参议员克里斯·墨菲称该法案“似乎旨在拉拢不到民主党议员的选票”,而E15燃料授权条款则引发共和党领导层内讧
2026年6月25日美国东部时间下午3:10 / 福克斯新闻
美国战争部长皮特·赫格斯瑟向国会申请870亿美元用于伊朗战争相关开支
福克斯新闻首席国家安全记者詹妮弗·格里芬在《特别报道》中就五角大楼向战争部申请补充资金一事进行报道。
五角大楼为支付部分伊朗战争费用提出的巨额资金申请,很难获得参议院民主党议员的支持,而这项数十亿美元申请中暗藏的一个关键议题,可能会在共和党内部制造分歧。
在数月的猜测——猜测这项申请是否会提出、以及具体金额会有多高——之后,国会于周三下午收到了近880亿美元的一揽子方案。当前的标价较此前预计的最高可达2000亿美元的预估大幅降低。
但在历经约四个月、并达成一项脆弱的和平协议后,民主党人似乎不愿支持这项用于补充弹药的拨款,尽管法案中加入了旨在争取他们支持的拉拢条款。
闭门爆发的争执演变为特朗普伊朗谈判的一次胜利
2026年6月23日,纽约州民主党参议员、参议院少数党领袖查克·舒默在华盛顿国会山举行的参议院民主党政策午餐会后的新闻发布会上发言。(丹尼尔·赫尔/彭博社)
“这项法案似乎就是为了拉不到民主党议员的选票而设计的,”康涅狄格州民主党参议员克里斯·墨菲说道,“他们显然没打算让这项法案通过。”
这些拉拢条款包括向农民提供110亿美元援助、以及14亿美元用于抗击非洲的埃博拉疫情,但这些并未打动墨菲。他指责称,其中的农业援助本质上就是“战争成本”。
这项法案也未能获得参议院少数党领袖、纽约州民主党人查克·舒默的支持。他指责唐纳德·特朗普总统“要求纳税人收拾他留下的烂摊子”。
“在将美国拖入一场鲁莽的战争之后,他现在又想让国会给他数百亿美元,来掩盖这场战争造成的破坏——而普通家庭还在为高物价买单,”舒默在X平台上说道,“我们应该为美国民众降低生活成本,而不是再为特朗普开一张空白支票。”
密苏里州共和党参议员乔希·霍利对于参议院民主党人似乎准备否决这项法案并不感到意外。他指出,这项法案在参议院需要至少60票才能通过,并称“他们今年、甚至去年就什么都没支持过”。
伊朗战争代价已达800亿美元——是国会此前被告知金额的两倍多
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6399285728112
“这确实是事实。我的意思是,包括他们谈判达成的那些内容,”霍利说道,“比如FISA法案,他们当时就进行了谈判,我当时就不赞成他们的谈判,但即便如此,你也知道,他们谈判完拨款法案之后又说‘不’。我的意思是,所以,你知道的,如果他们真的支持这项法案,我会很惊讶的。”
申请的大部分资金都将用于五角大楼,其中包括给战争部的670亿美元,其中210亿美元用于补充在“史诗之怒”伊朗攻势中耗尽的导弹库存,170亿美元用于军事行动,24亿美元用于无人机,以及51亿美元用于网络安全和自主作战系统。
另有120亿美元的战争部资金将用于机密项目。这项申请还包括给海岸警卫队的20亿美元,以及给国民警卫队的8亿美元。
特朗普政府还申请了6.72亿美元,用于移除伊朗核材料、开展核查和监测工作,以及其他防扩散活动。
根据该提案,这笔资金将支持移除伊朗核材料,包括六氟化铀、各种形态的铀以及研究堆燃料,其中还包括高浓缩铀。
该提案还将为美国在伊朗开展潜在的核查活动提供资金支持,前提是能够获得场地准入权限;同时将支持国际原子能机构的核查工作,加强核走私侦测力度,并在中东地区扩大核应急支持团队的行动范围。
此次资金申请提出之际,美伊谈判代表正努力将近期达成的谅解备忘录转化为一项更详细的协议,以规范伊朗的核计划及其浓缩铀库存。
虽然该备忘录将稀释浓缩铀列为处理伊朗浓缩铀的最低可接受方式,但谈判代表尚未公开披露这些材料最终是会留在伊朗、转移至其他国家还是被销毁。
特朗普申请6.72亿美元阻止伊朗核计划,谈判代表正权衡铀库存的最终去向
2026年5月5日,奥斯汀一家埃克森美孚加油站的油泵上显示着无乙醇汽油的价格。特朗普政府将于今年夏季豁免美国对高乙醇含量的E15汽油的波动性要求,扩大其销售范围,惠及玉米种植户和生物燃料生产商。(凯莉·格林利/彭博社通过盖蒂图片社)
就在民主党人对这项补充拨款法案怒不可遏之际,法案中暗藏的一项条款可能也会让共和党人感到头疼。
在农业援助条款中,有一项政策旨在永久延长乙醇混合汽油的销售。乙醇是一种由玉米制成的液态生物燃料,这种混合燃料被称为E15。
E15议题罕见地在参议院共和党领导层内部制造了分歧,而且这种分歧根据各州地理位置在参议院共和党议员中蔓延。
“承诺推行全年E15授权,这是总统兑现不了的空头支票,”一位共和党消息人士说道。
参议院多数党领袖、南达科他州共和党人约翰·图恩支持这项政策,尤其是考虑到该政策可能会为那些在玉米种植为主的州参选或寻求连任的候选人带来好处。
但作为他的副手、参议院多数党党鞭、怀俄明州共和党人约翰·巴拉索,在上个月众议院通过全年E15法案时就表示反对,并辩称允许强制使用这种燃料混合会损害小型炼油厂的利益,并且会破坏特朗普标志性立法“宏大美丽法案”中取得的能源生产进展。
“美国的小型炼油厂是负担得起的美国能源的无名英雄,华盛顿特区却常常忽视它们。工薪家庭的生计都依赖它们,”巴拉索本周早些时候在参议院议场说道,“我代表怀俄明州的几家小型炼油厂。这些炼油厂雇佣了数千名员工。”
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“它们让汽油价格更亲民,”他继续说道,“它们增强了我国的能源安全。针对小型炼油厂的新授权提案将会损害它们和为它们工作的人们的利益。”
