City
Epaper

US Congress unveils compromise fiscal 2026 defense bill

By IANS | Updated: December 8, 2025 07:20 IST

Washington, Dec 8 Congressional leaders released the compromise version of the fiscal 2026 National Defence Authorisation Act (NDAA), ...

Open in App

Washington, Dec 8 Congressional leaders released the compromise version of the fiscal 2026 National Defence Authorisation Act (NDAA), setting the stage for a vote this week on the annual legislation that has become a central pillar of US defence and national-security policymaking for more than six decades.

The bill would “authorize more than $890 billion for the Pentagon and Department of Energy nuclear weapons programs,” according to the text shared with reporters, coming in “roughly $8 billion more than the Trump administration requested.” Lawmakers said the legislation is being moved through an unrelated Senate bill, S.1071, which has been designated as the legislative vehicle to fast-track passage.

The House is expected to take up the must-pass package later this week. Despite intense negotiations between Republicans and Democrats, the NDAA has cleared Congress for 64 consecutive years — a record congressional leaders from both parties have repeatedly cited as evidence of bipartisan consensus on national defence.

Sunday’s release of the final compromise text marks the beginning of the endgame for the 2026 authorization cycle, during which committees in both chambers advanced competing drafts before closing differences in conference. The bill’s top-line figure reflects a modest increase over the administration’s formal request, signalling congressional intent to accelerate selected modernization programs and maintain long-term nuclear and conventional readiness.

The NDAA also continues its role as a broad policy vehicle that touches nearly every aspect of US defence planning, including the Pentagon budget, Department of Energy nuclear activities, personnel authorizations, and intelligence-related provisions. Additional policy directives and reporting requirements remain embedded across the legislative text.

In procedural terms, leaders opted to use S.1071 as the legislative vehicle—a common manoeuvre in recent years that allows congressional negotiators to substitute the full NDAA text into an unrelated bill already positioned for floor action. That approach is expected to ensure final passage ahead of the year’s legislative deadlines.

The House vote later this week will be the first significant test of the compromise package. Leaders expect the Senate to act soon after, preserving Congress’s decades-long streak of enacting the NDAA every year since the early 1960s.

The annual authorization law also guides US engagement across the broader Asia-Pacific, including force structure decisions, exercises, and security-assistance programs that directly affect India–US defence ties, which have grown substantially over the past decade. Once enacted, the fiscal 2026 NDAA will provide Washington with updated statutory authorities that underpin many elements of its Indo-Pacific strategy.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalIndia, Nepal DGMOs validate Exercise 'SURYAKIRAN-XIX', cementing 'long-standing military brotherhood'

NationalSIR Phase 2: ECI records 100 pc distribution in EF in seven States/UTs amongst 12

BusinessNew labour codes give gig, platform workers portable social security benefits

BusinessCBI books Reliance Commercial Finance, its promoters in Rs 57.47 crore bank fraud case

NationalNew labour codes give gig, platform workers portable social security benefits

International Realted Stories

InternationalNavy Chief Adm Dinesh Tripathi to visit Brazil on Dec 9

InternationalIndian Coast Guard Ship Sarthak arrives at Kuwait's Shuwaikh Port for five-day visit

InternationalPoliceman injured after assailants target police station in Pakistan's Khyber Pakhtunkhwa

InternationalDetained BYC leader Mahrang Baloch backs human rights lawyers facing charges in Pakistan

InternationalSaudi team likely to visit Afghanistan, Pakistan as attempts at mediating truce gain momentum: Report