FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context 
June 7, 2021 
and Selected Issues for Congress 
Brendan W. McGarry 
The Department of Defense Appropriations Act is one of 12 annual appropriations measures 
Analyst in U.S. Defense 
typically reported by the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations and the largest in 
Budget 
terms of discretionary funding. The act funds activities of the U.S. Department of Defense 
  
(DOD) except for military construction and family housing programs. The legislation also funds 
certain activities of the intelligence community. 
 
On February 10, 2020, President Donald J. Trump submitted a budget request for FY2021 that included $753.5 billion for 
national defense-related activities, including discretionary and mandatory programs. The request aligned with the statutory 
spending limit, or cap, for national defense-related activities in the Budget Control Act (BCA; P.L. 112-25), as amended by 
the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 (BBA; P.L. 116-37). The request included $69 billion in defense funding designated for 
Overseas Contingency Operations, or OCO, which is effectively exempt from the cap. 
The portion of the request falling within the scope of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021, totaled $690.17 
billion. That figure included $688.99 billion for defense activities and $1.18 billion for intelligence activities. The request 
was $8.17 billion (1.2%) less than the FY2020 enacted amount, which included emergency funding provided for hurricane 
relief and the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) response. The House-passed Department of Defense Appropriations 
Act, 2021 would have provided $686.72 billion in budget authority in FY2021—$11.62 billion (1.7%) less than the FY2020 
enacted amount. The Senate Appropriations Committee draft bill would have provided $688.07 billion in budget authority in 
FY2021—$10.27 billion (1.5%) less than the FY2020 enacted amount. The enacted version of the legislation (P.L. 116-260), 
signed into law on December 27, 2020, provided $688.06 billion in budget authority for FY2021—$10.28 billion (1.5%) less 
than the FY2020 enacted amount. 
The Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021, provided funding for an end-strength of 2.15 million military 
personnel in the active and reserve components—10,300 more personnel than the FY2020 enacted amount—and for a 3% 
military pay raise. The legislation provided funding in new appropriation accounts for the Space Force (e.g., Procurement, 
Space Force and Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation, Space Force) as part of DOD’s ongoing efforts to establish 
the Space Force within the Department of the Air Force as the sixth branch of the armed forces. The legislation also provided 
funding for a new budget activity (e.g., Budget Activity 6.8) for software and digital technology pilot programs. 
Among the programs for which Congress added funding were the Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarine, F-35 
Lightning II strike fighter aircraft, and Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) missile defense system. Among the 
programs for which Congress reduced funding were the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund, the Navy’s hypersonic weapons 
program known as Conventional Prompt Strike, and upgrades to the M-2 Bradley infantry fighting vehicle. 
Among the issues debated by one or both chambers during consideration of the bill but not included in the enacted version 
were additional funding for the DOD response to the COVID-19 pandemic; a prohibition on the use of funding to construct a 
wall, fence, or barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border; a reduction of dollar-amount limits on general and special transfer 
authorities; funding to rename certain Army installations, facilities, roads, and streets named for leaders of the Confederacy; 
and repeal of Authorizations for the Use of Military Force (AUMFs), among others. Congress addressed some of these 
matters in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021 (P.L. 116-283), enacted prior to the appropriations 
bill. 
This report compares funding levels for certain defense accounts and programs in the enacted FY2020 appropriations, the 
Trump Administration’s FY2021 request, and FY2021 legislation. Other CRS reports provide in-depth analysis and 
contextual information on defense and foreign policy issues. 
 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Contents 
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1 
Legislative Activity ......................................................................................................................... 1 
Selected Actions ........................................................................................................................ 1 
Bill Overview ............................................................................................................................ 4 
Background ..................................................................................................................................... 7 
Strategic Context ....................................................................................................................... 7 
Budgetary Context .................................................................................................................... 8 
FY2021 Defense Budget Request ........................................................................................... 10 
Selected Policy Matters ................................................................................................................. 12 
COVID-19 ............................................................................................................................... 12 
Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) .............................................................................. 14 
Border Wall and Related Matters ............................................................................................ 15 
Border Barrier Construction ............................................................................................. 15 
Counter-Narcotics Support ............................................................................................... 17 
Transfer Authorities .......................................................................................................... 18 
Confederate Names ................................................................................................................. 19 
Authorizations for the Use of Military Force (AUMFs) ......................................................... 20 
Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF) ............................................................................. 21 
Iran .......................................................................................................................................... 21 
Military Personnel ................................................................................................................... 22 
End-Strength ..................................................................................................................... 22 
Pay Raise ........................................................................................................................... 24 
Childcare Program ............................................................................................................ 24 
Selected Acquisition Matters ......................................................................................................... 25 
Software and Digital Technology Pilot Programs ................................................................... 25 
Mid-Tier Acquisition and Rapid Prototyping Programs ......................................................... 26 
Strategic Nuclear Forces ......................................................................................................... 27 
Long-Range, Precision Strike Weapons .................................................................................. 29 
Missile Defense Programs ....................................................................................................... 31 
Military Space Programs ......................................................................................................... 33 
Ground Combat Systems ......................................................................................................... 35 
Navy Shipbuilding .................................................................................................................. 37 
Military Aircraft Programs ...................................................................................................... 40 
Outlook .......................................................................................................................................... 42 
 
Figures 
Figure 1. Days between Start of Fiscal Year and Enactment of Annual Defense 
Appropriations Act, FY1977-FY2021 .......................................................................................... 4 
Figure 2. Outlays by Budget Enforcement Category and Revenues, FY2001-FY2030 
(Projected) .................................................................................................................................... 9 
Figure 3. Portion of FY2021 President’s National Defense Budget Request within the 
Scope of the Defense Appropriations Act ................................................................................... 11 
Figure 4. Department of Defense Budget Authority, FY1948-FY2025 (Projected) ...................... 12 
Congressional Research Service 
 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
  
Tables 
Table 1. FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Selected Dates and Actions ................................... 3 
Table 2. FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act Funding Summary .................................................. 5 
Table 3. Requested and Enacted Amounts in Annual Defense Appropriations Acts, 
FY2012-FY2021 .......................................................................................................................... 6 
Table 4. General and Special Transfer Authority Limits in the DOD Appropriations Act, 
2021: Legislative Comparison.................................................................................................... 18 
Table 5. Summary of Military Personnel End-Strength, FY2021 ................................................. 23 
Table 6. Selected Long-Range, Nuclear-Armed Weapons Systems .............................................. 28 
Table 7. Selected Long-Range Strike Weapons Systems .............................................................. 30 
Table 8. Selected Missile Defense Programs ................................................................................. 32 
Table 9. Selected Military Space Programs ................................................................................... 34 
Table 10. Selected Ground Combat Systems ................................................................................. 35 
Table 11. Selected Shipbuilding Programs .................................................................................... 38 
Table 12. Selected Military Aircraft Programs .............................................................................. 41 
 
Table A-1. Hearings of the House Appropriations Committee Defense Subcommittee 
(HAC-D), 2020........................................................................................................................... 44 
Table A-2. Hearings of the Senate Appropriations Committee Defense Subcommittee 
(SAC-D), 2020 ........................................................................................................................... 44 
  
Table B-1. Budget Data Sources for Appropriations Tables .......................................................... 45 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix A. Hearings of the House and Senate Appropriations Committees, Defense 
Subcommittees, 2020 ................................................................................................................. 44 
Appendix B. Budget Data Sources for Appropriations Tables ...................................................... 45 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 52 
 
Congressional Research Service 
FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Introduction 
The annual Department of Defense Appropriations Act primarily provides funding for most 
activities of the Department of Defense (DOD), including the Departments of the Army, Navy 
(including Marine Corps), and Air Force (including Space Force); Office of the Secretary of 
Defense; and Defense Agencies. The legislation also appropriates funding for certain intelligence 
activities, including the Intelligence Community Management Account (for staffing expenses 
related to the National and Military Intelligence Programs) and the Central Intelligence Agency 
Retirement and Disability System Fund (a mandatory account that provides payments of 
benefits). 
The act does not provide funding for DOD-related military construction and family housing 
programs, Army Corps of Engineers (Civil Works) programs, or the TRICARE for Life program 
of medical insurance for military retirees. Funding for military construction and family housing 
programs is provided in the Military Construction and Veterans Affairs, and Related Agencies 
Act. Funding for Army Corps of Engineers (Civil Works) programs is provided in the Energy and 
Water Development and Related Agencies Appropriations Act. Funding for TRICARE for Life is 
appropriated automatically each year (10 U.S.C. §§1111-1117). 
This report provides an overview of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021, and 
serves as a reference to other CRS products that provide additional information, context, and 
analysis relevant to certain aspects of the legislation. The following section provides an overview 
of congressional action on the legislation. The subsequent section summarizes the budgetary and 
strategic context within which Congress debated the President Trump’s FY2021 budget request. 
Other sections describe the legislation’s treatment of certain policy issues and major components 
of the request, including selected weapons acquisition programs. 
Appropriations Process 
For more information on the defense appropriations process, see CRS In Focus IF10514, 
Defense Primer: Defense 
Appropriations Process, by James V. Saturno and Brendan W. McGarry. For more information on the federal budget 
process, see CRS Report R46240, 
Introduction to the Federal Budget Process, by James V. Saturno.  
Legislative Activity 
Selected Actions 
On February 10, 2020, President Donald J. Trump submitted an FY2021 budget request that 
included $753.5 billion for national defense-related activities, including discretionary and 
mandatory programs.1 Of that amount, the portion falling within the scope of the annual defense 
appropriations bill totaled $690.2 billion.2 
                                                 
1 Government Publishing Office, 
Budget of the United States Government, FY2021, Analytical Perspectives, Table 24-
1, Budget Authority and Outlays by Function, Category, and Program, at 
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/BUDGET-2021-PER/pdf/BUDGET-2021-PER-8-5-1.pdf.  
2 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Congressional Research Service 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
The House Committee on Appropriations reported a version of the FY2021 defense 
appropriations bill, and the Senate Committee on Appropriations released draft legislation. These 
bills had some common and other differing provisions. 
On July 8, 2020, the House Appropriations Committee’s Defense Subcommittee marked up and 
approved by voice vote its version of the Department of Defense Appropriations Bill, 2021.3 On 
July 14, the House Appropriations Committee, by a vote of 30-22, approved its version of the 
bill.4 On July 16, the committee reported the bill (H.R. 7617) and accompanying report (H.Rept. 
116-453). The legislation became a vehicle for a package of six appropriations acts. On July 31, 
by a vote of 217-197,5 the House passed the Defense, Commerce, Justice, Science, Energy and 
Water Development, Financial Services and General Government, Labor, Health and Human 
Services, Education, Transportation, Housing, and Urban Development Appropriations Act, 2021 
(H.R. 7617). The House bill included an amended version of the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Act, 2021, as Division A. 
On October 1, 2020, with no FY2021 regular appropriations bills enacted by the start of the fiscal 
year, Congress enacted the Continuing Appropriations Act, 2021 and Other Extensions Act (P.L. 
116-159) to fund government agencies through December 11. The continuing resolution funded 
most DOD programs and activities at FY2020 levels, with certain exceptions (or 
anomalies). The 
exceptions permitted the procurement of the first Columbia-class ballistic missile submarine in 
FY2021 under a two-boat contract and extended an authority provided in Section 3610 of the 
CARES Act (P.L. 116-136) that allows DOD to reimburse contractors for paid leave, including 
sick leave.6 Congress passed four additional FY2021 continuing resolutions, for a total of five, 
before enacting regular appropriations to fund government agencies through the remainder of the 
fiscal year.7 
Continuing Resolutions 
For background and analysis on continuing resolutions, see CRS Report R46582, 
Overview of Continuing 
Appropriations for FY2021 (P.L. 116-159), by James V. Saturno and Kevin P. McNellis and CRS Report R45870, 
Defense Spending Under an Interim Continuing Resolution: In Brief, coordinated by Pat Towell.  
The Senate Appropriations Committee did not mark up or report a version of the Department of 
Defense Appropriations Bill, 2021. On November 10, 2020, Senator Richard Shelby, chair of the 
Senate Committee on Appropriations, released drafts of all 12 annual appropriations bills along 
with draft accompanying explanatory statements.8 According to committee press statements, the 
                                                 
3 House Appropriations Committee, “Appropriations Subcommittee Approves Fiscal Year 2021 Defense Funding Bill,” 
press release, July 8, 2020, at https://appropriations.house.gov/news/press-releases/appropriations-subcommittee-
approves-fiscal-year-2021-defense-funding-bill. The subcommittee released the text and a summary of its version of 
the defense appropriations bill. 
4 House Appropriations Committee, “Appropriations Committee Approves Fiscal Year 2021 Defense Funding Bill,” 
press release, July 14, 2020, at https://appropriations.house.gov/news/press-releases/appropriations-committee-
approves-fiscal-year-2021-defense-funding-bill. 
5 See Roll no. 178, at https://clerk.house.gov/Votes/2020178. 
6 For a list of these anomalies, see CRS Report R46582, 
Overview of Continuing Appropriations for FY2021 (P.L. 116-
159), by James V. Saturno and Kevin P. McNellis, p. 15. 
7 The five continuing resolutions were: P.L. 116-159, P.L. 116-215, P.L. 116-225, P.L. 116-226, and P.L. 116-246. For 
more information, see CRS.gov, Appropriations Status Table, Continuing Resolutions tab, at 
https://www.crs.gov/AppropriationsStatusTable/Index.  
8 The 12 draft bills and explanatory statements are on the Senate Appropriations Committee’s website linked to the 
majority press release at https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/news/committee-releases-fy21-bills-in-effort-to-
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
release of the draft bills was intended to further negotiations on annual appropriations between 
the House and the Senate.9 
On December 21, 2020, by a vote of 327-85, the House agreed to a Senate amendment 
comprising four appropriations acts, including the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 
2021, as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division C of H.R. 133). On the 
same day, by a vote of 92-6, the Senate agreed to an amended version of the House-passed 
legislation. On December 27, 2020, President Trump signed the bill into law (P.L. 116-260) (see 
Table 1). 
Table 1. FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Selected Dates and Actions 
Public 
House 
Senate 
Law 
Bill 
Report #, 
Vote # 
Conf. 
Bill 
Report #, 
Vote # 
Conf. 
P.L. #, 
Date 
(yeas, 
Rept. #, 
Date 
(yeas, 
Rept. #, 
Date 
Reported 
nays), 
Vote #, 
Reported 
nays), 
Vote #, 
Signed 
Date 
Date 
Date 
Date 
Passed 
Passed   
Passed 
Passed   
H.R. 
H.Rept. 
178, 
— 
Draft 
Draft 
— 
— 
— 
7617 
116-453, 
(y217-
tex
ta 
report, 
(Div. 
07/16/20 
n197), 
11/10/2
0a 
A) 
07/31/20 
H.R. 
— 
250, 
No 
H.R. 
— 
289, 
No 
P.L. 116-
133 
(y327-
conference 
133 
(y92-n6),  conference 
260, 
(Div. 
n85), 
report 
(Div. 
12/21/20 
report 
12/27/20 
C) 
12/21/20 
submitted; 
C) 
submitted; 
JES released 
JES released 
by House 
by House 
Rules 
Rules 
Committee. 
Committee. 
Source: CRS analysis of Congress.gov; House Appropriations Committee, “Appropriations Subcommittee 
Approves Fiscal Year 2021 Defense Funding Bil ,” press release, July 8, 2020, at 
https://appropriations.house.gov/news/press-releases/appropriations-subcommittee-approves-fiscal-year-2021-
defense-funding-bil ; House Appropriations Committee, “Appropriations Committee Approves Fiscal Year 2021 
Defense Funding Bil ,” press release, July 14, 2020, at https://appropriations.house.gov/news/press-
releases/appropriations-committee-approves-fiscal-year-2021-defense-funding-bil ; and Senate Appropriations 
Committee, “Committee Releases FY21 Bil s in Effort to Advance Process, Produce Bipartisan Results,” press 
release, November 10, 2020, at https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/news/committee-releases-fy21-bil s-in-
effort-to-advance-process-produce-bipartisan-results. 
Notes: JES is joint explanatory statement. 
a.  The Senate Appropriations Committee did not mark up or report a version of the bil . On November 10, 
2020, the chair of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Senator Richard Shelby, released drafts of all 
12 annual appropriations bil s along with draft accompanying explanatory statements and 302(b) 
subcommittee allocations. 
                                                 
advance-process-produce-bipartisan-results. 
9 Ibid. See also the statement from Senate Appropriations Committee Vice Chair Senator Patrick Leahy, “Senate 
Approps Vice Chair Leahy Statement On The Release Of The FY 2021 Senate Appropriations Bills,” November 10, 
2020, at https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/news/minority/senate-approps-vice-chair-leahy-statement-on-the-
release-of-the-fy-2021-senate-appropriations-bills-. 
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 FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress
FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
The law was enacted 87 days after the start of the FY2021 fiscal year
. Figure 1 shows the dates 
of enactment for the annual defense appropriations act since FY1977, when the federal 
government transitioned to a fiscal year beginning October 1, 1976. 
Figure 1. Days between Start of Fiscal Year and Enactment of Annual Defense 
Appropriations Act, FY1977-FY2021 
(in days) 
 
