伊朗战争总成本达800亿美元——是国会此前被告知金额的两倍多


2026年6月23日 美国东部时间12:10 / 福克斯新闻频道

五角大楼预计将申请约800亿美元追加拨款以覆盖伊朗战争开支

作者:摩根·菲利普斯、亚历克斯·米勒 福克斯新闻报道

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特朗普政府正在筹备等待已久的数十亿美元拨款申请,用于补充伊朗战争期间耗尽的弹药库存。与此同时,国会正就五角大楼提出的另一笔巨额拨款请求展开拉锯。

一位知情人士向福克斯新闻数字频道证实,五角大楼预计将申请约800亿美元的追加拨款,以覆盖伊朗战争的开支。这一数字是战争部长皮特·赫格斯和五角大楼主计长杰伊·赫斯特今年早些时候向议员们作证时所披露金额的两倍。

自战争爆发以来,议员们就一直在等待政府提交拨款申请,但几乎无从得知实际的开支规模。

特朗普推动的3500亿美元“自由兵工厂”计划遭共和党怀疑

五角大楼正在申请800亿美元的国会追加拨款,用于支付伊朗战争开支。(斯托扬·内诺夫/伊丽莎白·弗朗茨/路透社)

这项拨款申请能否在参议院获得通过仍未可知,尤其是在多名民主党和共和党议员对唐纳德·特朗普总统暂时暂停战争的谅解备忘录(MOU)表示反对的背景下。

参议院多数党领袖、南达科他州共和党议员约翰·图恩辩称:“我们需要确保尽一切努力补充、重置我们耗尽的大量弹药,这不仅是因为伊朗当前的局势,也是为了战前储备。”
“我认为,从国家安全角度出发,人们普遍希望采取一些措施来确保我们有能力威慑并击败任何出现的威胁。”图恩表示,“所以我们拭目以待,当申请提交上来时,我们会推进相关工作。我们会在某个时间点了解投票情况。”

外界预计的这项拨款申请提出之前,赫格斯上周在国会山展开游说,向参议员们争取更多五角大楼经费;副战争部长史蒂夫·芬伯格也与议员们进行了会谈,推动这项800亿美元的追加拨款计划,该消息最早由《华尔街日报》报道。

赫格斯出席参议院听证会之际,伊朗战争250亿美元成本及60天战争权力授权期限逼近
https://www.foxnews.com/video/6391217489112

赫格斯和赫斯特此前向国会透露,战争已花费290亿美元,但许多议员认为这一数字低估了实际成本,因为用于轰炸伊朗的SM-3、爱国者、萨德导弹以及战斧导弹的数量庞大。

特朗普计划周三在白宫会见国防承包商高管,这是对3月6日那场会议的跟进。当时洛克希德·马丁、雷神母公司RTX、BAE系统、波音、霍尼韦尔航空航天、L3哈里斯以及诺斯罗普·格鲁曼承诺将其“高端”弹药系统的产量提高三倍。

6月16日,特朗普援引《国防生产法案》加快生产,理由是“弹药工业基础存在系统性制约,包括有限的生产能力、脆弱的供应链、长期交付依赖以及相关生产瓶颈”。

战略与国际研究中心的分析师警告称,战争中使用的多款关键武器系统的库存可能需要数年时间才能恢复至战前水平。他们的分析发现,按照当前的生产速度,爱国者和萨德导弹拦截器以及战斧巡航导弹的全面补充可能需要三年甚至更长时间。

国防工业官员和外部专家认为,大幅提高产量需要国会拨付额外资金,以便五角大楼下达大规模补充订单,并为制造商提供扩大生产所需的长期需求信号。

“美国军方拥有足够多的弹药、军火和库存,足以实现特朗普总统的所有战略目标,甚至更多。‘史诗暴怒行动’已经证明了招惹美国的后果,”白宫发言人安娜·凯利说道,“即便如此,总统仍敦促我们的国防承包商持续生产更多‘美国制造’的武器,这些武器是世界上最先进的。民主党人毁掉了我们的军队,但特朗普总统重建了它。”

特朗普公布1.5万亿美元国防扩张计划,大幅削减国内开支——哪些项目将被砍掉

参议院多数党领袖、南达科他州共和党议员约翰·图恩表示,在与伊朗持续紧张的局势下,美国必须补充耗尽的弹药库存。(内森·波斯纳/安纳多卢通讯社)

针对伊朗的轰炸行动名为“史诗暴怒行动”,于2月28日启动。4月7日以来双方实施了脆弱的停火,目前两国高级官员正在就长期和平协议进行谈判,上周签署的谅解备忘录为谈判奠定了框架。

与此同时,这并非五角大楼和特朗普向议员们提出的唯一一笔巨额拨款请求。

本月早些时候,特朗普要求共和党人立即启动第三份预算和解法案的起草工作,该法案包含3500亿美元国防拨款,与他备受期待的《保障美国选民资格(SAVE)美国法案》绑定。

这一数字部分用于弥补他最初提出的1.5万亿美元国防预算拨款请求的缺口,议员们在拨款谈判中远未达到这一金额。

“这是对我们军队的一代人级投资,甚至比里根总统的计划还要宏大!‘和解3.0’是实现我们的战士所需的全部1.5万亿美元国防预算的唯一途径,以此建立‘自由兵工厂’,”特朗普在Truth Social平台上说道。

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但这项申请已经在参议院共和党内部遭遇早期阻碍,目前几乎没有共和党人愿意绕过常规拨款程序为五角大楼提供资金。

本月早些时候在一场激烈的参议院拨款委员会听证会上,参议院拨款委员会主席、缅因州共和党议员苏珊·柯林斯和肯塔基州共和党议员米奇·麦康奈尔一致认为,另一项和解法案不太可能获得通过,尤其是将其作为数十亿美元额外国防开支的 dumping ground(垃圾场)。

柯林斯表示:“和解程序并非最佳途径。”
“要通过和解法案将非常困难。”

Iran war’s price tag hits $80B — more than double what Congress was told

June 23, 2026 12:10pm EDT / Fox News

The Pentagon is expected to request roughly $80 billion in supplemental funding to cover the cost of the war in Iran

By Morgan Phillips, Alex Miller, Fox News

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The Trump administration is prepping a long-awaited, multibillion-dollar request to resupply munitions drained during the Iran war as Congress wrestles with another eye-popping funding request from the Pentagon.

