The Pentagon has requested more than $200 billion from the White House to fund the war in Iran, according to a senior administration official.
In an enormous new ask reported by The Washington Post, the move is likely to face significant resistance in Congress.
The proposed funding would far exceed the costs of the current air offensive and is aimed at increasing production of critical weapons used in the war.
The Defense Department has sought large funding packages to replenish precision munitions that have been rapidly depleted as US and Israeli forces have struck thousands of targets over the past three weeks.
It remains unclear how much the White House will ultimately ask Congress to approve, with some officials doubting the Pentagon's request has a realistic chance of passing.
The department has put forward several proposals in recent weeks as part of ongoing internal discussions, officials said.
A political battle
The request is expected to trigger a major political battle in Congress, where public support for the war remains limited, and Democrats have voiced strong criticism.
Republicans have indicated support for additional funding but have yet to outline a clear legislative path, particularly given the Senate's 60-vote threshold.
President Donald Trump had campaigned on reducing US involvement in foreign conflicts and criticised previous spending on the war in Ukraine, where Congress approved roughly $188 billion.
The cost of the Iran war has risen quickly, exceeding $11 billion in the first week alone, according to officials.
Soon after the joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran began, the administration started preparing a supplemental funding request to ensure the military could maintain readiness while sustaining attacks.
Inside the Pentagon, the effort has been led by Deputy Defense Secretary Steven Feinberg, who has focused on expanding the US defence industrial base and increasing production capacity for key weapons systems.
Officials said the proposals aim to address shortages in munitions and accelerate output, though experts warned that scaling production would take time due to constraints in labour, facilities and materials.
Even before the war, Trump had called for a $1.5 trillion defence budget, a proposal that drew internal opposition from the White House Office of Management and Budget, which considered it too large.
Lawmakers have also pushed for additional funding for intelligence operations to be included in any final package.
Source: www.trtworld.com
Conclusion
The Pentagon’s request for over $200 billion in emergency funding represents more than just the immediate costs of combat; it is an urgent strategic pivot to rebuild the U.S. military’s raw material backbone. The scale of operations in Iran has exposed a critical vulnerability: modern high-tech warfare depletes specialized mineral reserves far faster than global markets can currently replenish them.
The situation regarding tungsten, with demand surging by 300–400%, and the acute shortage of antimony clearly demonstrate that without control over these "bottlenecks," the production of munitions and guided missiles risks coming to a standstill. Record-breaking investments of up to $500 million per project in Nevada and Idaho, alongside the 2024–2027 plan to localize rare earth magnet production, effectively mark a declaration of "resource sovereignty."
For the defense sector, this signals a shift from cost-saving measures to a strategy of forced import substitution. The success of these initiatives will ultimately determine whether the U.S. can sustain a prolonged, high-intensity conflict without remaining dependent on external supplies of critical raw materials—most notably from China.
Aleksei Andrievskii is the founder of the ANDRIEVSKII SEA WEALTH family office in Cyprus, a member of the advisory board at Bendura Bank AG, Liechtenstein