
The $87.6 Billion Iran War Bill Could Bypass the Filibuster.
Erin Calloway
Updated Jul 15, 2026
The United States entered the Iran war without a formal authorization from Congress. Now lawmakers are being asked to approve another $87.6 billion for it - through a budget process designed to limit the ability of opponents to block the bill.
Congress never voted to begin the conflict, but it is being asked to finance the damage, replace weapons, repair bases, and sustain operations after the fact.
The War Vote That Never Happened
The war was never formally authorized under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution, which grants Congress the power to declare war. Both the House and Senate passed resolutions rebuking the White House over the unauthorized conflict. Those resolutions did not stop the war.
The $87.6 billion request covers operational costs, munitions replenishment, and forward-looking military needs. It is separate from the estimated $30 billion in costs the Pentagon comptroller acknowledged to Congress in May. Independent analysts at the Center for Strategic and International Studies placed total war costs through June at $34 to $42 billion - figures that diverge from the supplemental request, which encompasses future costs and stockpile rebuilding.
Why Reconciliation Changes the Fight
Budget reconciliation allows certain fiscal legislation to pass the Senate with a simple majority rather than the 60 votes typically needed to advance legislation. House Republicans are using this process to move the supplemental, according to July 14 reporting from the Washington Times citing Speaker Johnson confirming the Budget Committee is working on the process.
The reconciliation plan is tracked by the militaryspend.org cost tracker with citations to official congressional filings. Both chambers’ resolutions rebuking the White House are on public record and were confirmed by The Hill.
Where the $87.6 Billion Would Go
The reconciliation process requires a budget resolution and committee markup before a bill can reach the Senate floor. The timeline for passage is unclear. If the bill passes, the $87.6 billion is added to the national debt. The Pentagon has separately indicated it needs additional funds to repair more than 20 U.S. military bases struck during the conflict - a cost estimated at $250 to $300 billion over four to five years by Harvard Kennedy School researcher Linda Bilmes. That figure has not yet been submitted to Congress as a formal request.
References: Iran War Cost Tracker | The Hill (Iran war cost reporting)
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