Published: 10:19, December 19, 2024
US Senate passes annual defense policy bill, sending it to Biden for signing
By Xinhua
US soldiers inspect a M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) at the Bahrain International Airshow in Sakhir on Nov 13, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

WASHINGTON - The US Senate voted Wednesday to pass the $895 billion defense policy bill for fiscal year 2025, which, having previously cleared the House, now awaits to be signed into law by President Joe Biden.

The 2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) was passed in an 85-14 vote, well above the 60-vote threshold needed for passage in the 100-member upper chamber. Military spending approved in the bill represented a 1 percent increase from the previous year's top line price tag of $886 billion.

Bernie Sanders, the independent senator representing the state of Vermont, voted against the bill, railing against what he considered a needlessly high amount of military spending that failed to address what the country really urgently needed.

"We do not need to spend almost $1 trillion on the military, while half a million Americans are homeless, children go hungry and elderly people are unable to afford to heat their homes in the winter," Sanders said in remarks on the Senate floor.

This image obtained from the US Department of Defense shows an operational test launch of an Air Force Global Strike Command unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Sept 6, 2023. (PHOTO / AFP)

Sanders said during the Senate's procedural vote on the bill on Monday that the United States does not "need a defense system that is designed to make huge profits for a handful of giant defense contractors while providing less of what the country needs".

This year's NDAA also authorized greater-than-usual pay raise for service members, a 14.5 percent increase for lowest-ranking troops and a 4.5 percent increase for the rest of the armed forces.

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One of the most controversial issues in the NDAA centered on the health insurance coverage for members of the military and their children who are recipients of gender-affirming medical treatment. The current bill, a compromise between Republican and Democratic members of Congress, would ban TRICARE, the Pentagon's health care program, from covering transgender children of service members.

Republicans pushed for prohibiting TRICARE from covering adults in the military who receive gender-affirming care, as well as reversing the Pentagon's existing policy of funding for the travel of service members who have to cross state borders for abortion procedures because the states where they are stationed ban abortion. These efforts failed in the face of Democratic opposition.

US soldiers inspect the site of reported Turkish shelling days earlier on an oil extraction facility on the outskirts of Rumaylan, in Syria's northeastern Hasakeh province on Oct 28, 2024. (PHOTO / AFP)

On the US military's involvement overseas, the bill authorized more than what was requested by the Biden administration for investment in building military capabilities in the so-called "Indo-Pacific region", totaling $15.6 billion.

It also authorized an expansion of US-Israel joint military drills amid the conflict in the Middle East, meanwhile prohibiting the Pentagon from citing casualty numbers from Hamas.

Short of directly providing fund to the Defense Department, the NDAA authorizes the Pentagon's programs in the upcoming fiscal year, including the purchase of weapons and equipment and the maintenance of the US military's competitiveness.

READ MORE: US House passes bill boosting Biden's record defense budget

Funding for the Pentagon in fiscal year 2025 will have to be passed by Congress in a separate spending bill no later than the fiscal year's end on Sept 30, 2025.