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Monday, February 10, 2020

Fiscal Year 2021 DOD Budget Request Seeks 3% Pay Raise for Service Members


President Donald J. Trump's request for $705.4 billion to fund the Defense Department in fiscal year 2021 prioritizes readiness and modernization, the strengthening of alliances, performance and accountability reforms, and service members and their families.





The president released his fiscal 2021 budget request today. For
those in uniform, the department has asked for a 3% pay raise across the
board, along with increases to the allowances for housing and
subsistence.





DOD also is seeking $8 billion for a range of programs to support
military families, including professional development and education
opportunities for service members and spouses, child care for more than
160,000 children, youth programs for more than a million family members
and support to the schools that educate more than 77,000 students from
military families.





Top priorities for defense in the budget request include nuclear
modernization, missile defeat and defense, space and cyberspace.





For  fiscal 2021, DOD is asking for $28.9 billion to fund modernization of the nuclear defense program, covering all three legs of the nuclear triad: land, sea and air.





Around $7 billion is targeted at nuclear command, control and
communications. Another $2.8 billion is earmarked for the B-21 Raider
long-range strike bomber. The Air Force eventually expects to get some
100 of the aircraft, which will carry the B61-12 and B83 nuclear gravity
bombs, as well as the long-range standoff cruise missile.





The request for nuclear modernization also funds procurement of the
Columbia-class ballistic submarine at $4.4 billion, and the ground-based
strategic deterrent at $1.5 billion. The GBSD is expected to replace
about 400 existing Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles. 





DOD's request also includes $15.4 billion for the newly created U.S. Space Force, $337 million for the Space Development Agency, and $249 million for U.S. Space Command.





Defense officials said the research, development, testing and
evaluation budget request is the largest in history, at $106.6 billion.
Funding requests for hypersonics at $3.2 billion, microelectronics at
$1.5 billion and artificial intelligence at $800 million highlight DOD
priorities with regard to the great-power competition, Pentagon
officials said. The request for hypersonics would be an increase of 23%
over last year, while artificial intelligence would get a 7.8% bump.





Much of the budget request goes toward modernization.





n the air, the budget request seeks $3 billion for 15 KC-46 Pegasus
tankers to replace aging Eisenhower-era KC-135 Stratotankers and KC-10
Extenders. The request also provides $11.4 billion for 79 F-35 Lightning
II variants.





On the sea, the budget request would fund a new Virginia-class submarine at $4.7 billion and two DDG-51 Arleigh Burke-class destroyers at $3.5 billion.





On the land, the Army and Marine Corps would receive 4,247 joint light tactical vehicles at $1.4 billion, as well as $1.5 billion for modifications and upgrades to 89 M-1 Abrams tanks.


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