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US military pushes for boost in 2027 spending on drones and air defenses used in Iran war

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Acting Under Secretary of Defense and Comptroller, Jules Hurst III, left, and Director of Force Structure, Resources and Assessment of the Joint Chief of Staff Space Force Lt. Gen. Steven Whitney, talk with members of the media during a briefing on the Department of Defense's FY27 Budget Request at the Pentagon, Tuesday, April 21, 2026 in Washington. (AP Photo/Kevin Wolf)

WASHINGTON โ€“ U.S. military officials on Tuesday called for spending tens of billions of dollars in the next budget year on drones, air defense systems and fighter jets that have been a key part of fighting the Iran war.

As part of President Donald Trumpโ€™s push to boost defense spending to $1.5 trillion in the 2027 budget, the Pentagon wants to triple spending on drones and related technology to more than $74 billion and invest over $30 billion into more critical munitions, including missile interceptors, whose stockpiles have become critically low during the Iran war.

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Military officials said the spending blueprint was developed before the conflict in the Middle East. They also did not discuss how much they will request in additional funds for the war, which would be on top of what the White House is seeking to boost defense spending in the next budget year.

โ€œThe overlap, youโ€™ll see, is the request for munitions, which is something we always need," Jules Hurst III, acting undersecretary of defense and the Pentagon's comptroller, told reporters at a briefing. "We always need to increase our magazine depth. But outside of that, there arenโ€™t any operational costs in here from Iran.โ€

Heavy investment in drone warfare

The missile interceptors whose numbers are under the most strain are the Patriot and the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD, air defense systems. The THAAD system is designed for defeating medium-range ballistic missiles, while the Patriot system is for taking down short-range ballistic missiles and crewed aircraft. However, they both also were used to shoot down cheap Iranian drones.

The $30 billion budget item also would aim to purchase long-range Precision Strike Missiles and Mid-Range Capability missile systems used by the U.S. Army.

The budget proposal would allocate nearly $54 billion for military drones and related technology, as well as $21 billion for weapons systems designed to take down enemy drones.

Drones and other unmanned vehicles have emerged as a key weapon in the wars in Ukraine and Iran, and top Pentagon officials say the U.S. must significantly increase its funding of both drones and counter-drone systems.

โ€œDrone warfare is rapidly reshaping the modern battlefield,โ€ Hurst said. โ€œThis budget is the largest investment in drone warfare and counter drone technology in U.S. history.โ€

As part of the 2027 budget, the Pentagon also intends to grow the military by 44,500 troops, or more than 2%, spend more than $2 billion on operations on the U.S.-Mexico border and make the largest shipbuilding request since 1962.

Dramatic increase in the Navy's Tomahawk missiles

While officials said the budget was developed before operations began in Iran, it featured major jumps in many of the missiles that have been used in the conflict. One of the most dramatic increases was in the choice for the Navy to increase of its purchase of the Tomahawk cruise missile from 55 missiles last year to 785 in this yearโ€™s budget.

The long-range cruise missile was heavily used in Iran and led to concerns from experts that the military was using it much faster than it could replenish its stocks.

Vice Adm. Ben Reynolds, the Navyโ€™s budget boss, wouldnโ€™t say if he expected all 785 Tomahawk missiles to be delivered within the year. He acknowledged that weapons production capacity โ€œis absolutely the challengeโ€ and, in the case of the Tomahawk, he said the Navy expects Raytheon โ€” the company that makes it โ€” โ€œto invest very heavily now to be able to ramp up production.โ€

The services also are addressing the difficulty in producing the advanced munitions favored by the military by slowly shifting toward more basic weapons.

Major Gen. Frank Verdugo, the Air Forceโ€™s budget chief, said the Air Force wants to invest $600 million to develop โ€œaffordableโ€ munitions as part of an effort to move away from โ€œsmall numbers of exquisite weapons toward a future where we can overwhelm an adversary with sheer volume.โ€

Trump-endorsed battleship is missing

The Navy said it would be buying 18 more warships using more than $65 billion โ€” a 46% increase from the previous year.

However, the Trump-endorsed battleship that was announced to great fanfare last year is not in this yearโ€™s budget, according to the briefing. Instead, the Navy is planning to pay for the first battleship in next yearโ€™s budget.

The military's spending proposal also lacked money for repairing U.S. bases in the Middle East, which Hurst said would be part of a future request.

โ€œPart of it is we would assess what our posture should be in the Middle East,โ€ Hurst told reporters. โ€œWe have to make sure we understand what we want to construct in the future. We might change how we build bases in the Middle East based on this conflict.โ€