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Biden Proposes $715B for FY 2022 Defense Budget; Lloyd Austin Quoted

President Joe Biden has unveiled a $715 billion budget request for the Department of Defense for fiscal year 2022, which reflects a 1.6 percent rise from the FY 2021 enacted amount of approximately $703.7 billion.

The proposed defense budget proposal includes $27.7 billion in funds for nuclear modernization efforts, including $3 billion for B-21 Long Range Strike Bomber, $5 billion for Columbia-class ballistic missile submarines and $2.6 billion for the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent program, DOD said Friday.

The Biden administration would earmark $20.4 billion in funds for missile defeat and defense initiatives, including $1.7 billion for Ground-Based Midcourse and Next Generation Interceptors and $562 million for Terminal High Altitude Area Defense ballistic missile defense.

The FY 2022 budget request includes a 2.7 percent pay increase for military and civilian employees, $112 billion for research, development, test and evaluation efforts and $6.6 billion for long range fires. The proposal would invest $2.3 billion in microelectronics, $874 million in artificial intelligence and $398 million in 5G. 

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said defending the U.S. from foreign and domestic adversaries and ensuring that U.S. troops remain the worldā€™s leading fighting force is his top priority and the presidentā€™s FY 2022 proposed budget for the Pentagon meets his commitment.

ā€œThe budget provides us the mix of capabilities we need most and stays true to our focus on the pacing challenge from the Peopleā€™s Republic of China, combating the damaging effects of climate change on our military installations, and modernizing our capabilities to meet the advanced threats of tomorrow,ā€ added Austin, a 2021 Wash100 Award winner.

The White House requested $12 billion for the procurement of 85 F-35 joint strike fighter jets, $2.5 billion for the purchase of 14 new KC-46 tankers and $1.5 billion for the acquisition of a dozen F-15EX fighter jets.

The proposed budget would allocate $10.4 billion for cyberspace activities and $20.6 billion for space-based systems, including the Overhead Persistent Infrared systems GPS Enterprise and National Security Space Launch programs.

The budget proposal requests $5.1 billion for the Pacific Deterrence Initiative, $617 million for climate change-related efforts and over $500 million for COVID-19 and pandemic preparedness programs.

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