At the burn rate the Center for Strategic and International Studies calculated — $900 million per day — three weeks of Operation Epic Fury have cost the United States an estimated $19 billion 1. The Pentagon has responded with a $200 billion supplemental funding request, with no timeline for the war's conclusion and no stated conditions for its end . Defence Secretary Hegseth said the figure "could move" 2. Fortune calculated $200 billion funds approximately 140 more days at the current tempo.
The spending request has fractured the political Coalition that launched the war. Senator Lisa Murkowski will not vote without a White House strategy outline. Representative Lauren Boebert declared herself "a no on any war supplemental." CNN reported Republican leaders "do not believe they have the votes" within their own caucus . Representative Rosa DeLauro, ranking Democrat on House Appropriations, called the figure "outrageous." The opposition is bipartisan in a way the constitutional question was not — six Democratic senators forced a War Powers Resolution vote on 18 March, which Senate Republicans blocked , but on the money, members of both parties are refusing.
Congress has declined to authorise the war under the War Powers Act and is now declining to fund it. The White House has not exercised any of the off-ramp options that NBC News reported military officials include in daily briefings . Without new appropriations, existing defence accounts will be exhausted within weeks. The IDF's operational planning extends through at least Passover in mid-April, with deeper plans through mid-May . Iran's foreign minister has stated the country "never asked for a Ceasefire" and "never asked even for negotiation" 3. A war that neither belligerent intends to stop has collided with a legislature that will not pay for it — and American governance has no mechanism designed to resolve that impasse while ordnance is already in the air.
The $19 billion figure does not capture the full fiscal exposure. Secretary of State Rubio bypassed congressional review to push through $16.5 billion in emergency arms sales to Kuwait, the UAE, and Jordan — weapons to defend the very Gulf States whose infrastructure Iran is destroying in retaliation for the American campaign. Representative Gregory Meeks said the waiver showed "lack of preparation for the war." Israel approved NIS 2.6 billion (~$826 million) in emergency defence procurement of its own . The cost of the war is being distributed across allied defence budgets, but the central question remains in Washington: who authorises expenditure of $900 million every day it continues, and what happens when nobody does?