Source: CRS analysis of dates of enactment of public law from CRS Report 98-756, 
Defense Authorization and 
Appropriations Bills: FY1961-FY2020, and P.L. 116-260. 
Defense Authorizations and Appropriations 
For historical information on defense authorizations and appropriations, see CRS Report 98-756, 
Defense 
Authorization and Appropriations Bills: FY1961-FY2020, by Nese F. DeBruyne and Barbara Salazar Torreon.  
Bill Overview 
Of the FY2021 budget request for national defense, the portion falling within the scope of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021, totaled $690.17 billion. The request was $8.17 
billion (1.2%) less than the FY2020 enacted amount, which included emergency funding for 
expenses related to Hurricanes Michael and Florence, flooding, and earthquakes that occurred in 
FY2019, and for the federal response to the outbreak of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-
19) pandemic.10 
                                                 
10 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. FY2020 enacted amount of $12.36 billion in emergency funding 
includes $1.77 billion for natural disaster relief in P.L. 116-93 and $10.59 billion for COVID-19 response in P.L. 116-
127 and P.L. 116-136. 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
The original House-passed Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021 would have 
provided $686.72 billion in budget authority in FY2021—$11.62 billion (1.7%) less than the 
FY2020 enacted amount and $3.45 billion (0.5%) less than the FY2021 request.11 
The Senate Appropriations Committee-released draft of its Department of Defense Appropriations 
Bill, 2021, would have provided $688.07 billion in budget authority in FY2021—$10.27 billion 
(1.5%) less than the FY2020 enacted amount and $2.11 billion (0.3%) less than the FY2021 
request.12 
The enacted legislation provided $688.06 billion in budget authority for FY2021—$10.28 billion 
(1.5%) less than the FY2020 enacted amount and $2.11 billion (0.3%) less than the FY2021 
request (se
e Table 2).13 
Table 2. FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act Funding Summary 
(in billions of dollars of budget authority) 
FY2021 
Senate 
FY2020 
FY2021 
FY2021 
committee-
FY2021 
Title 
Enacted 
Request 
House-passed 
drafted 
Enacted 
Military Personnel 
142.45 
150.52 
149.36 
149.62 
149.44 
Operation and Maintenance 
199.42 
196.63 
196.70 
194.80 
192.21 
Procurement 
133.88 
130.87 
133.63 
133.30 
136.53 
Research and Development 
104.43 
106.22 
104.35 
104.08 
107.14 
Revolving and Management Funds 
1.56 
1.35 
1.35 
2.60 
1.47 
DHP and Other DOD Programs 
36.32 
34.72 
35.32 
35.37 
36.02 
Related Agencies 
1.07 
1.18 
1.13 
1.14 
1.15 
General Provisions 
-3.80 
0.03 
-3.56 
-1.49 
-4.55 
Subtotal, Base Budget 
615.32 
621.52 
618.29 
619.42 
619.41 
OCO 
70.67 
68.65 
68.44 
68.65 
68.65 
Emergency 
12.3
6a 
 
 
 
 
Total 
698.34 
690.17 
686.72 
688.07 
688.06 
Source: House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617, Comparative 
Statement of New Budget (Obligational) Authority for FY2020 and Budget Requests and Amounts 
Recommended in the Bil  for 2021, p. 440; CRS analysis of H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to 
accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, 
November 10, 2020, p. 2; U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 
2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, 
committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at 
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
                                                 
11 CRS analysis of H.R. 7617 (Division A). 
12 Senate Appropriations Committee, Explanatory Statement to accompany its version of the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Bill, 2021, November 10, 2020, p. 2, at 
https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/DEFRept.pdf. 
13 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Notes: DHP is Defense Health Program. The term base budget generally refers to funding for planned or 
regularly occurring costs to man, train, and equip the military force. OCO is Overseas Contingency Operations 
(Title IX is titled, “Overseas Contingency Operations/Global War on Terrorism”). Numbers may not sum due 
to rounding. 
a.  FY2020 enacted amount of $12.36 bil ion in emergency funding includes $1.77 bil ion for natural disaster 
relief in the annual defense appropriations act (P.L. 116-93) and $10.59 bil ion for COVID-19 response in 
the second and third supplemental appropriations (P.L. 116-127 and P.L. 116-136). 
Table 3 shows the difference in requested and enacted amounts provided by the annual 
Department of Defense Appropriations Acts over the past decade. 
Table 3. Requested and Enacted Amounts in Annual Defense Appropriations Acts, 
FY2012-FY2021 
(in billions of dollars) 
Fiscal Year 
Requested Amount 
Enacted Amount 
Difference (%) 
2012 
649.6
3a 
622.
86a 
-4.1% 
2013 
601.2
3b 
597.
09b 
-0.7% 
2014 
590.3
3c 
565.
09c 
-4.3% 
2015 
547.
88d 
547.
75d 
0.0% 
2016 
571.7
2e 
566.6
2e 
-0.9% 
2017 
569.
86f 
571.4
5f 
0.3% 
2018 
623.3
3g 
647.4
4g 
3.9% 
2019 
668.4
1h 
667.3
2h 
-0.2% 
2020 
690.6
2i 
687.
76i 
-0.4% 
2021 
690.
17j 
688.
06j 
-0.3% 
Source: CRS analysis of funding tables in conference reports or explanatory statements accompanying annual 
defense appropriation acts. For specific references, see footnotes in notes below. 
Notes: Amounts include base, OCO funding, and—for years in which it was provided as part of regular defense 
appropriations—emergency funding. Amounts exclude scorekeeping adjustments and appropriations for 
subsequent fiscal years. Page numbers below contain hyperlinks to source documents. 
a.  Funding table in conference report (H.Rept. 112-331) to accompany Military Construction and Veterans 
Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2012, p. 796;  
b.  Funding table in explanatory statement to accompany the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2013 
(Division C of P.L. 113-6) in the Senate, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 159 (March 11, 2013), p. 
S1546; 
c.  Funding table in joint explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 
2014 (Division C of P.L. 113-76) in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 160 (January 15, 
2014), p. H832; 
d.  Funding table in explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2015 
(Division C of P.L. 113-235) in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 160 (December 11, 2014), 
p. H9647;  
e.  Funding table in explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2016 
(Division C of P.L. 114-113) in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 161 (December 17, 2015), 
p. H10055;  
f. 
Funding table in explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2017 
(Division C of P.L. 115-31) in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 163 (May 3, 2017), p. 
H3702; 
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g.  Funding table in explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2018 
(Division C of P.L. 115-141) in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 164 (March 22, 2018), p. 
H2434;  
h.  Funding table in joint explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 
2019 (Division A of P.L. 115-245) released by the Senate Appropriations Committee on September 13, 
2018, p. 147;  
i. 
Funding table in explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2020 
(Division A of P.L. 116-93) in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 165 (December 17, 2019), 
p. H10960;  
j. 
Funding table in explanatory statement in U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 
2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), 
p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf.  
Background 
Strategic Context14 
President Trump’s FY2021 budget request for DOD was shaped in part by the department’s 
efforts to align its priorities with strategic guidance documents, including the 2018 National 
Defense Strategy (NDS). The 11-page unclassified summary identified strategic competition with 
China and Russia as “the central challenge to U.S. prosperity and security.”15 This marked a shift 
in strategic emphasis from countering terrorism and insurgencies in the Middle East in the years 
following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. 
The NDS summary called for additional and steady funding to counter evolving threats from 
China and Russia: “Long-term strategic competitions with China and Russia are the principal 
priorities for the Department, and require both increased and sustained investment, because of the 
magnitude of the threats they pose to U.S. security and prosperity today, and the potential for 
those threats to increase in the future.”16 The NDS, released prior to the outbreak of the COVID-
19 pandemic, did not address the question of pandemics or climate change as national security 
threats. 
The NDS summary called for upgrading the U.S. military’s competitive advantage in part by 
upgrading (or modernizing) nuclear; space and cyberspace; command, control, communications, 
computers and intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (C4ISR); and missile defense 
systems. It described the importance of speed in integrating into weapons new technologies (e.g., 
artificial intelligence, autonomy, robotics, directed energy, hypersonic weapons): “Success no 
longer goes to the country that develops a new technology first, but rather to the one that better 
integrates it and adapts its way of fighting.”17 
The National Defense Strategy Commission was established by Sec. 942 of the National Defense 
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2017 (NDAA; P.L. 114-328) to provide an independent 
assessment of the National Defense Strategy. In a 2018 report, the Commission generally agreed                                                  
14 This section was coordinated with Kathleen J. McInnis, Specialist in International Security, and Ronald O’Rourke, 
Specialist in Naval Affairs. 
15 Department of Defense, 
Summary of the 2018 National Defense Strategy of the United States of America: 
Sharpening the American Military’s Competitive Edge, p. 2, at 
https://dod.defense.gov/Portals/1/Documents/pubs/2018-National-Defense-Strategy-Summary.pdf. 
16 Ibid, pp. 6-7. 
17 Ibid, p. 10. 
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with DOD’s strategic approach, particularly its orientation towards strategic competition with 
other great powers. At the same time, the Commission asserted that successive Administrations 
and Congresses have underestimated the scale of this reorientation, the urgency with which it 
must occur, and the resources required to make it happen. For example, the commission 
recommended that policymakers increase defense spending by 3% to 5% per year in real terms 
(i.e., adjusting for inflation)—or alter the expectations of the strategy and America’s global 
strategic objectives.18 Some Members of Congress have recommended increasing the defense 
budget by 3%-5% per year in real terms to prepare for long-term strategic competition with China 
and Russia.19 
Others have argued DOD could carry out the strategy with less funding. In 2019, Robert O. Work, 
who served as deputy secretary of defense during the Obama Administration, said, “You can 
execute this National Defense Strategy at $700 billion a year, without question, if you make the 
right choices. You can completely screw up the strategy at $800 billion a year if you make the 
wrong choices.”20 Some Members of Congress have proposed reducing the defense budget by as 
much as 10% to fund non-defense priorities such as health care, housing, and educational 
opportunities.21 
Selected CRS Products 
For background and analysis on the National Defense Strategy, see CRS Insight IN10855, 
The 2018 National 
Defense Strategy, by Kathleen J. McInnis and CRS Report R45349, 
The 2018 National Defense Strategy: Fact Sheet, by 
Kathleen J. McInnis. For background and analysis on potential national-security implications of COVID-19, see CRS 
Report R46336, 
COVID-19: Potential Implications for International Security Environment—Overview of Issues and Further 
Reading for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke, Kathleen J. McInnis, and Michael Moodie. For background and analysis 
on great power competition, see CRS Report R43838, 
Renewed Great Power Competition: Implications for Defense—
Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
Budgetary Context 
Congressional action on the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021, occurred as federal 
spending continued to exceed revenues. The trend has raised questions about whether pressure to 
reduce the federal deficit may impact defense budget plans. 
In September 2020, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected a federal deficit of $3.3 
trillion in 2020, or 16% of gross domestic product—the highest percentage since 1945.22 This 
amount was $2.2 trillion more than CBO had estimated in March of 2020. CBO described the 
projected increase as “mostly the result of the economic disruption caused by the 2020                                                  
18 Eric Edelman and Gary Roughead (co-chairs), 
Providing for the Common Defense: The Report of the National 
Defense Strategy Commission, United States Institute for Peace, November 2018, p. 52, at 
https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/2018-11/providing-for-the-common-defense.pdf. 
19 See, for example, Joe Gould, “HASC’s new lead Republican on making Space Force permanent and budget fights to 
come,” 
Defense News, February 4, 2021, at https://www.defensenews.com/congress/2021/02/04/hascs-new-lead-
republican-on-making-space-force-permanent-and-budget-fights-to-come/. 
20 Center for a New American Security, 
The National Defense Strategy Commission Report: Debating the Key Issues, 
January 15, 2019, at https://www.cnas.org/events/the-national-defense-strategy-commission-report-debating-the-key-
issues.  
21 See, for example, Senator Bernie Sanders, “Sanders: Cut the Pentagon by 10% to Hire More Teachers, Build More 
Homes, and Create More Jobs,” press release, June 25, 2020, at https://www.sanders.senate.gov/press-releases/sanders-
cut-the-pentagon-by-10-to-hire-more-teachers-build-more-homes-and-create-more-jobs/. 
22 Congressional Budget Office, 
An Update to the Budget Outlook: 2020 to 2030, September 2020, at 
https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2020-09/56517-Budget-Outlook.pdf. 
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coronavirus pandemic and the enactment of legislation in response.”23 Over the next decade, 
mandatory spending and net interest payments on the national debt are projected to increase faster 
than discretionary spending.24 
See Figure 2. 
Figure 2. Outlays by Budget Enforcement Category and Revenues, FY2001-FY2030 
(Projected) 
(in trillions of dollars) 
 
Source: CRS analysis of
 Congressional Budget Office, 10-Year Budget Projections (Tables 1-1, 1-4) 
accompanying 
An Update to the Budget Outlook: 2020 to 2030, September 2020. 
Notes: Area above dotted line reflects deficit. 2019 reflects actual figures; 2020-2030 reflect projections. 
In recent decades, during periods of widening gaps between revenues and outlays, Congress has 
sometimes enacted legislation intended to reduce the deficit in part by limiting defense spending. 
After the deficit had reached nearly 6% of GDP in 1983,25 Congress enacted the Balanced Budget 
and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (also known as the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act; 
P.L. 99-177).26 This legislation created annual deficit limits and stated that breaching them would 
trigger automatic funding reductions equally divided between defense and non-defense spending. 
In 1990, Congress passed the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-508), which included 
statutory limits on discretionary spending. These discretionary spending limits were in effect 
through 2002, and in certain years included a specific limit on defense spending.27 After the 
deficit reached nearly 10% in 2009,28 Congress enacted the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA; 
P.L. 112-25), which reinstated statutory limits, or caps, on discretionary spending for fiscal years 
2012-2021 and included separate annual limits for defense spending. Discretionary spending 
                                                 
23 Ibid. For CRS products on COVID-19, see https://www.crs.gov/resources/coronavirus-disease-2019. 
24 Ibid. 
25 Office of Management and Budget, Historical Tables, Table 1.2, Summary of Receipts, Outlays, and Surpluses or 
Deficits (-) as Percentages of GDP: 1930–2025, accessed February 16, 2021, at 
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/historical-tables/. 
26 For more information and analysis, see CRS Report R41901, 
Statutory Budget Controls in Effect Between 1985 and 
2002, by Megan S. Lynch. 
27 Ibid. Defense spending limits under P.L. 101-508 were in place in FY1991, FY1992, FY1993, FY1998 and FY1999. 
28 Ibid. 
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limits are enforced through a mechanism called sequestration.29 Sequestration automatically 
cancels previously enacted appropriations by an amount necessary to reach pre-specified levels.30 
The defense spending cap under BCA as amended applies to discretionary base budget authority 
for the national defense budget function (050).31 The limit does not apply to certain other types of 
funding (e.g., funding for Overseas Contingency Operations [OCO] or emergency 
requirements).32 On March 1, 2013—five months into the fiscal year—then-President Barack 
Obama ordered the sequestration of budgetary resources across nonexempt federal government 
accounts.33 Some observers argue that such legislation disproportionately affects defense 
programs and inadequately addresses projected growth in mandatory programs. Others argue that 
it is necessary in light of recurring deficits and growing federal debt.34 
In a 2020 report, the Congressional Budget Office identified 12 options for reducing the federal 
budget deficit through discretionary defense programs, such as reducing the DOD budget, 
capping increases in basic pay for military service members, and stopping construction of Ford-
class aircraft carriers.35 
Selected CRS Products 
For background and analysis on the Budget Control Act (BCA) and sequestration, see CRS Video WVB00305, 
Budget Control Act: Overview, by Megan S. Lynch and Grant A. Driessen, CRS Report R44874, 
The Budget Control Act: 
Frequently Asked Questions, by Grant A. Driessen and Megan S. Lynch, and CRS Report R44039, 
The Defense Budget 
and the Budget Control Act: Frequently Asked Questions, by Brendan W. McGarry. For background and analysis on 
Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) funding, see CRS Report R44519, 
Overseas Contingency Operations 
Funding: Background and Status, by Brendan W. McGarry and Emily M. Morgenstern. 
FY2021 Defense Budget Request 
President Trump’s FY2021 budget request included $753.5 billion in budget authority for 
national defense-related activities. Of that amount, $740.5 billion was for discretionary programs 
and $13.0 billion was for mandatory programs.36 The budget request conformed to the FY2021 
                                                 
