The House Armed Services Committee has advanced a massive $1.15 trillion war policy bill, marking the largest military authorization in American history.
The plan delivers a substantial pay bump for troops, adds more manpower to the ranks, and reshapes benefits in an effort to rebuild a force hollowed out by decades of underinvestment and bureaucratic neglect.
Passed by a 44-12 vote, the fiscal 2027 National Defense Authorization Act now heads to the House floor, where it is expected to be taken up in July.
The price tag is staggering, but so is the message: America is serious again about deterrence, strength, and the readiness of its warriors.
Chairman Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Ala., made it clear that the committee’s intention is to put the War Department back on the offensive. “This proposal revitalizes the defense industrial base, creates good-paying American jobs, and reverses the damage caused by decades of underinvestment in the U.S. military,” Rogers said.
His words echo the Trump administration’s recurring warning that America cannot afford another era of military decay while adversaries build arsenals at breakneck speed.
The bill’s biggest headline item is the troop pay raise. Service members from E-1 through E-5 will see a 7% increase, those from E-6 through O-3 will see 6%, and upper ranks O-4 and above will receive 5%. That’s a clear recognition that America’s junior enlisted troops—the backbone of the force—deserve relief from rising prices and punishing inflation.
The size of the hike dwarfs the 3.8% raise from fiscal 2026, though it doesn’t reach the record-setting 14.5% increase granted in 2025 to help cover post-inflation living costs. Still, it places far more money where it belongs: in the hands of those wearing the uniform.
The proposal also adds 40,100 active-duty troops across the services: roughly 15,000 for the Army, 12,000 for the Navy, 8,900 for the Air Force, 1,400 for the Marine Corps, and 2,800 for the Space Force. Once implemented, the active-duty force will climb to 1,342,900 members—numbers not seen since before the hollow force days of the Obama era.

On the benefits side, the bill offers several long-overdue reforms. Perhaps most significant is the removal of a service member’s Basic Housing Allowance from eligibility calculations for the Basic Needs Allowance.
For far too long, the inclusion of housing pay kept lower-income military families from qualifying for assistance, forcing many to rely on food banks despite their service. Roughly one in four military households has reported food insecurity; this policy aims to fix that insult once and for all.
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Lawmakers also added compassion-based policy changes such as bereavement leave for pregnancy loss or stillbirth, limits on efforts to shutter or “restructure” base medical facilities, and new auditing requirements for Tricare. The Government Accountability Office will launch a sweeping review into Tricare’s pharmacy benefits—something families have been demanding after years of red tape and delays.
Under the legislation, troops will be able to access physical therapy without a formal referral. The bill also expands child care resources by officially allowing au pairs to qualify under the War Department’s Child Care in Your Home Fee Assistance Pilot Program. For thousands of dual-serving families stretched thin by deployments, that could be a critical relief measure.
Oversight provisions also made their way into the final draft. The committee demanded that the Pentagon, under War Secretary Pete Hegseth, provide detailed reports whenever flag officers are dismissed or disciplined—an attempt to restore accountability to an institution that has grown increasingly opaque.
The move follows Hegseth’s decisive firing of Army Chief of Staff Gen. Randy George earlier this year, part of an effort to purge complacent brass and revive a warrior culture focused on winning wars, not pushing diversity memos.

Additionally, the House required an independent review into the recent decision to cancel an Army brigade’s deployment to Poland and the plan to pull 5,000 U.S. troops from Germany. Critics say such moves might send the wrong signal to both allies and adversaries at a time when deterrence must remain ironclad.
The $1.15 trillion authorization aligns exactly with President Trump’s War Department request. On top of that, the administration has also proposed an additional $350 billion in separate supplemental funding under reconciliation—money aimed at restoring a true wartime readiness posture against threats from China, Iran, and Russia.
The Senate has yet to introduce its version of the bill, with its Armed Services Committee set for closed-door sessions next week. There’s little doubt the upper chamber’s version will differ, but the House measure already defines the baseline for a return to robust, unapologetic American strength.
Some Democrats fretted about the price tag, with Rep. Adam Smith, D-Wash., pointing out the 30% jump in spending.
But here’s the undeniable fact: when you’re staring down a $40 trillion national debt built on wasteful social programs, the one thing worth spending on is national security. As most on the committee agreed, this is money well spent—for our soldiers, our sovereignty, and our survival.
The bill now heads to the full House after the Independence Day break. Lawmakers like Rep. Rob Wittman, R-Va., expect debate in mid-July, setting up a potential summer showdown over priorities—whether America arms itself adequately for a dangerous world or retreats back into the comfort of wishful thinking.
Either way, the message from the House is loud and clear: after years of drift, America is rebuilding its arsenal of democracy. And this time, our troops, not the bureaucrats, come first.
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