自众议院法案通过以来,图恩表示他一直在进行沟通,以期在该议题上找到“前进之路”。
“我们正在与利益相关群体以及双方议员合作,弄清楚我们能否落实这项政策并将其付诸实施,”图恩说道。
支持该条款的南达科他州参议员迈克·朗兹辩称,他将其视为一项“激励措施”,但也承认该条款有可能被从整体补充拨款法案中修改掉。
“我的意思是,这让这笔交易更划算,我不知道他们为什么要把它删掉,”朗兹说道。
亚历克斯·米勒是福克斯新闻数字频道负责报道美国参议院的撰稿人。
Trump’s $88B Iran war bill collides with Senate opposition
Sen Chris Murphy says the package ‘seems designed to repel Democratic votes,’ while an E15 fuel mandate splits GOP leaders
June 25, 2026 3:10pm EDT / Fox News
War Secretary Pete Hegseth requests $87B from Capitol Hill to cover Iran war costs
Fox News chief national security correspondent Jennifer Griffin reports on the Pentagon’s request for supplemental funds for the War Department on ‘Special Report.’
The Pentagon’s massive funding request to pay some of the costs of the Iran war is going to be a hard sell for Senate Democrats, and a key issue buried deep in the multibillion-dollar request could divide Republicans.
Congress received the nearly $88 billion package Wednesday afternoon after months of speculation about whether it would ever come, and exactly how much it would cost. The current price tag is drastically lower than earlier estimates, which project the package could reach as high as $200 billion.
But after roughly four months and a tenuous peace deal in place, Democrats appear unwilling to support the funding that would replenish munitions, despite sweeteners that appear geared toward attracting their support.
CLOSED-DOOR OUTBURST TURNS INTO VICTORY FOR TRUMP’S IRAN NEGOTIATIONS
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, a Democrat from New York, speaks at a news conference following Senate Democrat policy luncheons at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on June 23, 2026.(Daniel Heuer/Bloomberg)
“It seems designed to repel Democratic votes,” Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said. “They’re clearly not trying to pass this.”
Those sweeteners, which include $11 billion in aid for farmers and $1.4 billion to fight the Ebola outbreak in Africa, didn’t sway Murphy, who charged that the farm assistance in particular was a “war cost.”
The package isn’t getting any love from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., either, who accused President Donald Trump of “asking taxpayers to clean up his messes.”
