arsenal. It also provides for military pay increases and housing support for service members and their families.

    The department said the budget would increase total end strength by more than 2% in FY2027. Active-duty components would rise by more than 3%, for a total increase of 44,000 service members.

    Drones, Shipbuilding, Space, and Cyber

    The proposal allocates more than $74 billion for drone and counter-drone technologies, which the department said would triple spending in that area compared with FY2026.

    For maritime programs, the budget includes $65.8 billion for shipbuilding, shipyard modernization, and the creation of what the department called the “Golden Fleet.” The request would fund 18 new Battle Force Ships, which the release said is the largest such request since 1962.

    The budget would also nearly double funding for the U.S. Space Force, with more than $75 billion requested for space-related capabilities.

    Cyber operations would receive more than $20 billion under the proposal, aimed at defending federal systems, critical infrastructure, and supply chains while expanding cyber operational capacity.


    Image Credit: CENTCOM
    AI Use Notice: A human gathered the research, but AI wrote the first draft. A human then edited and approved it.

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