29 For more information, see CRS Report R44874, 
The Budget Control Act: Frequently Asked Questions, by Grant A. 
Driessen and Megan S. Lynch. 
30 For more background and analysis, see CRS Report R42972, 
Sequestration as a Budget Enforcement Process: 
Frequently Asked Questions, by Megan S. Lynch. 
31 The term base budget generally refers to funding for planned or regularly occurring costs to man, train, and equip the 
military force. Budget authority is authority provided by law to a federal agency to obligate money for goods and 
services. For more information on how BCA affects the defense budget, see CRS Report R44039, 
The Defense Budget 
and the Budget Control Act: Frequently Asked Questions, by Brendan W. McGarry. The national defense budget 
function (identified by the numerical notation 050) comprises three subfunctions: Department of Defense (DOD)–
Military (051); atomic energy defense activities primarily of the Department of Energy (053); and other defense-related 
activities (054), such as FBI counterintelligence activities. For more information, see CRS In Focus IF10618, 
Defense 
Primer: The National Defense Budget Function (050), by Christopher T. Mann. 
32 Since 2009, the term Overseas Contingency Operations, or OCO, has been used to describe military operations in 
Iraq, Afghanistan, and other countries. For more information, see CRS Report R44519, 
Overseas Contingency 
Operations Funding: Background and Status, by Brendan W. McGarry and Emily M. Morgenstern. 
33 Government Accountability Office, 
SEQUESTRATION: Observations on the Department of Defense's Approach in 
Fiscal Year 2013, GAO-14-177R, November 7, 2013, p. 13, at https://www.gao.gov/assets/660/658913.pdf. 
34 For more information, see CRS Report R44039, 
The Defense Budget and the Budget Control Act: Frequently Asked 
Questions, by Brendan W. McGarry, p. 3. 
35 Congressional Budget Office, 
Options for Reducing the Deficit: 2021 to 2030, December 2020, at 
https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2020-12/56783-budget-options.pdf. 
36 Government Publishing Office, 
Budget of the United States Government, FY2021, Analytical Perspectives, Table 24-
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discretionary defense limit established by the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 (BBA 2019; P.L. 
116-37). BBA 2019 had raised the defense spending cap initially set by the Budget Control Act of 
2011 to $671.5 billion in FY2021. BBA 2019 also specified a nonbinding target of $69 billion in 
FY2021 for defense OCO funding. 
Of the $753.5 billion requested for national defense-related activities in FY2021, the portion 
falling within the scope of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021, totaled $690.17 
billion, including $688.99 billion for DOD and $1.18 billion for other agencies (i.e., certain 
activities of the intelligence community). S
ee Figure 3.37 The portion of defense OCO funding 
falling within the scope of the legislation totaled $68.65 billion. The remaining $63.3 billion 
requested for national defense-related activities in FY2021, including $350 million in OCO 
funding, falls outside the scope of the legislation. 
Figure 3. Portion of FY2021 President’s National Defense Budget Request within the 
Scope of the Defense Appropriations Act 
 
Source: CRS analysis of funding table in U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, 
Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, 
at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf; and Government 
Publishing Office, 
Budget of the United States Government, FY2021, Analytical Perspectives, Table 24-1, Budget 
Authority and Outlays by Function, Category, and Program. 
Notes: OCO is funding designated for Overseas Contingency Operations; O&M is operation and maintenance; 
MILPERS is military personnel; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation; DOE is Department of 
Energy; MILCON/FH is military construction and family housing. “Total” and “not included” figures from Table 
24-1; “included figures” from explanatory statement funding table. Totals may not sum due to rounding. 
                                                 
1: Budget Authority and Outlays by Function, Category, and Program, at 
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/BUDGET-2021-PER/pdf/BUDGET-2021-PER-8-5-1.pdf. 
37 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
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Including military construction and family housing appropriations, the FY2021 DOD budget 
request totaled $716.2 billion, excluding emergency funding provided for hurricane relief and 
COVID-19 response.38 The level of budget authority requested by DOD for FY2021, when 
adjusted for inflation, was higher than during the Vietnam War and the Cold War-era military 
buildup of the 1980s, lower than during the height of post-9/11 operations in Iraq and 
Afghanistan, and projected to remain relatively flat over the five-year period through FY2025. 
See Figure 4. 
Figure 4. Department of Defense Budget Authority, FY1948-FY2025 (Projected) 
(in billions of nominal, or current, dollars and constant FY2021 dollars) 
 
Source: Department of Defense, National Defense Budget Estimates for FY2021, Table 6-8, Department of 
Defense Budget Authority by Public Law Title, April 2020. 
Selected CRS Products 
For more information on the FY2021 defense budget request, see CRS Insight IN11224, 
FY2021 Defense Budget 
Request: An Overview, by Brendan W. McGarry and CRS Video WVB00314, 
FY2021 Defense Budget: Issues for 
Congress, by Nathan J. Lucas et al. 
Selected Policy Matters 
This section of the report discusses certain policy matters that generated interest or debate among 
Members or objections from the Trump Administration, including matters relating to the 
Administration’s redirection of funds to construct barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border and 
congressional proposals to rename Army installations, facilities, roads, and streets named after 
confederate leaders and officers. 
COVID-19 
Congressional action on the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021, occurred during 
the COVID-19 pandemic. The enacted version of the legislation did not provide funding                                                  
38 Department of Defense, National Defense Budget Estimates for FY2021, Table 6-8, Department of Defense Budget 
Authority by Public Law Title, April 2020, p. 143, at 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/FY21_Green_Book.pdf. 
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explicitly for the department’s pandemic response. Congress provided FY2020 emergency 
supplemental funding for DOD pandemic-related activities, elements of which were questioned 
by House appropriators, among other Members. 
In FY2020, Congress provided DOD with $10.59 billion in emergency supplemental funding to 
respond to COVID-19.39 Almost half of that amount was for the Defense Health Program to 
provide medical care to military members, dependents, and retirees; procure medical gear such as 
ventilators and personal protective equipment; develop vaccines and diagnostic tests; and cover 
other anticipated expenses.40 The emergency supplemental legislation also included funding to 
cover costs associated with the deployment of military hospital ships intended to ease civilian 
hospital demand and other activities; mobilization of National Guard personnel to support 
emergency operations; and Defense Production Act (DPA) purchases intended to facilitate the 
manufacture and distribution of medical equipment and supplies. 
For FY2021, the House Appropriations Committee would have provided $1.36 billion in FY2021 
for the department’s pandemic response, including $758 million in procurement funds for certain 
suppliers; $450 million in operation and maintenance funds for second, third, and fourth tier 
suppliers recovery and resupply activities; and $150 million for the Defense Health Program.41 
The committee directed the Secretary of Defense and the service secretaries to provide quarterly 
updates to the congressional defense committees on COVID-19-related expenses incurred in the 
previous quarter, including any savings from delayed or cancelled training, exercises, or 
deployments. The committee noted that DOD planned to use most of the $1 billion provided in 
FY2020 emergency supplemental funding for DPA purchases to address the impact of COVID-19 
on the defense industrial base, in part by making loans to private companies, and expressed 
concern “that this funding will not support increased medical supply production, as intended by 
the additional CARES Act funding.”42 The committee also expressed concern over the 
department’s planning and preparation for the pandemic and restructuring of the Military Health 
System.43 The committee encouraged the Secretary of Defense to cooperate with the directors of 
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Biomedical Advanced Research and 
Development Authority on research to address public health vulnerabilities, secure a national 
stockpile of life-saving drugs, and address vulnerability points for the military.44 
The House-passed bill would have provided $100 million to the Shipbuilding and Conversion, 
Navy appropriation account for certain suppliers.45 
                                                 
39 The Families First Coronavirus Response Act (P.L. 116-127) provided $82 million for the department’s Defense 
Health Program (DHP) to waive all TRICARE cost-sharing requirements related to COVID-19. The Coronavirus Aid, 
Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act; P.L. 116-136) provided $10.5 billion in emergency funding for the 
department. 
40 For more information on the Defense Health Program, see CRS In Focus IF11442, 
FY2021 Budget Request for the 
Military Health System, by Bryce H. P. Mendez. For more information on DOD health care activities supported by this 
funding, see CRS Report R46316, 
Health Care Provisions in the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, P.L. 116-
127, coordinated by Sarah A. Lister and Paulette C. Morgan and CRS Report R46481, 
COVID-19 Testing: Frequently 
Asked Questions, coordinated by Amanda K. Sarata and Elayne J. Heisler. 
41 H.Rept. 116-453, p. 11. 
42 Ibid, p. 12. 
43 Ibid. For background and analysis on proposed changes to the military health system, see CRS In Focus IF11273, 
Military Health System Reform, by Bryce H. P. Mendez and CRS In Focus IF11458, 
Military Health System Reform: 
Military Treatment Facilities, by Bryce H. P. Mendez. 
44 Ibid, p. 13. 
45 H.R. 7617, p. 29. 
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The Senate Appropriations Committee noted that it would, to the extent necessary, seek to address 
agency needs related to COVID-19 “in future supplemental appropriations vehicles. Accordingly, 
funding recommended in the Committee’s regular fiscal year 2021 appropriations bill is focused 
on annual funding needs unrelated to the COVID-19 pandemic.”46 
COVID-19 Implications for DOD 
For background and additional analysis, see CRS Report R46336, 
COVID-19: Potential Implications for International 
Security Environment—Overview of Issues and Further Reading for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and Kathleen J. 
McInnis, CRS Insight IN11273, 
COVID-19: The Basics of Domestic Defense Response, coordinated by Michael J. 
Vassalotti, and CRS Report R43767, 
The Defense Production Act of 1950: History, Authorities, and Considerations for 
Congress, by Michael H. Cecire and Heidi M. Peters. 
Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) 
Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, Congress has appropriated discretionary budget 
authority designated as emergency requirements or for Overseas Contingency Operations/Global 
War on Terrorism (OCO/GWOT) in support of the U.S. government response to the attacks and 
for other activities. In the years following enactment of the Budget Control Act of 2011, OCO 
funding was used for non-contingency purposes. Some observers criticized such funding as a 
“slush fund,” others praised it as a “relief valve,” and still others noted that it no longer 
corresponded to funding for U.S. military operations in countries such as Afghanistan and Iraq.47 
DOD acknowledges that it currently uses the majority of OCO funding for activities other than 
costs associated with “direct war” requirements. For example, of the $69 billion requested for 
OCO funding in FY2021, DOD identified $21 billion (30%) for “direct war” requirements. The 
remainder was for base budget and enduring requirements (i.e., costs that will remain even after 
combat operations end).48 
For FY2021, the House-passed bill would have provided $68.435 billion in OCO funding—
$0.215 billion (0.3%) less than requested. The House Appropriations Committee referred to the 
use of OCO as “an abject failure” and recommended that Congress return to funding contingency 
operations through supplemental appropriations 
With  the  possibility  of  significantly  fewer  deployed  American  servicemembers  in 
Afghanistan  combined  with  more  training  exercises  and  less  contingencies,  activities 
funded in the past by OCO could very well be supported within base accounts in the future. 
For  these  reasons,  the  Committee  believes  that  the  Department  should  cease  requesting 
funding for the OCO accounts following this fiscal year. The traditional manner of funding 
contingency  operations  through  supplementals  should  return.  The  OCO  experiment  has 
been  an  abject  failure  and  has  given  the  Department  a  budgetary  relief  valve  that  has 
allowed it to avoid making difficult decisions.49 
                                                 
46 Explanatory statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Bill, 2021, p. 2, at https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/DEFRept.pdf. 
47 For more information, see CRS Report R44519, 
Overseas Contingency Operations Funding: Background and Status, 
by Brendan W. McGarry and Emily M. Morgenstern, pp. 9-10. 
48 Department of Defense, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 
2020, Defense Budget Overview, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, Revised May 
13, 2020, pp. 1-3, 6-1, at 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/fy2021_Budget_Request_Overview_Book.pdf
. 
49 H.Rept. 116-453, pp. 4-5. 
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In its draft bill, the Senate Appropriations Committee included the Administration’s requested 
level of defense OCO funding. The panel explained its recommendation as follows 
This  funding  will  ensure  that  resources,  equipment,  and  supplies  are  available  for  our 
servicemembers without interruption, and will enable the Department to avoid absorbing 
operational  costs  from  within  baseline  programs  that  are  critical  to  future  readiness  and 
home-station activities.50 
The enacted version of the legislation provided the Administration’s requested level of defense 
OCO funding.51 
Overseas Contingency Operations Funding 
For background and analysis on funding for Overseas Contingency Operations, see CRS Report R44519, 
Overseas 
Contingency Operations Funding: Background and Status, by Brendan W. McGarry and Emily M. Morgenstern, CRS 
Report WPD00012, 
Overseas Contingencies Operations: Funding and Outlook, by Brendan W. McGarry and Emily M. 
Morgenstern, and CRS Video WVB00246, 
Overseas Contingency Operations Funding: Trends and Issues, by Brendan 
W. McGarry. 
Border Wall and Related Matters 
Border Barrier Construction 
Under the Trump Administration, DOD reallocated approximately $10 billion of FY2019 and 
FY2020 funding to construct barriers on the U.S.-Mexico border. On February 13, 2020, DOD 
transferred $3.8 billion from defense procurement programs to the Operation and Maintenance, 
Army account for use by the Army Corps of Engineers to construct barriers and roads along the 
U.S. southern border.52 The reprogramming repeated, in part, a process the department undertook 
twice in 2019 (totaling $2.5 billion) in support of Department of Homeland Security (DHS) 
counter-drug activities pursuant to 10 U.S.C. §284, in conjunction with a separate set of 
emergency transfers ($3.6 billion) under 10 U.S.C. §2808.53 
                                                 
50 Explanatory statement accompanying Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Bill, 2021, p. 253, at https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/DEFRept.pdf. 
51 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
52 Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense-Comptroller, Budget Execution, Implemented 
Reprogramming Actions – FY2020, “Support for DHS Counter Drug Activity,” February 13, 2020, at 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/execution/reprogramming/fy2020/reprogramming_action/20-
01_RA_Support_for_DHS_Counter_Drug_Activity.pdf. 
53 Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense-Comptroller, Budget Execution, Implemented 
Reprogramming Actions – FY2019, “Support for DHS Counter-Drug Activity Reprogramming Action,” March 25, 
2019, at 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/execution/reprogramming/fy2019/reprogramming_action/19-
01_RA_Support_for_DHS_Counter_Drug_Activity.pdf; “Support for DHS Counter-Drug Activity Reprogramming 
Action,” May 9, 2019, at 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/execution/reprogramming/fy2019/reprogramming_action/19-
02_RA_Support_for_DHS_Counter_Drug_Activity.pdf; and White House, “President Donald J. Trump’s Border 
Security Victory,” fact sheet, February 15, 2019, at https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/president-donald-
j-trumps-border-security-victory/. 
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House appropriators considered, but did not enact, a number of provisions that would have 
limited or prohibited the use of defense funds to construct barriers along the Southern border. 
Section 8134 of the House-passed bill would have prohibited the use of FY2021 or prior-year 
defense appropriations to construct “a wall, fence, border barriers, or border security 
infrastructure” along the southern border.54 The language also would have prohibited using funds 
for the Drug Interdiction and Counter-drug Activities, Defense account to construct “fences.” 
Section 8135 of the House bill would have required DOD to return any of the unobligated 
procurement funds that were transferred on February 13, 2020, to their original accounts and 
prohibited their use “for any purpose other than the original purposes for which they were 
appropriated.”55 Section 8136 of the House bill would have prohibited DOD from using funds for 
active-duty servicemembers supporting security or immigration enforcement operations along the 
southern border unless the requesting agency agreed to reimburse DOD for such costs.56The 
House Appropriations Committee argued that the department’s use of defense funding to pay for 
the border wall was an example of “mismatch between its stated priorities and its fiscal 
actions.”57 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provisions, arguing that prior-year 
appropriations, transfer authority, and the use of active-duty forces on a non-reimbursable basis 
were “critical to DOD’s support of Department of Homeland Security (DHS) efforts to secure the 
Southern Border.”58 
The Senate Appropriations Committee-drafted bill and the enacted legislation did not include 
comparable provisions. Section 2801 of the previously enacted FY2021 National Defense 
Authorization Act (P.L. 116-283) dealt with a related issue and limited to $500 million the amount 
of military construction funds available for redirection under a national emergency pursuant to 10 
U.S.C. 2808.59 President Trump vetoed the FY2021 NDAA over this and other provisions.60 The 
House and Senate each voted to override the veto by margins larger than the two-thirds majority 
required by the Constitution.61 
DOD Funding for Border Wall 
For background and analysis, see CRS Report R45937, 
Military Funding for Southwest Border Barriers, by Christopher 
T. Mann, CRS Report R46002, 
Military Funding for Border Barriers: Catalogue of Interagency Decisionmaking, by 
Christopher T. Mann and Sofia Plagakis, and CRS Insight IN11017, 
Military Construction Funding in the Event of a 
National Emergency, by Michael J. Vassalotti and Brendan W. McGarry. 
                                                 
