DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

White House Declines to Offer Congress an Estimate of Iran War Cost

April 16, 2026
in News
White House Declines to Offer Congress an Estimate of Iran War Cost

The White House declined to estimate the cost of the war with Iran at a congressional hearing on Thursday, prompting some Senate Democrats to criticize the Trump administration for its lack of transparency.

In a second appearance on Capitol Hill this week, Russell T. Vought, the White House budget director, sidestepped questions about the price tag of the U.S.- and Israel-led conflict. He said the “fluctuating” nature of the war made it hard to calculate either the expenses incurred to date or the amount that the president would seek soon in new military funding.

Pressed at one point to supply even a general range of the cost, Mr. Vought told lawmakers, “I’m not going to give you a range because I don’t want to be inaccurate.” He said the administration would furnish those details in a fuller request to Congress soon.

With the war stretching into its seventh week, the ambiguity did not sit well with Democrats, many of whom have forcefully opposed Mr. Trump’s actions and the money he has already sought for the military. In his 2027 budget request released earlier this month, the president asked Congress to approve about $1.5 trillion for defense — a vast increase, but one that did not include immediate funds for the war with Iran.

Two senior Democrats — Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon, the ranking member on the Budget Committee, and Senator Patty Murray of Washington, the top Democratic appropriator — both took issue with Mr. Vought’s stance.

“I just find it outrageous that as director you’re not willing to tell us what those costs are,” Ms. Murray said.

Since the start of the war, administration officials and congressional lawmakers have batted only informal estimates of the cost to taxpayers. In March, the Pentagon estimated in private briefings on Capitol Hill that the price tag for just the first six days of the war exceeded $11 billion.

Later in the month, the Pentagon told the Trump administration that it might need around $200 billion in special, supplemental funding for Iran, triggering opposition from Democrats and Republicans alike. The administration is now widely expected to seek much less from Congress in the coming weeks.

Earlier in the hearing on Thursday, Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina and chairman of the budget panel, praised Mr. Trump for seeking additional military spending in the 2027 budget request, which the lawmaker described as “great on defense.”

Mr. Graham suggested at one point that Republicans could try to pass supplemental funding for the Iran war in a package that included “some things my Democratic colleagues want.” If that failed, however, the senator said that he would pursue “another reconciliation bill,” referring to the same, party-line process that Republicans hope to use to approve funding for immigration enforcement.

Tony Romm is a reporter covering economic policy and the Trump administration for The Times, based in Washington.

The post White House Declines to Offer Congress an Estimate of Iran War Cost appeared first on New York Times.

Coachella 2026: We talked to L.A.’s beloved Bob Baker Marionettes about the festival
News

Coachella 2026: We talked to L.A.’s beloved Bob Baker Marionettes about the festival

by Los Angeles Times
April 16, 2026

It’s been a big week for L.A.’s Bob Baker Marionette Theater — it made its Coachella debut and entered an ...

Read more
News

Republicans in Congress back Army secretary amid clash with Hegseth

April 16, 2026
News

Despite Cease-Fire, Iran’s Hackers Haven’t Logged Off

April 16, 2026
News

David Ellison hits CinemaCon, reiterating pledge to make more movies with Paramount-Warner Bros.

April 16, 2026
News

Trump officially taps Erica Schwartz to lead CDC, avoiding vaccine skeptics

April 16, 2026
Battlefield 6 Roadmap for 2026 Fully Revealed: 7 New Maps, Server Browser, and More Explained

Battlefield 6 Roadmap for 2026 Fully Revealed: 7 New Maps, Server Browser, and More Explained

April 16, 2026
Netflix shares plunge after weak guidance and news that cofounder Reed Hastings will leave the board

Netflix shares plunge after weak guidance and news that cofounder Reed Hastings will leave the board

April 16, 2026
Gavin Newsom’s $20M PR hustle to polish California’s image picked apart by lawmakers

Gavin Newsom’s $20M PR hustle to polish California’s image picked apart by lawmakers

April 16, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026