Senate starts reviewing 2024 Defense Bill.
The Senate Takes a Step Forward on the National Defense Authorization Act
The Senate voted on July 18 to begin consideration of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for the fiscal year 2024, bringing it one step closer to a final passage.
Senators voted 72 to 25 to invoke cloture on the motion to proceed to its version of the bill, which sets forth policies for Department of Defense (DOD) programs and activities, as well as military construction, and the Department of Energy’s (DOE) national security programs.
While the bill authorizes appropriations, it does not provide budget authority.
The $886 billion defense package authorizes $844.3 billion for the DOD and $32.4 billion for national security programs within the DOE.
It also includes a 5.2 percent pay raise for both military servicemembers and the DOD civilian workforce, according to a summary (pdf) from the Senate Armed Services Committee, and extends the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI) through fiscal year 2027.
Other notable provisions in the bill are increased funding for a number of initiatives to respond to evolving threats, including research on foreign malign influence operations and a “comprehensive training, advising, and institutional capacity-building program for the military forces of Taiwan,” amid increasingly aggressive actions from China.
In addition, the bill would extend the DOD’s authority to “provide training for Eastern European national military forces in the course of multilateral exercises” and modifies the authority to “include the Republic of Kosovo among the list of countries eligible to receive training” amid rising tensions in the Balkans.
House Passes NDAA
Elsewhere the bill funds a joint DOD-NNSA program to “develop a nuclear-armed sea-launched cruise missile to address China’s nuclear breakout and Russia’s continued aggression.”
It also includes measures aimed at countering fentanyl trafficking and cracking down on transnational criminal organizations.
While speaking on the Senate floor prior to the vote, Senate majority leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) noted that Democrats and Republicans have worked “in good faith” to pass the NDAA for more than six decades, and said he hopes lawmakers on both sides of the aisle will continue to have an “open and constructive amendment process” for the 2024 NDAA, “without needless delay or dilatory tactics.”
The Republican-controlled House earlier this month passed its own version of the NDAA that includes amendments to restrict abortion coverage and transgender procedures, as well as diversity and inclusion initiatives at the Department of Defense, among other things.
Specifically, the House NDAA includes provisions that repeal the Pentagon’s new policy reimbursing travel costs for military members who seek abortions from states where such procedures are allowed. It also bans Pentagon health care programs from providing surgeries and hormone treatments for transgender personnel.
That version also includes more standard provisions, such as increasing America’s nuclear deterrent and a 5.2 percent military pay increase.
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