Biden wants $1.19 trillion defence budget with eye on Ukraine and future wars

US President Joe Biden’s budget request speeds the Department of Defence’s pace in buying the stealth F-35 fighter jet. PHOTO: REUTERS

WASHINGTON – President Joe Biden’s biggest peacetime US defence budget request of US$886 billion (S$1.19 trillion) includes a 5.2 per cent pay rise for troops and the largest allocation on record for research and development, with Russia’s war in Ukraine spurring demand for more spending on munitions.

Biden’s request earmarks US$842 billion for the Pentagon and US$44 billion for defence-related programmes at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Department of Energy and other agencies. The total amount of the 2024 budget proposal is US$28 billion more than 2022’s US$858 billion.

Congress has signalled, as it often does, that it will increase defence spending over the amount requested by Mr Biden during the months-long budget process that this request kicks off. The Senate and House typically pass Bills setting policy and spending levels for the Pentagon much later in the year.

Congress and the administration both have an eye on a possibly prolonged war in Ukraine and potential future conflicts with Russia and China.

“Our greatest measure of success, and the one we use around here most often, is to make sure the PRC (People’s Republic of China) leadership wakes up every day, considers the risks of aggression, and concludes, ‘today is not the day’,“ Deputy Defence Secretary Kathleen Hicks said on Monday.

Relations between the United States and China have become highly contentious over issues ranging from trade to espionage as the two powers increasingly compete for influence in parts of the world far from their own borders.

“This top line request serves as a useful starting point,” Senator Jack Reed, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said when the budget figures were unveiled last Thursday.

This budget will be the first to procure missiles and other munitions with multi-year contracts, something that is routine for planes and ships, as the Pentagon signals enduring demand to top munitions makers such as Raytheon Technologies, Lockheed Martin and Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings.

The Ukraine war has shown the US military that it needs to make bigger lots of certain types of munitions, helping to explain the multi-year contracts for weaponry that would potentially also be used in a military conflict with China.

ADVANCED MISSILES

The budget boosts procurement of sophisticated missiles such as the Joint Air-to-Surface Standoff Missile-Extended Range, and the Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile. Those “are for the broader strategy – for a higher-end fight”, said a senior US defence official, adding that these missiles are “not ground munitions” like those being used in Ukraine.

Thus far, funds to backfill the munitions sent to Ukraine, including anti-tank Javelin missiles and the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System, were handled by US$35.7 billion in supplemental funds enacted in 2022. The Pentagon aid to Ukraine in the budget is the same as that of the prior year. If more funding is needed for Ukraine, the senior defence official said, another supplemental request could be drawn up.

The 2024 budget boasts a historically large research and development budget for the Pentagon – US$145 billion earmarked to develop new weaponry like hypersonic missiles, which are fired into the upper atmosphere and can evade even advanced radar systems. Russia has used these missiles in Ukraine.

Mr Biden’s budget request also speeds the Department of Defence’s pace in buying the stealth F-35 fighter jet. The F-35 is the Pentagon’s largest weapons programme and will be the linchpin of US air power in the near future.

The 2023 budget request asked for 61 F-35 jets made by Lockheed Martin, and Congress increased that number to 77.

Among the other top priorities for this budget are modernising the US nuclear “triad” of ballistic missile submarines, bombers and land-based missiles, shipbuilding and developing capabilities in space.

The budget would benefit the biggest US defence contractors, including Lockheed, Raytheon, Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics.

Some of that investment is funded by asking to retire equipment such as two of the navy’s older littoral combat ships, 32 of the air force’s non-combat-ready F-22 Raptor jet fighters and 42 older A-10 Warthogs, which the US withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2021 made less essential because they are vulnerable to more sophisticated enemies. REUTERS

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