54 H.R. 7617, p. 132. 
55 Ibid, pp. 132-133. 
56 Ibid, p. 133. 
57 H.Rept. 116-453, p. 4. 
58 Office of Management and Budget, 
Statement of Administration Policy, July 30, 2020, pp. 1-2. 
59 P.L. 116-283. 
60 White House, “Presidential Veto Message to the House of Representatives for H.R. 6395,” statement, December 23, 
2020, at https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/briefings-statements/presidential-veto-message-house-representatives-h-
r-6395/. 
61 For more information, see CRS Report R46714, 
FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act: Context and Selected 
Issues for Congress, by Pat Towell. 
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Counter-Narcotics Support 
For FY2021, DOD requested $769.6 million for the Drug Interdiction and Counter-drug 
Activities, Defense account, which funds programs to identify and interdict the transit of illicit 
drugs to the United States.62 
The House-passed bill would have appropriated $746.2 million for the Drug Interdiction and 
Counter-drug Activities, Defense account—$23.4 million less than requested.63 Within this 
account, the House Appropriation Committee would have provided $125.2 million less than 
requested for Counter-Narcotics Support and $101.8 million more than requested for the National 
Guard Counter-Drug Program.64 The panel noted its concern with DOD’s reallocation of funding 
from Counter-Narcotics Support: 
The  Committee  is  concerned  with  the  misrepresentation  by  the  Department  of  Defense 
regarding the purposes for which funds were requested under this heading in fiscal year 
2020.  The  Department  of  Defense  has  reallocated  $47,400,000  from  Counter-Narcotics 
Support for activities that were neither requested by the Department nor appropriated by 
Congress,  namely  to  fund  southwest  border  barrier  construction.  Such  actions  deny  the 
Committee  its  constitutional  and  oversight  responsibilities  and  the  Committee 
recommendation  for  fiscal  year  2021  does  not  continue  funding  programs  that  were 
reduced as a result of the Department’s actions.65 
The Trump Administration objected to the House’s proposed reduction to counter-drug funding, 
arguing that it “would hinder DOD’s ability to fulfill its statutory counter-drug missions.”66 
The Senate Appropriations Committee would have included $923.4 million for the Drug 
Interdiction and Counter-drug Activities, Defense account—$153.8 million more than requested. 
The panel would have included additional funding for Counter-Narcotics Support ($33.8 million), 
the National Guard Counter-Drug Program ($100 million), and National Guard Counter-Drug 
Schools ($20 million). Some of the funding for Counter-Narcotics Support would have been for 
joint interagency task force projects associated with the Pacific Deterrence Initiative (PDI), an 
effort intended to strengthen U.S. defense posture in the Indo-Pacific region. The panel noted its 
concern that DOD “has not applied significant prioritization to initiatives in the region.” 
The enacted version of the legislation included $914.4 million for the Drug Interdiction and 
Counter-drug Activities, Defense account—$144.8 million more than requested. The unrequested 
funding was for Counter-Narcotics Support ($20.8 million), including a multi-mission support 
vessel ($18.0 million) and a joint interagency task force project associated with PDI ($2.8 
million); Drug Demand Reduction Program ($4 million); the National Guard Counter-Drug 
Program ($100.0 million); and National Guard Counter-Drug Schools ($20.0 million). 
Counterdrug Activities 
For background and analysis on DOD counterdrug activities, see CRS Insight IN11052, 
The Defense Department 
and 10 U.S.C. 284: Legislative Origins and Funding Questions, by Liana W. Rosen. 
                                                 
62 Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, 
Operation 
and Maintenance Overview, Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Estimates, February 2020, p. 31. 
63 H.R. 7617, p. 42. 
64 H.Rept. 116-453, p. 344. 
65 Ibid, p. 345. 
66 
Statement of Administration Policy, p. 3. 
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Transfer Authorities 
DOD transfer and reprogramming authorities emerged as central in a debate over the 
department’s use of the authorities to transfer, without congressional prior approval, FY2019 and 
FY2020 defense funds to construct barriers along the U.S.-Mexico border. For FY2021, DOD 
requested $9.5 billion in general and special transfer authority, including $5 billion in general 
transfer authority for base funding and $4.5 billion in special transfer authority for OCO 
funding.67 The use of such authorities generally requires the prior approval of certain 
congressional committees. 
Sections 8005 and 9002 of the House-passed bill would have authorized $1.9 billion in general 
and special transfer authority, including $1 billion in general transfer authority and $900 million 
in special transfer authority.68 The House Appropriations Committee argued in part, “The granting 
of additional budget flexibility to the Department is based on the presumption that a state of trust 
and comity exists between the legislative and executive branches regarding the proper use of 
appropriated funds. This presumption presently is false.”69 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provision, arguing that “limiting DOD’s 
transfer authorities would severely constrain its ability to shift funds between accounts to meet 
unforeseen or emerging military requirements.”70 
The Senate Appropriations Committee included, and the enacted version of the legislation 
provided, $6 billion in general and special transfer authority, including $4 billion in general 
transfer authority and $2 billion in special transfer authority (se
e Table 4).71 The explanatory 
statement accompanying the enacted legislation directed the Secretary of Defense to submit a 
report to the House and Senate Appropriations Committees detailing how the department has used 
such authorities over the past decade.72 The language also directed the head of the Government 
Accountability Office to review the DOD report and assess “the extent to which the actions 
described in response to the direction above comply with existing appropriations law.”73 
Table 4. General and Special Transfer Authority Limits in the DOD Appropriations 
Act, 2021: Legislative Comparison 
(amounts in billions) 
Transfer 
FY2020 
Senate 
FY2021 
Authority 
Enacted  
FY2021 
House-passed 
committee-
Enacted  
(section) 
(P.L. 116-93) 
Requested 
(H.R. 7617) 
drafted 
(P.L. 116-260) 
GTA (Sec. 8005) 
$4.0 
$5.0 
$1.0 
$4.0 
$4.0 
STA (Sec. 9002) 
$2.0 
$4.5 
$0.5 
$2.0 
$2.0 
                                                 
67 
Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2021, Appendix, pp. 310, 343, 
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/BUDGET-2021-APP/pdf/BUDGET-2021-APP.pdf. 
68 H.R. 7617, pp. 46, 159. 
69 H.Rept. 116-453, p. 4. 
70 
Statement of Administration Policy, pp. 1-2. 
71 Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense Appropriations Bill, 2021, pp. 42, 143; and 
Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division C of P.L. 116-260). 
72 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 389, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
73 Ibid. 
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Transfer 
FY2020 
Senate 
FY2021 
Authority 
Enacted  
FY2021 
House-passed 
committee-
Enacted  
(section) 
(P.L. 116-93) 
Requested 
(H.R. 7617) 
drafted 
(P.L. 116-260) 
Total 
$6.0 
$9.5 
$1.5 
$6.0 
$6.0 
Source: Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2020 (Division A of P.L. 116-93); Office of Management 
and Budget, FY2021 
Budget Appendix; House-passed Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division 
A of H.R. 7617); Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 
2021; and enacted Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division C of P.L. 116-260). 
Notes: GTA is general transfer authority; STA is special transfer authority. 
DOD Transfer Authorities 
For background and analysis on DOD transfer and reprogramming authorities, see CRS Report R46421, 
DOD 
Transfer and Reprogramming Authorities: Background, Status, and Issues for Congress, by Brendan W. McGarry. 
Confederate Names 
The May 25, 2020, death of George P. Floyd Jr. in the custody of Minneapolis law enforcement 
and other high-profile racial incidents spurred widespread protests and generated congressional 
interest in a number of topics, including renaming U.S. military bases named for military leaders 
of the Confederacy. 
Section 8139 of the House-passed bill would have provided $1 million to the Operation and 
Maintenance, Army account to rename Army installations, facilities, roads, and streets named 
after confederate leaders and officers.74 The House Appropriations Committee noted that its 
version of the defense appropriations bill would provide the funding “to the Army for the 
renaming of installations, facilities, roads and streets that bear the name of confederate leaders 
and officers since the Army has the preponderance of the entities to change.”75 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provision, arguing in part that it reflected an 
attempt to “rewrite history.”76 
The Senate Appropriations Committee-drafted bill, and the enacted legislation, did not include a 
comparable provision. Section 370 in the previously enacted FY2021 NDAA dealt with a similar 
issue and required the Secretary of Defense to establish a commission to produce, within three 
years, a plan to remove from all DOD assets all names, symbols, monuments, and paraphernalia 
that honor or commemorate the Confederacy, except for Confederate grave markers.77 President 
Trump vetoed the FY2021 NDAA over this and other provisions.78 The House and Senate each 
                                                 
74 H.R. 7617, pp. 134-135. 
75 House Appropriations Committee, “Appropriations Committee Releases Fiscal Year 2021 Defense Funding Bill,” 
press release, July 7, 2020, at https://appropriations.house.gov/news/press-releases/appropriations-committee-releases-
fiscal-year-2021-defense-funding-bill. 
76 
Statement of Administration Policy, pp. 2-3. 
77 For more information, see CRS Report R46714, 
FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act: Context and Selected 
Issues for Congress, by Pat Towell, p. 10. 
78 White House, “Presidential Veto Message to the House of Representatives for H.R. 6395,” statement, December 23, 
2020, https://trumpwhitehouse.archives.gov/briefings-statements/presidential-veto-message-house-representatives-h-r-
6395/. 
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voted to override the veto by margins larger than the two-thirds majority required by the 
Constitution.79 
Confederate Names and Military Installations  
For background and analysis, see CRS Insight IN10756, 
Confederate Names and Military Installations, by Barbara 
Salazar Torreon, CRS Report R44959, 
Confederate Symbols: Relation to Federal Lands and Programs, coordinated by 
Laura B. Comay, and CRS Report R46714, 
FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act: Context and Selected Issues for 
Congress, by Pat Towell. 
Authorizations for the Use of Military Force (AUMFs) 
In 2001, Congress enacted the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF; P.L. 107-40). The 
legislation authorized the President to use military force against “those nations, organizations, or 
persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided” the September 11, 2001, 
terrorist attacks. In 2002, several months before the United States invaded Iraq to oust the 
Saddam Hussein regime, Congress enacted the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against 
Iraq Resolution of 2002 (P.L. 107-243). The legislation authorized the President to use the armed 
forces to “defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by 
Iraq.” 
Section 9027 of the House-passed bill would have repealed P.L. 107-40 240 days after enactment 
of the legislation. Section 9028 of the House-passed bill would have repealed P.L. 107-243 upon 
enactment of the legislation.80 Representative Barbara Lee, who introduced amendments to repeal 
the AUMFs, argued in part that “the 2001 AUMF has been cited at least 41 times in 19 countries 
to wage war with little or no congressional oversight” and that leaving the 2002 AUMF 
authorizing force against Iraq “on the books indefinitely creates a danger that Presidents will use 
it to justify military action that Congress never intended to authorize.”81 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provisions, arguing in part that “repealing the 
AUMFs would risk the military’s ability to pursue and defeat terrorists who seek to harm the 
United States and our interests at home and abroad and would also cast doubt on the continued 
authority of the United States to use force against terrorist groups, including its detention 
authority.”82 
The Senate Appropriations Committee-drafted bill and the enacted legislation did not include 
comparable provisions. 
Authorizations for the Use of Military Force 
For background and analysis on AUMFs, see CRS Report R43983, 
2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force: Issues 
Concerning Its Continued Application, by Matthew C. Weed and CRS Report R43760, 
A New Authorization for Use of 
Military Force Against the Islamic State: Issues and Current Proposals, by Matthew C. Weed. 
                                                 
79 For more information, see CRS Report R46714, 
FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act: Context and Selected 
Issues for Congress, by Pat Towell. 
80 H.R. 7617, p. 175. 
81 Representative Barbara Lee, “Congresswoman Barbara Lee Amendments to Stop Endless Wars Adopted by House 
Appropriations Committee,” press release, July 14, 2020, at https://lee.house.gov/news/press-releases/congresswoman-
barbara-lee-amendments-to-stop-endless-wars-adopted-by-house-appropriations-committee. 
82 
Statement of Administration Policy, p. 3. 
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Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF)  
For FY2021, DOD requested $4.02 billion for the Afghanistan Security Forces Fund (ASFF), 
which pays for training, equipping, and sustaining the Afghan military and national police.83 
The House-passed bill would have provided $3.05 billion in OCO funding for the Fund—$968 
million less than requested.84 The House Appropriations Committee noted the Fund’s “significant 
unobligated balances from prior year appropriations” and “the considerable uncertainty associated 
with the conflict, including the current level of violence and with respect to intra-Afghan 
negotiations.”85 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provision, arguing in part that such a level of 
funding would “pose significant risk to DOD’s mission given uncertainties associated with the 
Afghanistan peace process and continued high levels of violence by the Taliban against the 
Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) and the Government of Afghanistan.”86 
The Senate Appropriations Committee would have included $3.39 billion in OCO funding for the 
ASFF—$624.6 million less than requested “for unjustified increases over fiscal year 2020.”87 The 
panel also noted its concerns “that the budget flexibility allowed within the ASFF appropriation 
has led to a lack of budget discipline that challenges effective congressional and executive branch 
oversight and risks wasteful spending.” 
The enacted version of the legislation provided $3.05 billion in OCO funding for the ASFF. The 
conference agreement did not include funding for major capital projects and upgrades or the 
procurement of new systems.88 
Afghanistan 
For background and analysis on the Afghanistan, see CRS Report R45122, 
Afghanistan: Background and U.S. Policy: In 
Brief, by Clayton Thomas and CRS Report R46670, 
U.S. Military Drawdown in Afghanistan: Frequently Asked Questions, 
coordinated by Clayton Thomas. 
Iran  
On January 3, 2020, U.S. military forces killed Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-Quds 
Force (IRGC-QF) Commander Major General Qasem Soleimani in a drone strike in Baghdad.89 
In retaliation, on January 8, 2020, Iran launched a ballistic missile strike at two Iraqi bases—Ayn 
                                                 
83 Department of Defense, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, 
Justification for FY 2021 Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO) Afghanistan Security Forces Fund, February 2020, 
p. 5. 
84 H.R. 7617, p. 143. 
85 H.Rept. 116-453, pp. 376-377. 
86 
Statement of Administration Policy, p. 5. 
87 Explanatory statement accompanying the Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Bill, 2021, pp. 269-270. 
88 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 732, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
89 DOD, “Statement by the Department of Defense,” press release, January 2, 2020, at 
https://www.defense.gov/Newsroom/Releases/Release/Article/2049534/statement-by-the-department-of-defense/. 
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al-Asad in western Iraq and an airbase near Irbil, in Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq—resulting 
in approximately 110 U.S. military personnel being diagnosed with various forms of traumatic 
brain injury, mostly concussions from the blast.90 
Section 9029 of the House-passed bill would have prohibited funds provided by the legislation for 
any use of military force in or against Iran unless Congress declared war or enacted specific 
statutory authorization for such use of military force that met the requirements of the War Powers 
Resolution (50 U.S.C. §§1541 et seq.).91 Representative Barbara Lee, who introduced a previous 
version of the provision as an amendment, argued that the language “makes it clear that the 
President cannot go to war with Iran without authorization from Congress.”92 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provision, arguing in part that it could 
“endanger the President’s ability to defend United States forces and interests in the region against 
ongoing threats from Iran and its proxies.”93 
Neither the Senate Appropriations Committee draft legislation nor the enacted legislation 
included the House provision. Section 9022 of the enacted legislation stated instead, “Nothing in 
this Act may be construed as authorizing the use of force against Iran.”94 
Iran 
For background and analysis on Iran, see CRS Report RL32048, 
Iran: Internal Politics and U.S. Policy and Options, by 
Kenneth Katzman and CRS Report R44017, 
Iran’s Foreign and Defense Policies, by Kenneth Katzman. 
Military Personnel  
End-Strength 
For FY2021, DOD requested military personnel end-strength totaling 2.15 million personnel, 
including 1.35 million active-duty personnel and 802,000 reserve component personnel. The 
request represented 13,200 more personnel than the enacted FY2020 level, including 12,000 more 
active-duty personnel and 1,200 more reserve component personnel. 
The House-passed bill would have provided funding for the requested level of military end-
strength.95 
The Senate Appropriations Committee would have provided funding for 6,905 more personnel 
than the FY2020 level, including 5,705 more active-duty personnel and 1,200 more reserve-
component personnel.96 
                                                 
