On Monday, February 23, 2026, the White House and the Pentagon officially presented a landmark defense spending proposal, marking what Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth calls the “greatest reinvestment in lethality” in American history.
The budget request, totaling $940 billion for the next fiscal year, aims to transition the U.S. military from legacy peacekeeping structures to a high-intensity, technology-first force designed to deter peer competitors.
The Three Pillars of the “Hegseth Doctrine”
The proposed budget is not merely a funding increase; it represents a fundamental overhaul of how the Department of Defense (DoD) operates, prioritizing speed and technological edge over bureaucratic stability.
1. Rapid Modernization & Hardware
The budget accelerates the procurement of next-generation platforms while aggressively retiring aging systems.
Navy: A commitment to reach a 355-ship fleet by 2032, with immediate funding for two additional Virginia-class submarines and the expansion of unmanned surface vessels (USVs).
Air Force: A prioritization of the B-21 Raider stealth bomber and the NGAD (Next Generation Air Dominance) fighter program, designed to maintain air superiority in contested environments.
Space Force: A 20% increase in funding for satellite defense and “rapid launch” capabilities to protect U.S. orbital assets from kinetic and electronic threats.
2. Technological Superiority: The AI Pivot
Secretary Hegseth has emphasized that “data is the new ammunition.” The budget allocates over $35 billion specifically for:
Autonomous Systems: Developing a “swarm” capability for low-cost, expendable drones (Replicator Initiative).
AI Integration: Implementing AI-driven logistics and targeting systems to shorten the “kill chain” and improve decision-making speeds.
3. Troop Readiness and “Warrior Culture”
Reflecting President Trump’s campaign promises, the budget includes a 6% pay raise for junior enlisted service members and a massive investment in tactical training facilities.
Recruitment Overhaul: Funding for a new, modernized recruitment campaign aimed at restoring “warrior culture” and addressing the enlistment shortfalls of the past five years.
Infrastructure: $12 billion for the modernization of domestic shipyards and munitions factories to ensure the U.S. can sustain a prolonged industrial conflict if necessary.
Fiscal and Geopolitical Context
The proposal arrives at a time of extreme fiscal tension. Critics in Congress have pointed to the $34 trillion national debt and the ongoing partial DHS shutdown as reasons for caution. However, the administration argues that “weakness is the most expensive option.”
| Program Area | Proposed 2026 Funding | Change from 2025 |
| R&D (Research & Development) | $155 Billion | +12% |
| Shipbuilding | $42 Billion | +15% |
| Cyber & AI Operations | $22 Billion | +20% |
| Missile Defense | $31 Billion | +9% |