The Pentagon is expected to request roughly $80 billion in supplemental funding to cover the cost of the war in Iran, a source familiar confirmed to Fox News Digital. That figure is double what War Secretary Pete Hegseth and Pentagon Comptroller Jay Hurst testified before lawmakers earlier this year.

Lawmakers have been waiting since the war began for a request from the administration with little insight on what the actual price tag would be.

TRUMP’S PUSH FOR $350 BILLION ‘ARSENAL OF FREEDOM’ HITS GOP SKEPTICISM

The Pentagon is requesting $80 billion in supplemental funding from Congress to pay for the Iran war.(Stoyan Nenov/Elizabeth Frantz/Reuters)

Whether the request can pass muster in the upper chamber remains to be seen, especially with the backlash among several Democrats and Republicans over President Donald Trump’s memorandum of understanding (MOU) that has temporarily paused the war.

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D.,contended, “We need to make sure we’re doing everything we can to replenish, resupply a lot of our munitions that have been depleted, not only just with what’s happening in Iran but prior to that.”

“I think there’s a good interest in doing some things that would help ensure that, from a National Security standpoint, we’re prepared to deter and defeat any threat that comes up,” Thune said. “And so we’ll see if and when it gets here, we’ll work through it. We’ll see where the votes are at some point.”

The expected request comes after Hegseth made the rounds on Capitol Hill last week, pitching senators for more funding for the Pentagon, and after Deputy War Secretary Steve Feinberg spoke with lawmakers pushing for an $80 billion supplemental, which was first reported by the Wall Street Journal.

HEGSETH TESTIFIES AT SENATE AS IRAN WAR’S $25B PRICE TAG AND 60-DAY WAR POWERS DEADLINE LOOM

https://www.foxnews.com/video/6391217489112

Hegseth and Hurst recently told Congress that the war had cost $29 billion, but many lawmakers believe that figure underestimates the cost given the number of SM3, Patriot, THAAD missiles and Tomahawks used to bomb Iran.

Trump is set to meet with top executives at defense contractors at the White House on Wednesday, following up on a March 6 meeting where Lockheed Martin, Raytheon parent RTX, BAE Systems, Boeing, Honeywell Aerospace, L3Harris and Northrop Grumman promised to quadruple production on their “exquisite” munitions systems.

On June 16, Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to speed up production due to “systemic constraints in the munitions industrial base, including limited production capacity, fragile supply chains, long-lead dependencies, and related production bottlenecks.”

Analysts at the Center for Strategic and International Studies have warned that inventories of several key weapons systems used during the war could take years to restore to pre-war levels. Their analysis found that Patriot and THAAD missile interceptors, as well as Tomahawk cruise missiles, could require three or more years to fully replenish under current production rates.

Defense industry officials and outside experts have argued that substantially increasing output would require Congress to appropriate additional funding, allowing the Pentagon to place large replenishment orders and provide manufacturers with the long-term demand signals needed to expand production.

“The United States Military has more than enough munitions, ammo, and stockpiles to serve all of President Trump’s strategic goals and beyond, and Operation Epic Fury has exposed what happens when you mess with the United States,” White House spokesperson Anna Kelly said.”Even still, the president has urged our defense contractors to constantly produce more ‘made-in-America’ weapons, which are the best in the world. Democrats destroyed our military, but President Trump rebuilt it.”

TRUMP UNVEILS $1.5T DEFENSE SURGE, DEEP DOMESTIC CUTS — WHAT’S ON THE CHOPPING BLOCK

Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., says the U.S. must replenish depleted munitions stockpiles amid ongoing tensions with Iran.(Nathan Posner/Anadolu)

The bombing campaign against Iran, known as Operation Epic Fury, began on Feb. 28. A tenuous ceasefire has been in place since April 7, and now senior officials from both countries are negotiating on a longer-term peace deal after signing an MOU last week that established a framework for talks.

Meanwhile, it’s not the only eye-popping request the Pentagon and Trump have asked of lawmakers.

Trump earlier this month demanded that Republicans immediately begin work on a third budget reconciliation package loaded with $350 billion in defense funding tied to his highly sought-after Safeguarding American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) America Act.

The figure, in part, is to make up the difference between his initial $1.5 trillion defense budget request, which lawmakers aren’t anywhere close to in their funding negotiations.

“This is a GENERATIONAL Investment in our Military, even bigger than President Reagan’s! Recon 3.0 is the ONLY path to the full $1.5 TRILLION DOLLAR Military Budget our Warriors need in order to build THE ARSENAL OF FREEDOM,” Trump said on Truth Social.

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But the request has already hit early roadblocks among Republicans in the upper chamber, and it comes as few Republicans want to circumvent the typical appropriations process to fund the Pentagon.

Earlier this month during a contentious Senate Appropriations hearing, Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine, and Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., agreed that another reconciliation bill was unlikely to happen, particularly as a dumping ground for billions in additional defense spending.

Collins, who chairs the Senate Appropriations Committee, said, “Reconciliation is not the best approach.”

“It would be very difficult to get the reconciliation bill approved,” Collins said.

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