90 CRS Report R45795, 
U.S.-Iran Conflict and Implications for U.S. Policy, by Kenneth Katzman, Kathleen J. McInnis, 
and Clayton Thomas, pp. 10-11. 
91 H.R. 7617, pp. 175-176. Note the section was numbered 9030 in the House committee-reported version of the bill 
and numbered 9029 in the House-passed version of the bill. 
92 Representative Barbara Lee, “Congresswoman Barbara Lee Amendments to Stop Endless Wars Adopted by House 
Appropriations Committee,” press release, July 14, 2020, at https://lee.house.gov/news/press-releases/congresswoman-
barbara-lee-amendments-to-stop-endless-wars-adopted-by-house-appropriations-committee. 
93 
Statement of Administration Policy, p. 3. 
94 P.L. 116-260, p. 169. 
95 House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617, p. 20, 
https://www.congress.gov/116/crpt/hrpt453/CRPT-116hrpt453.pdf. 
96 Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense 
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The enacted legislation provided funding for 10,300 more personnel than the FY2020 level, 
including 9,100 more active-duty personnel and 1,200 more reserve-component personnel (see 
Table 5).97 
Table 5. Summary of Military Personnel End-Strength, FY2021 
Change 
Senate 
from 
FY2020 
FY2021 
House-
committee-
FY2021 
FY2020 to 
Component 
Actual 
Request 
passed 
drafted 
Enacted 
FY2021 
Army 
480,000 
485,900 
485,900 
485,000 
485,900 
5,900 
Navy 
340,500 
347,800 
347,800 
346,730 
347,800 
7,300 
Marine Corps 
186,200 
184,100 
184,100 
180,000 
181,200 
-5,000 
Air Force 
332,800 
333,700 
333,700 
333,475 
333,700 
900 
Subtotal, 
Active-Duty 
Forces 
1,339,500 
1,351,500 
1,351,500 
1,345,205 
1,348,600 
9,100 
Army 
Reserve 
189,500 
189,800 
189,800 
189,800 
189,800 
300 
Navy Reserve 
59,000 
58,800 
58,800 
58,800 
58,800 
-200 
Marine Corps 
Reserve 
38,500 
38,500 
38,500 
38,500 
38,500 
0 
Air Force 
Reserve 
70,100 
70,300 
70,300 
70,300 
70,300 
200 
Army 
National 
Guard 
336,000 
336,500 
336,500 
336,500 
336,500 
500 
Air National 
Guard 
107,700 
108,100 
108,100 
108,100 
108,100 
400 
Subtotal, 
Selected 
Reserve 
800,800 
802,000 
802,000 
802,000 
802,000 
1,200 
Total 
2,140,300 
2,153,500 
2,153,500 
2,147,205 
2,150,600 
10,300 
Source: House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617, p. 20; CRS 
analysis of H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft 
of the Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020, pp. 14-15; U.S. Congress, House 
Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative 
Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 
43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 399, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
                                                 
Appropriations Bill, 2021, November 10, 2020, pp. 14-15, 
https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/DEFRept.pdf. 
97 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 399, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
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Pay Raise 
Title 37, Section 1009, of the 
United States Code (37 U.S.C. §1009) provides a permanent 
formula for an automatic annual increase in basic pay that is indexed to the annual increase in the 
Employment Cost Index (ECI), a survey prepared by the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor 
Statistics, for “wages and salaries” of private industry workers. The FY2021 budget request 
proposed a 3% increase in basic pay for military personnel in line with the formula in current law. 
The House-passed bill and the Senate Appropriations Committee would have provided funding 
for the requested increase in military pay.98 
The enacted legislation provided funding for a 3% military pay raise that took effect January 1, 
2021.99 
Childcare Program 
For FY2021, DOD requested approximately $1.2 billion across the military services for its 
childcare program—$14 million (1.2%) more than the FY2020 enacted level.100 The largest 
employer-sponsored childcare program in the United States, the child development program 
serves approximately 200,000 children of uniformed service members and DOD civilians and 
employs more than 23,000 employees.101 Despite the overall funding increase sought for the 
program, the FY2021 budget requested less funding for Army and Marine Corps childcare 
activities. 
The House-passed bill would have provided $90 million in unrequested funding to the base 
operation support sub-activity group within the Operation and Maintenance, Army appropriation 
account and $26 million to the same sub-activity group within the Operation and Maintenance, 
Marine Corps account for childcare programs.102 Noting in part the proposed reductions to such 
programs, the House Appropriations Committee said it was “dismayed by the contradiction of the 
Department rhetorically supporting military families while continuing to reduce funding for the 
very programs on which they rely. Within the immense budget of the Department, quality of life 
programs must not be the bill payers for modernization.”103 
The Senate Appropriations Committee supported the Trump Administration’s request for the 
DOD childcare program. 
The enacted legislation included the House’s provisions to provide more funding than requested 
for childcare programs. 
                                                 
98 House Appropriations Committee, “H.R. 7617 Division-by-Division Summary,” press release, p. 2, 
https://appropriations.house.gov/sites/democrats.appropriations.house.gov/files/documents/HR-7617_division-by-
division_summary_v3.pdf; and Senate Appropriations Committee, “Defense, 2021 Highlights,” press release, p. 1, 
https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/FY21%20BILL%20HIGHLIGHTS_DEFENSE.pdf.  
99 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 
116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st 
sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 399, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
100 For more information, see CRS Report R45288, 
Military Child Development Program: Background and Issues, by 
Kristy N. Kamarck, pp. 8-9. 
101 Ibid, summary. 
102 H.Rept. 116-453, pp. 75, 88. 
103 Ibid, p. 4. 
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Military Personnel Issues 
For background and analysis on military personnel issues, see CRS Report R46107, 
FY2020 National Defense 
Authorization Act: Selected Military Personnel Issues, coordinated by Bryce H. P. Mendez, CRS In Focus IF10260, 
Defense Primer: Military Pay Raise, by Lawrence Kapp, and CRS Report R45288, 
Military Child Development Program: 
Background and Issues, by Kristy N. Kamarck. 
Selected Acquisition Matters  
This section of the report discusses certain acquisition matters that generated interest or debate 
among Members or objections from the Trump Administration. These matters include but are not 
limited to the funding request for software and digital pilot programs, congressional proposals to 
reduce funding for nuclear modernization and sustainment programs, development of a sixth-
generation fighter aircraft and supporting systems, and other acquisition efforts; and the Trump 
Administration’s proposal to decommission certain Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs).  
Software and Digital Technology Pilot Programs 
Some observers have called for the creation of new appropriation accounts or structures to 
provide DOD with greater acquisition and budgetary flexibility. For example, in a 2019 report, 
the Defense Innovation Board, an independent advisory board, noted that DOD relies on an 
acquisition process primarily designed for hardware rather than software, and recommended the 
creation of a new multi-year appropriation for digital technology.104 This resulted in DOD 
requesting for FY2021 a new Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation (RDT&E) budget 
activity (e.g., Budget Activity 6.8) for “Software and Digital Technology Pilot Programs.” 
Section 8131 of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division C of P.L. 116-
260) provided $664 million for eight Software and Digital Technology Pilot Programs funded in 
Budget Activity 6.8.105 According to the legislation, the funding can “be used for expenses for the 
agile research, development, test and evaluation, procurement, production, modification, and 
operation and maintenance” of software and digital technologies. At the same time, the 
accompanying explanatory statement noted that 
objective quantitative and qualitative evidence is needed to evaluate potential expansion of 
the  approved  pilot  programs.  Further,  seeking  additional  flexibility  in  the  execution  of 
appropriations  should  not  be  a  solution  to  internal  accounting  and  guidance  issues  that 
challenge the Department’s ability to execute these programs.106 
The statement encouraged the Secretary of Defense to execute the pilots in FY2021 and FY2022 
“while performing a detailed analysis of the Department’s accounting and financial management 
process for such pilot programs as compared to existing software and digital technology 
programs.” It also directed the Secretary to submit a report to the congressional defense 
                                                 
104 Department of Defense, Defense Innovation Board, SWAP [Software Acquisitions and Practices] Reports 2019, 
Appropriations Subgroup Report, January 15, 2019, at https://media.defense.gov/2019/Jan/16/2002080473/-1/-
1/0/DIB_APPROPRIATIONS_SUBGROUP_REPORT_2019.01.15.PDF. 
105 P.L. 116-260, p. 154. 
106 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public 
Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 
1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 602, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
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committees detailing the department’s assessment plan for each pilot and quarterly reports on the 
status of each pilot. 
Mid-Tier Acquisition and Rapid Prototyping Programs 
The FY2021 President’s budget request included RDT&E funding for multiple acquisition 
programs grouped together as “Rapid Prototyping Program.” These efforts use so-called middle 
tier of acquisition (MTA) authority for rapid prototyping and fielding, also known as Section 804 
Authority. MTA is split into two functions:  
1.  Prototyping, which is intended to use emerging technology to develop and field 
prototypes that demonstrate new capabilities or meet emerging military needs; 
and  
2.  Fielding, which is intended to use proven technology with minimal development 
to deploy new systems or upgrade existing systems.  
Programs initiated under either approach must be completed or transitioned to a program of 
record within five years.  
DOD’s Rapid Prototyping Program is intended in part to develop prototypes that reduce technical 
and integration risk for major acquisition programs in high-priority technologies, including 
autonomous systems, hypersonics; networked command, control, and communications; electronic 
warfare; sensors for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR); and fire control.107 For 
FY2021, DOD requested $102 million for the program in the Research, Development, Test and 
Evaluation, Defense-wide account. 
The House-passed bill would have provided $80 million for the program—$22 million less than 
the Administration requested due to an unspecified “program decrease.”108 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provision, arguing that it would “severely 
impact” prototyping projects underway with allies and partners for precision long-range strike 
and targeting systems; networked command and control, and communications; and autonomous 
air dominance systems.109 The Trump Administration also cited the impact to efforts in the Indo-
Pacific region: “This reduction would stop an ongoing United States and Australia air dominance 
capability that combines artificial intelligence-generated tactics and machine-precision execution 
with a production-ready attritable [expendable] aircraft, and would delay the initiation of 
additional modernization capabilities.” 
The Senate Appropriations Committee included $82 million for the program—$20 million less 
than requested.110 
The enacted legislation provided $92 million for the program—$10 million less than requested 
due to an unspecified “program decrease.”111 While House and Senate conferees signaled support 
                                                 
107 Department of Defense, Fiscal Year (FY) 2021 Budget Estimates, February 2020, Office of the Secretary of 
Defense, Defense-Wide Justification Book Volume 3 of 5, p. 345. 
108 H.Rept. 116-453, p. 314. 
109 
Statement of Administration Policy, p. 3. 
110 Explanatory statement accompanying the Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Bill, 2021, p. 218. 
111 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public 
Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 
1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 688, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
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for accelerating the delivery of capability to military personnel, they also “noted that under 
current law, several reporting requirements that apply to traditional acquisition programs, to 
include independent cost estimates and test and evaluation master plans, are not required for mid-
tier acquisition and rapid prototyping programs.” They raised concerns that such information is 
not being provided “as a matter of practice,” that such authorities may limit the military services’ 
long-term ability to manage acquisition programs; and that budgeting such items with research 
and development funding rather than procurement funding “obfuscates costs and limits 
transparency and visibility.” Conferees directed the Under Secretaries of Defense (Research and 
Engineering) and (Acquisition and Sustainment) and the service acquisition executives to provide 
the congressional defense committees with the FY2022 President’s budget request a list of 
acquisition programs utilizing prototyping or accelerated acquisition authorities, the rationale for 
each acquisition strategy, and a cost estimate and contracting strategy for each program, among 
other reporting requirements.112 
Defense Acquisition 
For background and analysis on recent defense acquisition reform efforts, see CRS Report R45068, 
Acquisition 
Reform in the FY2016-FY2018 National Defense Authorization Acts (NDAAs), by Heidi M. Peters. 
Strategic Nuclear Forces  
For FY2021, DOD requested $17.7 billion for FY2021 to continue modernizing the nuclear triad 
of submarines armed with submarine-launched ballistic missiles, land-based intercontinental 
ballistic missiles, and strategic bombers carrying gravity bombs and air-launched cruise 
missiles.113 The Trump Administration’s 2018 Nuclear Posture Review reiterated the findings of 
previous reviews “that the nuclear triad—supported by North Atlantic Treaty Organization 
(NATO) dual-capable aircraft and a robust nuclear command, control, and communications 
system—is the most cost-effective and strategically sound means of ensuring nuclear 
deterrence.”114 
The House-passed bill would have provided less funding than requested for several of these 
programs, including the bomber-launched Long-Range Standoff (LRSO) missile to replace the 
AGM-86 cruise missile and the Ground-based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD) ballistic missile to 
replace the Minuteman III missile. In addition, Section 8133 of the bill would have prohibited the 
use of DOD funds to prepare to conduct any explosive nuclear weapons test that produces any 
yield.115 Administration officials had reportedly discussed possibly conducting an explosive 
nuclear weapons test.116 The House-passed bill also included a provision related to a debate over 
whether the Department of Energy had to accept binding funding recommendations from the 
                                                 
112 Ibid, p. 603. 
113 Department of Defense, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 
2020, Defense Budget Overview, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, Revised May 
13, 2020, p. 1-7. 
114 Department of Defense, 
Nuclear Posture Review, February 2018, p. 2, at 
https://media.defense.gov/2018/Feb/02/2001872886/-1/-1/1/2018-NUCLEAR-POSTURE-REVIEW-FINAL-
REPORT.PDF. 
115 H.R. 7617, p. 132. 
116 John Hudson and Paul Sonne, “Trump administration discussed conducting first U.S. nuclear test in decades,” 
The 
Washington Post, May 22, 2020, at https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/trump-administration-
discussed-conducting-first-us-nuclear-test-in-decades/2020/05/22/a805c904-9c5b-11ea-b60c-3be060a4f8e1_story.html. 
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Nuclear Weapons Council (NWC), which is comprised mostly of DOD officials.117 Section 8138 
of the bill would have prohibited using DOD funds “to provide guidance on, review, prepare, 
approve, or recommend budget request funding levels or initiatives for the Department of 
Energy.”118 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provisions, arguing that such funding levels 
“would not reflect the urgency of nuclear modernization” and that “any delay in funding for 
replacement systems would adversely impact the nuclear triad and the deterrence mission.” It 
argued that Section 8133 would have impacted DOD’s ability to provide input to DOE’s National 
Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) on the requirement to conduct an underground nuclear 
test if a technical need arose or if otherwise directed by the President. It also argued that Section 
8138 would have prevented DOD from coordinating the NNSA budget within the NWC.119 The 
council is responsible for establishing priorities between DOD and DOE for managing the U.S. 
nuclear weapons stockpile.120 
The Senate Appropriations Committee and the enacted legislation did not include the House 
provisions. Section 1632 of the enacted FY2021 NDAA dealt with a similar issue and gave DOD 
more input over the scope of future NNSA budgets to develop and manufacture nuclear 
warheads.121 The committee differed from the House-passed bill in part by recommending more 
funding than requested for the Columbia-class submarine. 
The enacted legislation included more funding than the Trump Administration requested for the 
Columbia-class submarine, and less funding than requested for LRSO, GBSD, bomber upgrades, 
and Trident II (D-5) missile modifications (see
 Table 6). 
Strategic Nuclear Forces 
For background and analysis on strategic and nonstrategic nuclear forces, see CRS Report RL33640, 
U.S. Strategic 
Nuclear Forces: Background, Developments, and Issues, by Amy F. Woolf and CRS Report RL32572, 
Nonstrategic 
Nuclear Weapons, by Amy F. Woolf. 
Table 6. Selected Long-Range, Nuclear-Armed Weapons Systems 
(in millions of dollars) 
Program 
Appropriation 
FY2021 
Senate 
FY2021 
(relevant CRS 
House-Passed 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
report) 
drafted 
B-21 Bomber 
RDT&E 
2,848.4 
2,828.4 
2,848.4 
2,848.4 
(R44463) 
Bomber 
Proc. 
111.1 
85.2 
79.9 
79.9 
Upgrades 
(R43049) 
RDT&E 
723.2 
723.2 
722.2 
680.8 
                                                 