“After dragging America into a reckless war, he now wants Congress to hand him tens of billions more to paper over the damage — while families are still paying higher prices,” Schumer said on X. “We should be lowering costs for the American people, not writing another blank check for Trump.”
Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., wasn’t surprised that Senate Democrats appeared ready to bat down the package, which will need at least 60 votes to pass in the Senate, arguing that “they haven’t supported anything this year, or last year.”
IRAN WAR’S PRICE TAG HITS $80B — MORE THAN DOUBLE WHAT CONGRESS WAS TOLD
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6399285728112
“It’s literally true. I mean, including stuff that they negotiated,” Hawley said. “FISA, they negotiated, which I didn’t like when they negotiated, but still, you know, they negotiated and said, ‘No,’ they negotiated all the appropriations bills then said, ‘No.’ I mean, so, you know, I’d be shocked if they did support it.”
The bulk of the request is geared toward the Pentagon and includes $67 billion for the War Department, including $21 billion to replenish missile stockpiles depleted during the Iran offensive, known as Operation Epic Fury, $17 billion for military operations, $2.4 billion for drones and $5.1 billion for cybersecurity and autonomy.
Another $12 billion of the War Department funding would go toward classified programs. The request also includes $2 billion for the Coast Guard and $800 million for the National Guard.
The administration is also seeking $672 million for the removal of Iranian nuclear materials, inspections and verification efforts, and other counterproliferation activities.
According to the proposal, the funding would support the removal of Iranian nuclear materials, including uranium hexafluoride (UF6), uranium in various forms and research reactor fuel, including highly enriched uranium.
The proposal would also fund potential U.S. verification activities in Iran, subject to site access, support inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency, strengthen nuclear-smuggling detection efforts and expand Nuclear Emergency Support Team operations across the Middle East.
The funding comes as U.S. and Iranian negotiators work to translate the recent memorandum of understanding (MOU) into a more detailed agreement governing Iran’s nuclear program and stockpile of enriched uranium.
While the memorandum established downblending as the minimum acceptable method for handling Iran’s enriched uranium, negotiators have not publicly disclosed whether the material would ultimately remain in Iran, be transferred to another country or be destroyed.
TRUMP SEEKS $672M TO STOP IRANIAN NUKES AS NEGOTIATORS WEIGH FATE OF URANIUM STOCKPILE
The price of ethanol-free gasoline is shown on a gas pump at an Exxon gas station in Austin on May 5, 2026. The Trump administration will waive higher-ethanol E15 gasoline from U.S. volatility requirements this summer, expanding sales and benefiting corn farmers and biofuels producers.(Kaylee Greenlee/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
While Democrats shake their fists at the supplemental spending package, one provision tucked into the legislation could also give Republicans heartburn.
Among the farm aid provisions is a policy to permanently extend the sale of gasoline with a blend of ethanol, a liquid biofuel made from corn, known as E15.
The E15 issue showed a rare rift in Senate Republican leadership, and one that ripples through the Senate GOP based on geography.
“Promising a year-round E15 mandate is a check the president can’t cash,” a Republican source said.
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., backs it, particularly for the benefits it could give candidates running for election or re-election in states where corn crops are king.
But his second-in-command, Senate Majority Whip John Barrasso, R-Wyo., bucked the House’s year-round E15 bill when it passed last month and has argued that allowing a mandate on the fuel blend would hurt small refiners and undo strides for energy production made in Trump’s flagship legislation, the “big, beautiful bill.”
“America’s small refiners are unsung heroes of affordable American energy. Washington D.C., often overlooks them. Working families depend on them,” Barrasso said on the Senate floor earlier this week. “I represent several small refineries in Wyoming. The refineries employ thousands of people.”
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“They make gasoline prices more affordable,” he continued. “They strengthen our nation’s energy security. Proposed new mandates on small refineries would harm them and the people who work for them.”
Since the House bill passed, Thune said he has continued to have conversations to find a “path forward” on the issue.
“We’re working with the stakeholder community and our members on both sides to figure out if that’s something we can execute on and get done,” Thune said.
Sen. Mike Rounds, R-S.D., a proponent of the provision, argued that he viewed it as an “incentive,” but acknowledged there was a chance it could be amended out of the broader supplemental package.
“I mean it makes a better deal, and I don’t know why they would want to take it out,” Rounds said.
Alex Miller is a writer for Fox News Digital covering the U.S. Senate.
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