The Pentagon asked the White House on 19 March to approve a $200 billion congressional war funding request for the Iran campaign — four times its original estimate 1. Defence Secretary Hegseth said the figure 'could move' 2. Fortune calculated the sum covers approximately 140 more days of operations at the current daily burn rate 3.
CSIS had estimated the operation's cost at nearly $900 million per day as of mid-March . At that rate, $200 billion covers roughly 222 days. Fortune's lower figure of 140 days implies the daily cost has risen since that estimate — consistent with the escalation pattern since then: the expenditure of 5,000-pound GBU-72 penetrator munitions against underground missile storage , the diversion of 10,000 Merops AI interceptor drones from Ukraine stockpiles that will need replacing , and Hegseth's own characterisation of 19 March as 'the largest strike package yet, just like yesterday was' 4. Each day has cost more than the last.
Hegseth declined to set 'a definitive time frame' for the war at the same briefing. But a funding request sets one implicitly. If Congress approves $200 billion and The Administration exhausts it in 140 days — roughly early August — a second supplemental requires a return to Capitol Hill, where CNN reported Republican leaders already 'do not believe they have the votes' within their own caucus 5. The IDF's disclosed operational planning extends to Passover in mid-April, with contingencies 'three weeks beyond that' . The Pentagon's funding horizon stretches months further. The gap between Israel's planning window and America's fiscal commitment is itself a question neither government has addressed: which partner's timeline governs?
The request also exposes a structural gap in The Administration's war rationale. Trump's stated objective — popular revolution inside Iran — is one he has conceded faces the problem that Iranian civilians 'don't have weapons' . There is no doctrine for costing Regime change by air power, because no such campaign has succeeded. Hegseth's formulation at the briefing — 'it takes money to kill bad guys' 6 — is a political line, not a strategy. Senator Murkowski's demand for a White House strategy outline before voting is, in fiscal terms, the minimum any appropriations process requires: a connection between expenditure and a defined end state. The Pentagon has provided a number. It has not provided a theory of victory to justify it.