117 Colin Demarest, “Energy Secretary Dan Brouillette fights to retain NNSA budget reins,” 
Aiken Standard, July 3, 
2020, at https://www.postandcourier.com/aikenstandard/news/energy-secretary-dan-brouillette-fights-to-retain-nnsa-
budget-reins/article_048a51ef-e73e-5d7e-bac5-4756e9b9ba4f.html. 
118 H.R. 7617, p. 134. 
119 
Statement of Administration Policy, p. 2. 
120 See 10 U.S.C. §179 and Department of Defense, Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear 
Matters, Nuclear Matters Handbook 2016, Washington, DC, Appendix A, at 
https://www.acq.osd.mil/ncbdp/nm/NMHB/chapters/Appendix_A.htm. 
121 For more information, see CRS Report R46714, 
FY2021 National Defense Authorization Act: Context and Selected 
Issues for Congress, by Pat Towell, p. 21. 
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Program 
Appropriation 
FY2021 
Senate 
FY2021 
(relevant CRS 
House-Passed 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
report) 
drafted 
Columbia-Class 
Proc. 
4,014.7 
3,985.4 
4,144.7 
4,122.2 
Ballistic Missile 
Submarine 
RDT&E 
397.3 
386.8 
397.3 
397.3 
(R41129) 
Ground-Based 
RDT&E 
1,524.8 
1,464.8 
1,509.8 
1,449.8 
Strategic 
Deterrent 
(RL33640) 
Long-Range 
RDT&E 
474.4 
304.4 
444.4 
385.4 
Standoff 
Weapon 
(RL33640) 
Trident II (D-5) 
Proc. 
1,173.8 
1,132.2 
1,173.8 
1,160.9 
Missile Mods 
(RL33640) 
RDT&E 
173.1 
129.3 
115.0 
128.0 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: Proc. is procurement; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation.
 The line item or items 
corresponding to each program are listed in
 Appendix B. Figures rounded to the nearest tenth. 
Long-Range, Precision Strike Weapons  
For FY2021, DOD requested funding for a number of precision-strike weapons with ranges from 
approximately a few hundred nautical miles to more than 1,000 nautical miles. These types of 
weapons include existing technologies such as ballistic missiles and cruise missiles, as well as 
emerging technologies such as hypersonic weapons (i.e., maneuvering glide vehicles or missiles 
that fly at speeds of at least Mach 5) and long-range artillery cannons. The Trump Administration 
had identified such weapons as priorities partly in response to China and Russia’s development of 
increasingly advanced air defense systems. 
According to DOD, the FY2021 budget sought $3.2 billion for the development of hypersonic 
weapons.122 In terms of funding, the biggest programs include the Navy’s Conventional Prompt 
Strike,123 the Army’s Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon, and the Air Force’s Air-Launched Rapid 
Response Weapon.  
The enacted legislation provided more funding than requested for the Army’s Long-Range 
Hypersonic Weapon and less funding than requested for the Navy’s Conventional Prompt Strike                                                  
122 Department of Defense, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 
2020, Defense Budget Overview, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, Revised May 
13, 2020, p. 1-8. 
123 This effort is intended to produce a common glide vehicle for use by both the Navy and Army. For more 
information, see Department of the Navy, Strategic Systems Programs, Conventional Prompt Strike (CPS) website, 
accessed April 1, 2021, at https://www.ssp.navy.mil/six_lines_of_business/cps.html. 
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program in part because conferees determined the number of missile round procurements to be 
“excess to test requirements.”124 The legislation provide less funding than requested for certain 
other long-range precision-attack weapons (see
 Table 7). 
Long-Range Strike Programs 
For background and analysis on long-range strike programs, see CRS Report R45811, 
Hypersonic Weapons: 
Background and Issues for Congress, by Kelley M. Sayler; CRS Report R41464, 
Conventional Prompt Global Strike and 
Long-Range Ballistic Missiles: Background and Issues, by Amy F. Woolf; CRS Report R45996, 
Precision-Guided 
Munitions: Background and Issues for Congress, by John R. Hoehn and Samuel D. Ryder; and CRS Report R46721, 
U.S. Army Long-Range Precision Fires: Background and Issues for Congress, by Andrew Feickert. 
Table 7. Selected Long-Range Strike Weapons Systems 
(in millions of dollars) 
Program 
Appropriation 
FY2021 
Senate 
FY2021 
(relevant CRS 
House-Passed 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
report) 
drafted 
Hypersonic Weapons 
Air-Launched 
RDT&E 
381.9 
381.9 
336.9 
386.9 
Rapid Response 
Weapon 
(R45811) 
Conventional 
RDT&E 
1,008.4 
973.4 
624.7 
767.6 
Prompt Strike 
(R45811, R41464) 
Long-Range 
RDT&E 
801.4 
811.4 
861.4 
861.4 
Hypersonic 
Weapon 
(R45811) 
Other Precision-Attack Weapons 
Anti-Ship 
Proc. 
39.1 
35.5 
0.0 
17.8 
Tomahawk 
Cruise Missile 
RDT&E 
125.2 
125.2 
125.2 
125.2 
(R45996) 
Joint Air-to-
Proc. 
505.9 
500.0 
505.9 
500.0 
Surface Standoff 
Missile 
(R45996)  RDT&E 
70.8 
70.8 
70.8 
70.8 
Land-Attack 
Proc. 
277.7 
247.9 
195.5 
224.7 
Tomahawk 
Cruise Missile 
(R45996) 
Long-Range 
Proc. 
188.6 
134.1 
188.6 
153.9 
Anti-Ship Missile 
(R45996) 
RDT&E 
35.8 
46.8 
46.8 
46.8 
Proc. 
32.9 
32.9 
31.6 
31.6 
                                                 
124 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public 
Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 
1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 640, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
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Program 
Appropriation 
FY2021 
Senate 
FY2021 
(relevant CRS 
House-Passed 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
report) 
drafted 
Naval Strike 
RDT&E 
26.4 
26.4 
26.4 
26.4 
Missile 
(R45996) 
Precision-Strike 
Proc. 
49.9 
42.4 
0.0 
49.9 
Missile 
(R45996)  RDT&E 
145.4 
127.3 
115.4 
127.3 
Strategic Long-
RDT&E 
65.1 
65.1 
65.1 
65.1 
Range Cannon 
(R46721) 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: Proc. is procurement; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation.
 The line item or items 
corresponding to each program are listed in
 Appendix B. Figures rounded to the nearest tenth. 
Missile Defense Programs  
For FY2021, DOD requested $20.3 billion for activities related to missile defense, including $9.2 
billion for the Missile Defense Agency, $7.9 billion for regional and strategic missile defense 
programs, and $3.2 billion for activities intended to preemptively disrupt or defeat missile threats 
(a concept sometimes referred to as “left of launch”).125 
The request sought funding for the Ground-based Midcourse Defense (GMD) system intended to 
defend U.S. territory against intercontinental ballistic missiles in part with a new interceptor 
carrying a non-explosive warhead (called a “kill vehicle”).126 DOD canceled a program to 
redesign the kill vehicle on the existing Ground-based Interceptor (GBI), which has a mixed track 
record in testing, and proposed developing a new Next Generation Interceptor (NGI).127 The 
request also included funding for shorter-range missile defense programs, including the Navy’s 
Aegis ballistic missile defense program and the Army’s Terminal High Altitude Area Defense 
(THAAD) program.128  
                                                 
125 DOD, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 2020, Defense 
Budget Overview, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, Revised May 13, 2020, p. 4-
9, 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/fy2021_Budget_Request_Overview_Book.pdf
. 
126 DOD, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 2020, Program 
Acquisition Cost by Weapon System, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, p. 4-2, 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/fy2021_Weapons.pdf. 
127 Government Accountability Office, 
Missile Defense: Observations on Ground-based Midcourse Defense 
Acquisition Challenges and Potential Contract Strategy Changes, GAO-21-135R, October 21, 2020, at 
https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-21-135r.pdf. 
128 Ibid, pp. 4-3, 4-4. 
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The House-passed bill would have provided more funding than requested for development of the 
homeland defense radar in Hawaii. It would have provided less funding than requested for 
development of GBI and NGI, hypersonic missile attack detection, and other efforts. 
The Trump Administration objected to the House-passed funding levels. It argued that funding 
reductions to NGI “would limit DOD’s ability to effectively execute this critical program 
following the contract award and would impose additional challenges on an already tight 
development schedule,” that combined reductions to Aegis ballistic missile defense programs 
would delay “critical ground and flight tests required to implement the Administration’s priority 
of achieving layered homeland defense,” and that reductions to THAAD would “significantly 
impact the development and demonstrations of enhanced interceptor components and alternate 
booster options.”129 
The Senate Appropriations Committee would have provided more funding than requested for 
GMD and NGI, and less funding than requested for THAAD and Patriot. 
The enacted legislation challenged certain elements of the Administration’s FY2021 budget 
request for missile defense programs. Conferees raised concerns over the “apparent disconnect” 
between strategic guidance documents and requested funding for Missile Defense Agency (MDA) 
programs.130 They noted that recent high-priority programs—such as developing a space sensor to 
track hypersonic threats and procuring a radar to defend Hawaii from ballistic missiles—were 
“removed from MDA’s budget, or underwent significant funding reductions.”131 The legislation 
provided more funding than requested for GMD, NGI, and the Hawaii radar. It provided less 
funding than requested for the THAAD and Patriot programs (se
e Table 8). 
Missile Defense Programs 
For background and additional information on missile defense programs, see CRS In Focus IF11623, 
Hypersonic 
Missile Defense: Issues for Congress, by Kelley M. Sayler and Stephen M. McCall and CRS In Focus IF10541, 
Defense 
Primer: Ballistic Missile Defense, by Stephen M. McCall. 
Table 8. Selected Missile Defense Programs 
(in millions of dollars) 
Program (CRS  Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
Ground-Based 
RDT&E 
1,071.4 
993.4 
1,301.4 
1,288.3 
Midcourse 
Defense 
Next-
RDT&E 
664.1 
504.6 
864.1 
858.1 
Generation 
Interceptor 
Hawaii radar 
RDT&E 
0.0 
133.0 
65.0 
133.0 
Guam defense 
RDT&E 
56.6 
56.6 
56.6 
56.6 
(land-based 
Aegis) 
                                                 
129 
Statement of Administration Policy, pp. 4-5. 
130 Explanatory statement accompanying the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division C of P.L. 116-
260), in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 166 (December 21, 2020), p. H7969.  
131 Ibid. 
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Program (CRS  Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
Aegis and Aegis 
Proc. 
762.8 
858.3 
760.5 
856.0 
Ashore (other 
than Guam; 
RDT&E 
985.8 
910.7 
952.8 
948.8 
RL33745) 
Terminal (short-
Proc. 
1,553.2 
1,559.8 
1,491.3 
1,534.5 
range) defense 
(THAAD and 
RDT&E 
420.4 
327.7 
311.1 
311.1 
Patriot) 
Israeli 
Proc. 
127.0 
127.0 
127.0 
127.0 
cooperative 
defense 
RDT&E 
300.0 
300.0 
300.0 
300.0 
programs 
Hypersonic 
RDT&E 
206.8 
192.8 
272.6 
272.6 
defense 
Hypersonic 
RDT&E 
216.0 
96.0 
184.7 
194.7 
missile attack 
detection 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: Proc. is procurement; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation.
 The line item or items 
corresponding to each program are listed in
 Appendix B. Figures rounded to the nearest tenth. 
Military Space Programs  
For FY2021, DOD requested $19 billion for space-related activities, including funding to support 
ongoing efforts to establish the Space Force within the Department of the Air Force as the sixth 
branch of the armed forces.132 The budget requested funding for the development and 
procurement of space-based systems in new appropriation accounts (e.g., Research, 
Development, Test and Evaluation, Space Force and Procurement, Space Force).133 
In terms of funding, the largest space-related acquisition programs include the Next-Generation 
Overhead Persistent Infrared (OPIR) missile-warning satellites designed to replace the existing 
                                                 
132 This amount is for Major Force Program-12, “National Security Space,” according to DOD, 
National Defense 
Budget Estimates for FY 2021, Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) April 2020, p. 105, at 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/FY21_Green_Book.pdf. 
133 DOD requested and Congress provided operation and maintenance (O&M) funding for the Space Force in the 
Operation and Maintenance, Space Force appropriation account beginning in FY2020. The Air Force requested military 
personnel (MILPERS) and military construction (MILCON) funding for the Space Force in FY2021 within the Military 
Personnel, Air Force and Military Construction, Air Force, accounts, respectively. The Air Force plans to transfer 
MILPERS funding to a Space Force appropriation “once an integrated Department of the Air Force pay system is fully 
operational,” according to DOD, 
Department of the Air Force FY2021 Budget Overview, February 10, 2020, p. 7, at 
https://www.saffm.hq.af.mil/Portals/84/documents/FY21/SUPPORT_/FY21%20Budget%20Overview_1.pdf?ver=2020
-02-10-152806-743.  
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constellation of Space-Based Infrared (SBIR) satellites; Global Positioning System III (GPS III) 
satellites intended in part to provide more powerful military communications signals; and 
National Security Space Launch (NSSL) that provides launch services and support activities for 
medium- to heavy-class national security space satellites. 
Both the House-passed bill and the Senate Appropriations Committee would have provided less 
funding than requested for NSSL. The committee had expressed concern over agencies procuring 
launches through direct commercial contracts or other agreements, arguing that “such price and 
schedule optimization for individual programs, is likely to have suboptimal results for the 
government as a whole.”134 The committee directed the Secretary of Defense and Director of 
National Intelligence to use the existing Space Force contract for NSSL-class missions unless 
they can certify “that an alternative launch procurement approach for a designated mission is in 
the national security interest and best financial interest of the government.”135 
The enacted legislation generally supported the requested level of funding for space-based 
systems (se
e Table 9). 
Military Space Programs 
For background and analysis on military space programs, see CRS Report R46211, 
National Security Space Launch, 
by Stephen M. McCall and CRS Report R43353, 
Threats to U.S. National Security Interests in Space: Orbital Debris 
Mitigation and Removal, by Stephen M. McCall. 
Table 9. Selected Military Space Programs 
(in millions of dollars) 
Program (CRS  Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
National 
Proc. 
1,043.2 
933.3 
948.2 
996.4 
Security Space 
Launch 
RDT&E 
561.0 
561.0 
451.0 
551.0 
(R46211) 
Global 
Proc. 
650.2 
645.2 
606.2 
620.2 
Positioning 
System III 
RDT&E 
1,149.0 
1,134.0 
1,088.4 
1,161.0 
Infrared missile 
Proc. 
160.9 
160.9 
135.9 
145.9 
attack detection 
(SBIRS, OPIR) 
RDT&E 
2,318.9 
2,318.9 
2,318.9 
2,318.9 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: SBIRS is Space-Based Infrared Satellites;
 OPIR is Overhead Persistent Infrared (OPIR) satellites; Proc. is 
procurement; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation.
 The line item or items corresponding to 
each program are listed in
 Appendix B. Figures rounded to the nearest tenth. 
                                                 
134 Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the Department of Defense 
Appropriations Bill, 2021, November 10, 2020, p. 150. 
135 Ibid, p. 593. 
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Ground Combat Systems  
For FY2021, DOD requested $13 billion for ground systems, including combat vehicles, artillery, 
infantry support weapons, and other equipment.136 
In terms of funding, some of the Army’s biggest ground programs included modernization of M-1 
Abrams tanks and M-1126 Stryker wheeled combat vehicles, and procurement of Joint Light 
Tactical Vehicles (JLTV) intended to replace a portion of the High Mobility Multipurpose 
Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV) fleet. The Army also sought funding for defenses against aircraft, 
short-range missiles, and other aerial threats. These systems include Stryker vehicles modified 
with anti-aircraft weapons and designated as Maneuver—Short-Range Air Defense (M-
SHORAD), as well as the Guided Multiple Launch Rocket System (GMLRS) of artillery missiles 
that can be fired from truck-mounted launchers. 
The House-passed bill would have provided more funding for Stryker modifications. It would 
have provided less funding for Indirect Fire Protection Capability (IFPC) intended in part to 
intercept unmanned aircraft systems and cruise missiles; the Armored Multi-Purpose Vehicle 
(AMPV) designed to replace the M-113 armored personnel carrier family of vehicles; and 
Optionally Manned Fighting Vehicle (OMFV) intended to replace the M-2/M-3 Bradley fighting 
vehicle; among other programs. 
The Senate Appropriations Committee differed from the House-passed bill in part by 
recommending less funding than requested for GMLRS. 
The enacted legislation provided more funding than requested for Stryker modifications and 
development of an M-SHORAD “directed energy,” or DE, variant of the vehicle equipped with a 
laser intended to destroy unmanned aerial systems and artillery shells. It provided less funding 
than requested for certain other systems (se
e Table 10). 
Ground Combat Systems 
For background and analysis on ground combat systems, see CRS Report R46216, 
The Army’s Modernization 
Strategy: Congressional Oversight Considerations, by Andrew Feickert and Brendan W. McGarry, CRS Report R46463, 
U.S. Army Short-Range Air Defense Force Structure and Selected Programs: Background and Issues for Congress, by 
Andrew Feickert, and CRS Report R45098, 
U.S. Army Weapons-Related Directed Energy (DE) Programs: Background 
and Potential Issues for Congress, by Andrew Feickert. 
Table 10. Selected Ground Combat Systems 
(in millions of dollars) 
Program (CRS  Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
Vehicles and Other Systems 
Amphibious 
Proc. 
 478.9  
 456.3  
 452.0  
 436.8  
Combat Vehicle  
(IF11755) 
RDT&E 
 41.8  
 31.3  
 41.8  
 41.8  
                                                 
