{
"$type": "site.standard.document",
"bskyPostRef": {
"cid": "bafyreichj2tt5q4aixmi3khy5iyndi7tui7hus37cn3bjjlquy5lacsrfq",
"uri": "at://did:plc:73txmnzc4imhrv5q7azno3up/app.bsky.feed.post/3mhixo7ypsq52"
},
"coverImage": {
"$type": "blob",
"ref": {
"$link": "bafkreihufnsiiyr6gcz2x72xkrmipwfebxhsnsywdldvxrm3h5hkgdpbam"
},
"mimeType": "image/jpeg",
"size": 75912
},
"path": "/news/world/166261-us-pentagon-budget-crisis-iran/",
"publishedAt": "2026-03-20T15:09:00.000Z",
"site": "https://english.pravda.ru",
"tags": [
"World"
],
"textContent": "Pete Hegseth arrived in Congress not as a victor, but as a petitioner with an outstretched hand. Only yesterday he assured the nation that US arsenals were bottomless. Today, the narrative has shifted. Now the blame falls on predecessors and Kyiv. Missile stockpiles are depleted. Warehouses stand empty. A $2 trillion budget deficit turns any attempt to secure funding into a political grinder.\nHegseth is demanding $200 billion for a new campaign in Iran. But time is the scarcest resource for Donald Trump. He has two months. After that, he faces either capitulation before Congress or a quiet exit from a conflict for which the White House lacks even a draft strategy.\nEmpty Stockpiles: The Logic of Pentagon Shortfall\n\nThe US military machine has encountered a financial gap. Hegseth acknowledged that missiles do not grow on trees. Ground forces risk being left without adequate cover. Where the Pentagon once sustained allies with promises, it now demands \"gratitudeā from Europe. The reaction has been shock. Fuel prices in the EU have surged by 70%, and the energy crisis is squeezing Washington's allies faster than sanctions pressure Tehran.",
"title": "US Faces Military Funding Crisis: Congress Blocks New War Spending Plans"
}