pull down to refresh

Non-Paywalled
TL:DR
USD/BTC = $87,453
Block 929,717

The U.S. House on Dec. 10 passed a fiscal 2026 defense spending authorization package allocating nearly $900 billion to national security programs and initiates what Armed Services Committee leaders from both chambers describe as the most substantial overhaul of the Pentagon’s acquisition and industrial-base system in a generation.

The legislation represents the conference package negotiated between S.2296 and the House’s companion amendment and now moves to the Senate for final action.

In a joint release, leaders of the House and Senate Armed Services Committees said the bill reflects months of cross-party negotiation and “delivers the most significant acquisition reforms in a generation—cutting red tape, accelerating decision-making, and improving our ability to get modern capabilities into the hands of our troops on time and on budget.”

Democrats raised objections to certain policy riders but stressed the need to maintain continuity in core defense programs.

“There are provisions in this bill that are divisive and unnecessary, but our priority is to ensure the men and women who serve have what they need,” said Rep. Adam Smith (D-Wash.), the committee’s ranking member, in comments reported by the Associated Press.

He added in a formal statement that the authorization reflects “months of bipartisan negotiations done in good faith,” even as he highlighted concerns about final negotiations.

Industrial Base Overhaul Drives Core of FY26 NDAAIndustrial Base Overhaul Drives Core of FY26 NDAA

The committee-led emphasis on industrial-base revitalization is strengthened by new contracting authorities and investment structures detailed in the Congressional Budget Office’s cost assessment.

One of the most consequential shifts is long-term authority for multiyear contracting in ship maintenance.

In its formal estimate, CBO wrote that “outlays would total $5.95 billion over the 2025–2030 period and $6.6 billion through 2035,” highlighting expanded workload expected at public and private yards under Section 321.

The measure also establishes a Defense Industrial Base Fund with recurring annual budget authority. CBO projects “outlays would total $550 million over the 2025–2030 period and $800 million through 2035,” supporting targeted investments across munitions production, shipyard modernization, submarine-industrial-base tooling and advanced manufacturing.

Additional CBO analysis identifies new funding for automation, robotics and additive manufacturing to increase surge capacity in energetics and other critical systems.

The bill’s acquisition-reform provisions—derived from the committees’ work on streamlining requirements, accelerating decision cycles and expanding modular, open-systems design—are intended to shorten delivery timelines and reshape planning frameworks for contractors and suppliers across the defense construction and manufacturing sectors.

CBO Projects Major Outlays for Shipyards and Manufacturing CapacityCBO Projects Major Outlays for Shipyards and Manufacturing Capacity

Military construction spans a broad set of projects across the services, including near-term recapitalization of aging waterfront infrastructure at Navy shipyards—such as dry-dock modernization supporting Columbia and Virginia-class submarine production—and multiple Indo-Pacific posture upgrades focused on hardened facilities and airfield improvements on Guam.

While appropriations will determine final spending levels, the authorization’s Division B outlines dozens of new starts and major recapitalization efforts that set the framework for FY26 work.

Other sections direct the services to expand capacity at existing depots and shipyards, including digital-engineering investments in the submarine enterprise and strengthened oversight of the Navy’s Shipyard Infrastructure Optimization Program.

These authorizations collectively signal multi-year demand that could shape engineering, construction and supply-chain planning for firms engaged in federal maritime, aviation and base-infrastructure work.

MILCON, Energy and Environmental Mandates Expand Infrastructure ScopeMILCON, Energy and Environmental Mandates Expand Infrastructure Scope

Energy and environmental provisions broaden the scope of long-term construction and remediation mandates. The House amendment includes a nuclear-energy pilot at a Navy installation and establishes a Defense Dept. advanced nuclear transition working group to evaluate future deployment pathways.

PFAS-related authorities are expanded, including accelerated cleanup strategies, provision of alternative water supplies for affected communities and authorization of specific destruction technologies for fluorinated compounds.

Updated wildfire-prevention training requirements for National Guard units reflect the department’s increasing role in climate-driven hazard readiness.

As the Senate prepares to take up the measure, its Armed Services Committee has signaled it intends to preserve the industrial-base and acquisition-reform components while negotiating remaining policy disputes.

Senate Armed Services Committee Chair Jack Reed (D-R.I.) told Reuters that Congress must advance a bill that “protects our national security without undermining the bipartisan foundation that has long guided defense policy.”

With core industrial-base, MILCON and environmental frameworks aligned across both chambers, final action is expected to set in place multiyear contracting tools, manufacturing-capacity programs and infrastructure authorizations likely to influence defense construction and supply-chain activity through the next decade


My Thoughts 💭My Thoughts 💭

It’s crazy to see the government spend 50% of bitcoin supply on war/defense. The sad thing is people with in the DOD will complain they still need even more funding!!! Nevermind the trillions they spent before this bill passed that magically gets support from both Democrats and Republicans and they humanize this spending to make sure our troops have everything they need to fight these forever wars.

So much for Dodge and cutting defense spending!

American men are so cucked we just sit and take this!!

Ten million bitcoin in one fiscal year!!Ten million bitcoin in one fiscal year!!