136 DOD, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 2020, Program 
Acquisition Cost by Weapon System, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, 
introduction, at https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/fy2021_Weapons.pdf. 
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Program (CRS  Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
Armored Multi-
Proc. 
 193.0  
 15.9  
 79.3  
 63.0  
Purpose Vehicle 
(IF11741) 
Bradley infantry 
Proc. 
 493.1  
 430.8  
 460.7  
 277.3  
fighting vehicle 
upgrades 
(R44229) 
M-1 Abrams 
Proc. 
 1,425.3  
 1,395.5  
 1,369.5  
 1,343.2  
tank upgrades 
(R44229) 
Mobile 
RDT&E 
 135.5  
 135.5  
 128.9  
 128.9  
Protected 
Firepower 
(R44968) 
Optionally 
RDT&E 
 327.7  
 229.5  
 123.9  
 183.9  
Manned Fighting 
Vehicle 
(R45519) 
Paladin self-
Proc. 
 435.8  
 435.8  
 463.4  
 463.4  
propelled 
howitzer 
RDT&E 
 427.3  
 421.0  
 233.6  
 233.6  
Stryker troop 
Proc. 
 847.2  
 1,164.2  
 1,194.7  
 1,164.2  
carrier mods 
(R44229) 
Short-Range Missile and Anti-Aircraft Defenses 
Guided Multiple 
Proc. 
1,383.8 
1,388.8 
1,323.8 
1,324.7 
Launch Rocket 
System 
RDT&E 
 75.6  
 75.6  
 75.6  
 75.6  
(GMLRS) and 
mods 
Indirect Fire 
Proc. 
 106.3  
 25.0  
 62.5  
 62.5  
Protection 
Capability 
RDT&E 
 235.8  
 118.5  
 162.0  
 162.0  
Iron Dome 
Proc. 
 73.0  
 73.0  
 73.0  
 73.0  
M-SHORAD 
Proc. 
537.0 
532.9 
521.4 
517.3 
(IN10931) 
M-SHORAD 
RDT&E 
 246.5  
 256.5  
 246.5  
 256.5  
(DE) 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 765, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: Proc. is procurement; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation.
 The line item or items 
corresponding to each program are listed in
 Appendix B. Figures rounded to the nearest tenth. 
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Navy Shipbuilding  
For FY2021, DOD requested approximately $20 billion for the Shipbuilding and Conversion, 
Navy appropriation account.137 According to DOD budget documentation, this figure includes 
funding for eight battle force ships, including one Columbia-class ballistic missile submarine 
(SSBN), one Virginia-class attack submarine (SSN), two DDG-51 destroyers, one FFG(X) 
guided-missile frigate, one Landing Platform Dock (LPD)-17 Flight II, and two TATS towing, 
salvage, and rescue ships.138 Congress procured the LPD ship (LPD-31) in 2020.139 
The House-passed bill would have provided more funding than originally requested for a second 
Virginia-class attack submarine. It would have provided less funding than requested for large- and 
medium-sized unmanned surface vessels, among other vessels. Section 8129 of the House-passed 
bill would have prohibited funds to design and develop certain ships unless such contracts 
specified that all hull, mechanical, and electrical components were manufactured in the United 
States. Section 8130 of the bill would have prohibited funds for decommissioning any Littoral 
Combat Ships (LCSs).  
The Trump Administration objected to the House provisions. It argued that Section 8129 would 
have undermined “the Navy’s ability to ensure that United States ships are procured in a cost-
effective and timely manner by imposing restrictions on nearly all components for the covered 
shipbuilding programs.” According to the Trump Administration, Section 8130 would have 
prevented the decommissioning of the first four LCSs. It argued that the hulls of the ships “have 
different configurations from those of the rest of the LCS fleet,” making their conversion into 
“operational and deployable warships” cost prohibitive.140 
The Senate Appropriations Committee would have provided funding for vessels not included in 
the request: a Landing Helicopter Assault (LHA) amphibious ship, with a flight deck designed for 
operating helicopters and vertical or short takeoff and landing (V/STOL) fixed-wing aircraft; and 
an Expeditionary Fast Transport (EPF) ship, a commercial-based catamaran intended to quickly 
transport personnel and cargo in theater. It would have provided less funding for certain other 
vessels. 
The enacted legislation provided $3.37 billion more than the $19.9 billion requested for the 
Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy appropriation account.141 The increase arose in large part by 
Congress’s decision to procure two Virginia-class attack submarines in FY2021 rather than one, 
as originally requested by the Administration, and to provide funding for the unrequested EPF 
and LHA ships (see
 Table 11). 
The accompanying explanatory statement criticized the service’s budget justification materials for 
incrementally funded shipbuilding programs (including LPD-31), under which the cost of a 
                                                 
137 DOD, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 2020, Defense 
Budget Overview, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, Revised May 13, 2020, p. 9-
16, 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/fy2021_Budget_Request_Overview_Book.pdf
. 
138 Ibid. 
139 For more information, see CRS Report R43543, 
Navy LPD-17 Flight II and LHA Amphibious Ship Programs: 
Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
140 
Statement of Administration Policy, pp. 4-5. 
141 For a detailed breakdown of this funding, see Table 6 in CRS Report RL32665, 
Navy Force Structure and 
Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
weapon is divided into two or more annual portions.142 The reported stated, “The House and 
Senate Appropriations Committees do not believe that future Navy budget requests can be 
supported absent improved budget justification materials for incrementally funded shipbuilding 
programs,” and directed the Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Financial Management and 
Comptroller) to provide to the congressional defense committees templates for improved budget 
justification materials and briefs for all shipbuilding programs.143 
The enacted legislation included modified versions of the House provisions. Section 8134 of the 
act prohibited funds to design and develop elements of certain ships unless such contracts 
specified “that all auxiliary equipment, including pumps and propulsion shafts are manufactured 
in the United States.” Section 8135 of the enacted legislation prohibited the use of FY2021 
appropriations for decommissioning the USS Fort Worth (LCS 3) or the USS Coronado (LCS 
4).144 
Navy Shipbuilding Plans 
For background and analysis on Navy shipbuilding plans, see CRS Report RL32665, 
Navy Force Structure and 
Shipbuilding Plans: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke, CRS Testimony TE10057, 
Future Force 
Structure Requirements for the United States Navy, by Ronald O'Rourke; CRS Report RL33153, 
China Naval 
Modernization: Implications for U.S. Navy Capabilities—Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke; and 
CRS Report R43543, 
Navy LPD-17 Flight II and LHA Amphibious Ship Programs: Background and Issues for Congress, by 
Ronald O'Rourke. 
Table 11. Selected Shipbuilding Programs 
(in millions of dollars) 
Program (CRS  Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
DDG-51-class 
Proc. 
3,069.6 
2,960.5 
3,414.6 
3,379.1 
Aegis destroyer 
(RL32109) 
Expeditionary 
Proc. 
0.0 
0.0 
260.0 
260.0 
Fast Transport 
(EPF) 
Ford-class 
Proc. 
2,643.2 
2,511.2 
2,643.2 
2,565.4 
aircraft carrier 
(RS20643) 
Guided-missile 
Proc. 
1,053.1 
1,053.1 
1,053.1 
1,053.1 
frigate (FFG) 
(R44972) 
                                                 142 For more information on this funding approach, see CRS Report R41909, 
Multiyear Procurement (MYP) and Block 
Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and CRS In Focus 
IF10599, 
Defense Primer: Procurement, by Heidi M. Peters and Brendan W. McGarry. 
143 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public 
Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 
1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 548, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
144 Section 8135 of the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 2021 (Division C of P.L. 116-260), in the House, 
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 166 (December 21, 2020), p. H7365. 
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Program (CRS  Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
Large- and 
RDT&E 
464.0 
259.2 
91.2 
93.7 
Medium-Sized 
Unmanned  
Surface Vessels 
(R45757) 
Large 
RDT&E 
194.0 
125.8 
170.7 
152.4 
Unmanned 
Undersea Vessel 
(R45757) 
Landing 
Proc. 
0.0 
0.0 
500.0 
500.0 
Helicopter 
Assault (LHA) 
(R43543) 
Landing 
Proc. 
1,155.8 
1,155.8 
1,125.8 
1,155.8 
Platform Dock 
(LPD) 
(R43543) 
Next 
RDT&E 
30.0 
20.0 
30.0 
24.0 
Generation 
Logistics Ship 
(NGLS) 
(IF11674) 
Nuclear-
Proc. 
1,895.8 
1,895.8 
1,548.5 
1,548.5 
powered carrier 
refueling and 
modernization 
(RS20643) 
Light 
RDT&E 
30.0 
20.0 
30.0 
24.0 
Amphibious 
Warship (LAW) 
(R46374) 
Towing, salvage, 
Proc. 
168.2 
157.8 
168.2 
157.8 
and rescue ship 
(TATS) 
Virginia-class 
Proc. 
4,235.9 
6,776.4 
4,707.9 
6,776.4 
attack 
submarine 
(RL32418) 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-
117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: Proc. is procurement; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation.
 The line item or items 
corresponding to each program are listed in
 Appendix B. Figures rounded to the nearest tenth. 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Military Aircraft Programs 
For FY2021, DOD requested $56.9 billion for aircraft and related systems.145 These systems 
include fighter and attack aircraft, bombers, cargo and tanker aircraft, specialized support aircraft, 
and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles/Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAV/UAS). In terms of funding, the 
biggest such program is the F-35 Lightning II strike fighter aircraft. 
The House-passed bill would have provided more funding than requested for the F-35 aircraft, 
CH-47 Chinook cargo helicopter, and UH-60 Black Hawk utility helicopter, among other 
programs. It would have reduced by approximately half the Air Force’s request for $1.04 billion 
in research and development funding for a sixth-generation fighter aircraft and supporting 
systems, known as Next-Generation Air Dominance (NGAD). The House would have decreased 
funding for the program to pay for costs associated with upgrading, or recapitalizing, existing 
fighter aircraft.146 
The Trump Administration objected to the House provision, arguing in part that such a move 
“would severely impact the program’s ability to field NGAD capabilities needed in the 2030 
timeframe to meet the growing challenges of peer adversaries.”147 
The Senate Appropriations Committee differed from the House-passed bill in part by 
recommending less funding than was requested for MQ-4 Triton/RQ-4 Global Hawk UAV and F-
22 fighter modifications. 
In the largest departure from the request, the enacted legislation provided $1.6 billion more than 
$9.6 billion requested (including for aircraft modifications) to procure 17 additional F-35 aircraft. 
The increase in quantity included 12 F-35As for the Air Force and 5 F-35Cs for the Navy and 
Marine Corps, for a total of 96 of the fifth-generation stealth aircraft.148 The Air Force and Navy 
had requested the additional aircraft in their respective lists of “unfunded priorities,” a document 
each of the armed services is required to submit to Congress.149 The accompanying explanatory 
statement also included a reporting requirement related to Turkey’s removal from the F-35 
program for buying Russia’s S-400 air defense system. The statement directed the head of the F-
35 program to submit a quarterly report to the congressional defense committees on the status of 
contributions by Turkish suppliers in the F-35 supply chain until they are removed.150 
The enacted version of the legislation also provided more funding than requested for CH-47 and 
UH-60 helicopters. It provided less funding than requested for F-15 fighter aircraft (and 
                                                 
145 DOD, 
Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller)/Chief Financial Officer, February 2020, Program 
Acquisition Cost by Weapon System, United States Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2021 Budget Request, p. 1-1, at 
https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/Documents/defbudget/fy2021/fy2021_Weapons.pdf. 
146 H.Rept. 116-453 p. 290. 
147 
Statement of Administration Policy, p. 4. 
148 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public 
Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 
1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 391, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf.  
149 For copies of these lists, see “Services’, COCOMs’ FY-21 unfunded priorities lists,” 
Inside Defense, February 21, 
2020, at https://insidedefense.com/document/services-cocoms-fy-21-unfunded-priorities-lists; for the statutory 
requirement in 
United States Code, see 10 USC 222a. 
150 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public 
Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 
1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), p. 392, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-
117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-117HPRT43749.pdf. 
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modifications), KC-46A refueling tankers, F/A-18E/F fighter attack aircraft (and modifications), 
NGAD, and MQ-9 Reaper UAV (se
e Table 12). 
Fighter Programs 
For background and more information on the F-35 and the Next Generation Air Dominance program, see CRS 
Report RL30563, 
F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) Program, by Jeremiah Gertler and CRS In Focus IF11659, 
Air Force 
Next-Generation Air Dominance Program: An Introduction, by Jeremiah Gertler. 
Table 12. Selected Military Aircraft Programs 
(in millions of dollars) 
Program 
Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
(CRS Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
Fighters 
F-15 and mods 
Proc. 
1,784.6 
1,757.0 
1,529.3 
1,571.1 
(IF11521) 
RDT&E 
629.3 
619.3 
629.3 
619.3 
F/A-18E/F, EA-
Proc. 
2,975.8 
2,800.8 
2,836.1 
2,775.5 
18G and mods 
(RL30624) 
RDT&E 
361.4 
373.4 
365.4 
375.4 
F-22 mods 
Proc. 
393.8 
393.8 
350.3 
363.5 
(RL31673) 
RDT&E 
665.0 
665.0 
607.0 
665.0 
F-35 and mods 
Proc. 
9,683.6 
11,114.5 
10,858.5 
11,348.8 
(RL30563) 
RDT&E 
931.9 
940.6 
675.9 
841.2 
Next-
RDT&E 
1,044.1 
537.6 
974.1 
904.1 
Generation Air 
Dominance 
(future fighter) 
(IF11659) 
Helicopters 
AH-64 
Proc. 
961.5 
961.5 
961.5 
961.5 
CH-47 
Proc. 
179.1 
371.2 
298.1 
368.1 
Future vertical 
RDT&E 
647.9 
672.9 
712.9 
717.9 
lift, attack 
reconnaissance 
aircraft 
(IF11367) 
Improved 
RDT&E 
249.3 
224.3 
245.5 
241.3 
helicopter 
engine 
UH-60 
Proc. 
1,003.2 
1,126.5 
991.4 
1,114.7 
Tanker 
KC-46A tanker 
Proc. 
2,850.2 
2,707.4 
2,665.3 
2,665.3 
(RL34398, 
IN11537) 
RDT&E 
106.3 
106.3 
76.2 
76.2 
Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Program 
Appropriation 
FY2021 
House-Passed 
Senate 
FY2021 
(CRS Report) 
Type 
Request 
committee-
Enacted 
drafted 
MQ-25 
RDT&E 
267.0 
257.0 
267.0 
257.0 
MQ-4/RQ-4 
Proc. 
204.0 
276.4 
119.9 
257.9 
RDT&E 
361.2 
361.2 
273.2 
340.6 
MQ-9 
(R42136) 
Proc. 
224.5 
161.8 
195.1 
161.8 
RDT&E 
183.3 
173.4 
128.3 
128.3 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-
117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: Proc. is procurement; RDT&E is research, development, test and evaluation.
 The line item or items 
corresponding to each program are listed in
 Appendix B. Figures rounded to the nearest tenth. 
Outlook 
Among the longer-term issues raised by debate on the Department of Defense Appropriations Act, 
2021, were: 
How might federal deficits constrain defense budget plans? 
The projected increase in the federal deficit in 2020 associated with the economic disruption 
caused by the COVID-19 pandemic raises questions about whether pressure to reduce the gap 
between revenues and outlays will impact defense budget plans. 
How might changes to the National Defense Strategy (NDS) affect defense 
budget priorities? 
The Trump Administration’s National Defense Strategy summary did not address certain issues, 
such as pandemics or climate change, as national security threats. The Biden Administration may 
seek to incorporate such elements or domestic economic priorities in its strategic guidance 
documents, or to alter the great power construct as presently configured. 
How might the expiration of discretionary spending caps affect funding for 
Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO)? 
The expiration of the Budget Control Act’s discretionary spending limits after FY2021 raises 
questions for Congress about whether to continue authorizing and appropriating specially 
designated funding for Overseas Contingency Operations (OCO)—and, if continued, whether to 
increase, decrease, or maintain the current level of OCO funding. 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
How might the Department of Defense (DOD) and Congress balance shorter- and 
longer-term defense budget priorities? 
The annual DOD budget process provides an opportunity for DOD and Congress to make 
tradeoffs among funding for operating and maintaining the force; paying for personnel; procuring 
weapons, equipment, and services; researching and developing new technology; and carrying out 
other activities. The National Defense Strategy Commission recommended that Congress balance 
funding for DOD to emphasize readiness, capacity, and capability across the force.151 Others have 
used the terms “force structure” for capacity and “modernization” or “investment” for capability. 
Kathleen H. Hicks, the former director of the International Security Program at the Center for 
Strategic and International Studies who was nominated and confirmed to serve as Deputy 
Defense Secretary in the Biden Administration, has previously described these elements as the 
“iron triangle of painful trade-offs.”152 In 2017, Hicks wrote: “The geometry of the [iron triangle 
of painful trade-offs] drives the DOD to maintain a reasonable balance among three factors: 
preparing to be ready today (readiness), preparing to be ready tomorrow (investment), and sizing 
the force (structure).”153 
Should Congress increase DOD budgetary flexibility? If so, how? 
The National Defense Strategy Commission made a series of recommendations regarding 
congressional appropriations activity. The commission recommended that Congress consider 
producing five-year defense budget agreements “to permit greater stability and flexibility for 
DOD” and to authorize the department to “expend Operations and Maintenance funds from any 
given fiscal year across that fiscal year and the subsequent one.”154 It also recommended 
Congress enact on-time annual appropriations and fund whole-of-government efforts to address 
the challenges posed by great power competition. 
DOD may seek additional budgetary flexibility if defense budgets are projected to flatten or 
decline in coming years. As previously discussed, following calls for the creation of new 
appropriation accounts or structures, Congress in this act provided funding for several software 
and digital technology pilot programs that can “be used for expenses for the agile research, 
development, test and evaluation, procurement, production, modification, and operation and 
maintenance” of software and digital technologies. 
Congress also provides budgetary flexibility to DOD through transfer and reprogramming 
authorities.155 A transfer involves shifting funds from one appropriation account to another, while 
a reprogramming involves shifting funds within the same account. Members may consider how 
changing DOD general and special transfer authority limits or reprogramming thresholds—either 
by increasing or decreasing their dollar amounts or percentages—could affect Congress’s ability 
to control DOD action through appropriations and DOD’s ability to respond to unanticipated 
budgetary or national security conditions. 
 
                                                 
151 Edelman and Roughead, 
Providing for the Common Defense, p. 70. 
152 Kathleen Hicks, 
Defense Strategy and the Iron Triangle of Painful Tradeoffs, Center for Strategic and International 
Studies, June 21, 2017, at https://defense360.csis.org/defense-strategy-and-the-iron-triangle-of-painful-tradeoffs/. 
153 Ibid. 
154 Edelman and Roughead, 
Providing for the Common Defense, p. 46. 
155 For more information see, CRS Report R46421, 
DOD Transfer and Reprogramming Authorities: Background, 
Status, and Issues for Congress, by Brendan W. McGarry. 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Appendix A. Hearings of the House and Senate 
Appropriations Committees, Defense 
Subcommittees, 2020 
Table A-1. Hearings of the House Appropriations Committee Defense 
Subcommittee (HAC-D), 2020 
Date 
Topic 
February 6, 2020 
U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM
)a 
February 27, 2020 
U.S. European Command (EUCOM
)a 
February 27, 2020 
World-Wide Thr
eata 
March 3, 2020 
National Guard/Reserves 
March 4, 2020 
U.S. Navy/Marine Corps Budget Request for FY2021 
March 4, 2020 
U.S. Space Force Organizational Plan 
March 5, 2020 
Defense Health Program 
March 10, 2020 
U.S. Southern Command (SOUTHCOM
)a 
March 10, 2020 
U.S. Army Budget Request for FY2021 
March 11, 2020 
U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM
)a 
March 11, 2020 
U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM
)a 
March 12, 2020 
Member Day 
Source: House Appropriations Committee, Hearing: Defense website, accessed November 19, 2020, at 
https://appropriations.house.gov/subcommittees/defense-116th-congress/congress_hearing. 
Notes: The subcommittee’s hearing schedule in 2020 was interrupted due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 
a.  Hearing was closed to the public.  
Table A-2. Hearings of the Senate Appropriations Committee Defense 
Subcommittee (SAC-D), 2020 
Date 
Topic 
March 4, 2020 
Review of the FY2021 Budget Request for the National Guard & Reserve 
March 11, 2020 
Review of the FY2021 Budget Request for the Navy and Marine Corps 
Source: Senate Appropriations Committee, Defense Subcommittee hearings website, accessed November 19, 
2020, at https://www.appropriations.senate.gov/subcommittees/defense. 
Notes: The subcommittee’s hearing schedule in 2020 was interrupted due to the COVID-19 pandemic. 
 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Appendix B. Budget Data Sources for 
Appropriations Tables 
Table B-1. Budget Data Sources for Appropriations Tables 
CRS Table 
CRS Program 
Appropriation  Congressional  Congressional Line 
Proj. 
(Number) 
Label 
Account 
Line # 
Label 
ID 
Selected Long-
B-21 Bomber 
RDT&E, AF 
46 
Long Range Strike 
 
Range, Nuclear-
Armed 
Bomber 
APAF 
22 
B-1 
 
Weapons 
Upgrades 
APAF 
23 
B-2A 
 
Systems 
(Table 
6) 
APAF 
24 
B-1B 
 
APAF 
25 
B-52 
 
RDT&E, AF 
172 
B-52 Squadrons 
 
RDT&E, AF 
174 
B-1B Squadrons 
 
RDT&E, AF 
175 
B-2 Squadrons 
 
Columbia-Class 
SCN 
1 
Columbia Class Submarine 
 
Ballistic Missile 
Submarine 
SCN 
2 
Columbia Class Submarine 
 
(AP-CY) 
RDT&E, N 
52 
SSBN New Design 
 
RDT&E, N 
47 
Advanced Nuclear Power 
3219 
Systems 
Ground-Based 
RDT&E, AF 
57 
Ground Based Strategic 
 
Strategic 
Deterrent 
Deterrent 
(RL33640) 
Long-Range 
RDT&E, AF 
97 
Long Range Standoff 
 
Standoff 
Weapon 
Weapon 
(RL33640) 
Trident II (D-5) 
WPN 
1 
Trident II Mods 
 
Missile Mods 
(RL33640) 
Selected Long-
Conventional 
RDT&E, N 
91 
Precision Strike Weapons 
3334 
Range Strike 
Prompt Strike 
Development Program 
Weapons 
Systems 
(Table 
Long-Range 
RDT&E, A 
109 
Hypersonics 
 
7) 
Hypersonic 
Weapon 
Air-Launched 
RDT&E, AF 
49 
Hypersonics Prototyping 
 
Rapid Response 
Weapon 
Strategic Long-
RDT&E, A 
102 
Technology Maturation 
AY3 
Range Cannon 
Initiatives 
Precision-Strike 
MIPA 
4 
Precision Strike Missile 
 
Missile 
RDT&E, A 
219 
Long-Range Precision Fires 
 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
CRS Table 
CRS Program 
Appropriation  Congressional  Congressional Line 
Proj. 
(Number) 
Label 
Account 
Line # 
Label 
ID 
RDT&E, A 
18 
Land-Based Anti-Ship 
AE7 
Missile Technology 
Joint Air-to-
MPAF 
4 
Joint Air-to-Surface 
 
Surface Standoff 
Standoff Missile (JASSM) 
Missile 
MPAF 
4 
JASSM 
OCO 
RDT&E, AF 
200 
Joint Air-to-Surface 
 
Standoff Missile (JASSM) 
Land-Attack 
WPN 
 3  
Tomahawk 
 
Tomahawk 
Cruise Missile 
Anti-Ship 
WPN 
19 
Tomahawk Mods 
Mod 
Tomahawk 
Item 3 
Cruise Missile 
RDT&E, N 
211 
Tomahawk and Tomahawk 
4034 
Mission Planning Center 
(TMPC) 
Long-Range 
MIPA 
5 
Long Range Anti-Ship 
 
Anti-Ship Missile 
Missile (LRASMO) 
WPN 
17 
LRASM 
 
RDT&E, N 
93 
Offensive Anti-Surface 
 
Warfare Weapons 
Development 
Naval Strike 
WPN 
18 
LCS OTH missile 
 
Missile (ship-
launched) 
RDT&E, N 
143 
Ship self-defense 
2070 
Selected Missile 
Ground-Based 
RDT&E, DW 
77 
Ballistic Missile Defense 
 
Defense 
Midcourse 
Midcourse Segment 
Programs 
Defense 
(Table 8) 
RDT&E, DW 
116 
Ballistic Missile Defense 
 
Midcourse Defense 
Segment Test 
Next-
RDT&E, DW 
111 
Improved Homeland 
 
Generation 
Defense Interceptors 
Interceptor 
Hawaii radar 
RDT&E, DW 
105 
Homeland defense radar 
 
Hawaii 
Guam defense 
RDT&E, DW 
115 
Land-Based SM–3 (LBSM3) 
 
(land-based 
Aegis) 
Aegis and Aegis 
PDW 
34 
Aegis BMD 
 
Ashore (other 
than Guam) 
PDW 
35 
Aegis BMD AP 
 
PDW 
37 
SM-3 IIAS 
 
PDW 
40 
Aegis Ashore Ph. III 
 
PDW 
42 
Aegis BMD Hardware and 
 
software 
RDT&E, DW 
82 
Aegis BMD 
 
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CRS Table 
CRS Program 
Appropriation  Congressional  Congressional Line 
Proj. 
(Number) 
Label 
Account 
Line # 
Label 
ID 
RDT&E, DW 
113 
Aegis BMD test 
 
Terminal (short-
PDW 
31 
THAAD 
 
range) defense 
(THAAD and 
MIPA 
3 
MSE Missile (Patriot) 
 
Patriot) 
MIPA 
3 
MSE Missile (Patriot) 
OCO 
MIPA 
16 
Patriot Mods 
 
RDT&E, DW 
76 
BMD Terminal Defense 
 
Segment 
RDT&E, DW 
112 
BMD Terminal Defense 
 
Segment Test 
Israeli 
PDW 
38 
Israeli Programs 
 
cooperative 
defense 
PDW 
39 
Short Range Ballistic 
 
programs 
Missile Defense (SRBMD) 
RDT&E, DW 
88 
Israeli Cooperative 
 
Programs 
Hypersonic 
RDT&E, DW 
98 
Hypersonic Defense 
 
defense 
Hypersonic 
RDT&E, DW 
121 
Space Technology 
 
missile attack 
Development and 
detection 
Prototyping 
Selected Military  National 
PSF 
13 
National Security Space 
 
Space Programs 
Security Space 
Launch 
(Table 9)  
Launch 
RDT&E, SF 
20 
National Security Space 
 
Launch 
Global 
PSF 
6 
GPS III Fol ow On 
 
Positioning 
System III 
PSF 
7 
GPS III Space Segment 
 
PSF 
8 
Global Positioning (Space) 
 
RDT&E, SF 
2 
NAVSTAR Global 
 
Positioning System (User 
Equipment) 
RDT&E, SF 
12 
GPS Fol ow On (GPS III) 
 
RDT&E, SF 
29 
NAVSTAR Global 
 
Positioning System (Space 
and Control Segments) 
RDT&E, SF 
33 
GPS III Space Segment 
 
RDT&E, SF 
37 
GPS III Operational 
 
Control segment 
Infrared Missile 
PSF 
11 
SBIRS High (Space) 
 
Attack 
Detection 
RDT&E, SF 
19 
Next generation OPIR 
 
(SBIRS, OPIR) 
Selected 
Amphibious 
PMC 
2 
Amphib. Combat Veh. 
 
Ground 
Combat Vehicle 
Fam. 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
CRS Table 
CRS Program 
Appropriation  Congressional  Congressional Line 
Proj. 
(Number) 
Label 
Account 
Line # 
Label 
ID 
Combat 
RDT&E, N 
163 
MC Assault Veh. Syst. 
 
Systems 
(Table 
Devel. 
10) 
Armored Multi-
WTCV 
2 
Armored Multi-Purpose 
 
Purpose Vehicle 
Veh (AMPV) 
Bradley infantry 
WTCV 
5 
Bradley program mods 
 
fighting vehicle 
upgrades 
Guided Multiple 
MIPA 
11 
Guided MLRS rockets 
 
Launch Rocket 
System 
MIPA 
12 
MLRS practice rockets 
 
(GMLRS) and 
PMC 
12 
Guided MLRS Rocket 
 
mods 
(GMLRS) 
PMC 
12 
Guided MLRS Rocket 
OCO 
(GMLRS) 
RDT&E, A 
245 
Guided Multiple-Launch 
 
Rocket System (GMLRS) 
MIPA 
13 
HIMARS 
 
MIPA 
22 
MLRS mods 
 
Indirect Fire 
MIPA 
5 
IFPC 
 
Protection 
Capability 
RDT&E, A 
167 
IFPC Inc. 2 -- Block 1 
 
Iron Dome 
PDW 
41 
Iron Dome 
 
M-1 Abrams 
WTCV 
13 
M-1 Mods 
 
tank upgrades 
WTCV 
14 
M-1 Upgrades 
 
Mobile 
RDT&E, A 
127 
Armored Systems 
 
Protected 
Modernization (ASM)-Eng 
Firepower 
Dev 
M-SHORAD 
MIPA 
2 
M-SHORAD procurement 
 
 
MIPA 
2 
M-SHORAD 
OCO 
M-SHORAD 
RDT&E, A 
169 
Emerging Technology 
F13 
(DE) 
Issues 
Optionally 
RDT&E, A 
176 
Manned Ground Vehicle 
 
Manned Fighting 
Vehicle 
Paladin self-
WTCV 
7 
Paladin Integrated 
 
propelled 
Management 
howitzer 
RDT&E, A 
234 
155 mm. SP Howitzer 
 
Improv. 
Stryker troop 
WTCV 
4 
Stryker upgrades 
 
carrier mods 
Selected 
DDG-51-class 
SCN 
10 
DDG-51 
 
Shipbuilding 
Aegis destroyer 
SCN 
11 
DDG-51 (AP-CY) 
 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
CRS Table 
CRS Program 
Appropriation  Congressional  Congressional Line 
Proj. 
(Number) 
Label 
Account 
Line # 
Label 
ID 
Programs 
Expeditionary 
SCN 
19 
Expeditionary Fast 
 
(Table 11) 
Fast Transport 
Transport 
(EPF) 
Ford-class 
SCN 
3 
Carrier Replacement 
 
aircraft carrier 
Program (CVN 80) 
SCN 
4 
Carrier Replacement 
 
Program (CVN 81) 
Guided-missile 
SCN 
13 
FFG-Frigate 
 
frigate (FFG) 
Large- and 
RDT&E, N 
27 
Large Unmanned Surface 
 
Medium-Sized 
Vehicles (LUSVs) 
Unmanned  
Surface Vessels 
Large 
RDT&E, N 
80 
Large Unmanned Undersea   
Unmanned 
Vehicles 
Undersea Vessel  RDT&E, N 
89 
Advanced Undersea 
 
Prototyping 
Landing 
SCN 
17 
LHA Replacement 
 
Helicopter 
Assault (LHA) 
Landing 
SCN 
14 
LPD Flight II 
 
Platform Dock 
(LPD) 
Next 
RDT&E, N 
45 
Ship Concept Advanced 
4045 
Generation 
Design 
Logistics Ship 
(NGLS) 
Nuclear-
SCN 
7 
CVN Refueling Overhauls 
 
powered carrier 
refueling and 
SCN 
8 
CVN Refueling Overhauls 
 
modernization 
(AP-CY) 
Light 
RDT&E, N 
45 
Ship Concept Advanced 
4044 
Amphibious 
Design 
Warship (LAW) 
Towing, salvage, 
SCN 
22 
Towing, Salvage, and 
 
and rescue ship 
Rescue Ship (ATS) 
(TATS) 
Virginia-class 
SCN 
5 
Virginia Class Submarine 
 
attack 
submarine 
SCN 
6 
Virginia Class Submarine 
 
(AP-CY) 
Selected Military  F-35 and mods 
APN 
3 
Joint Strike Fighter CV 
 
Aircraft 
Programs 
(Table 12) 
 
4 
Joint Strike Fighter CV 
 
(AP-CY) 
Congressional Research Service 
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CRS Table 
CRS Program 
Appropriation  Congressional  Congressional Line 
Proj. 
(Number) 
Label 
Account 
Line # 
Label 
ID 
 
5 
JSF STOVL 
 
 
6 
JSF STOVL  (AP-CY) 
 
 
62 
F-35 STOVL Series (mods) 
 
 
63 
F-35 CV Series (mods) 
 
 
APAF 
1 
F-35 
 
 
2 
F-35 (AP-CY) 
 
 
33 
F-35 Modifications 
 
 
RDT&E, N 
148 
Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) - 
 
EMD 
 
149 
Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) 
 
 
200 
F-35 C2D2 
 
 
201 
F-35 C2D2 
 
 
RDT&E, AF 
96 
F-35 EMD 
 
 
191 
F-35 Squadrons 
 
 
F-15 and mods 
APAF 
4 
F-15EX 
 
 
5 
F-15EX (AP-CY) 
 
 
29 
F-15 (mods) 
 
 
34 
mods F-15 EPAWSS 
 
 
RDT&E, AF 
106 
F-15 EPAWSS 
 
 
188 
F-15E squadrons 
 
 
192 
F-15 EX 
 
 
F/A-18E/F, EA-
APN 
1 
F/A-18E/F (Fighter) Hornet 
 
18G and mods 
(MYP) 
 
28 
F-18 A-D Unique (mods) 
 
 
29 
F-18E/F and EA-18G 
 
Modernization and 
Sustain[ment] 
 
32 
Infrared Search and Track 
 
(IRST) 
 
34 
F-18 Series (mods) 
 
 
RDT&E, N 
75 
F/A-18 Infrared Search and 
 
Track (IRST) 
 
112 
EA-18 
 
 
208 
F/A-18 Squadrons 
 
 
F-22 mods 
APAF 
32 
F-22A (mods) 
 
 
35 
Increment 3.2B 
 
 
RDT&E, AF 
190 
F-22A squadrons 
 
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FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
CRS Table 
CRS Program 
Appropriation  Congressional  Congressional Line 
Proj. 
(Number) 
Label 
Account 
Line # 
Label 
ID 
 
Next-
RDT&E, AF 
59 
Next-Generation Air 
 
Generation Air 
Dominance 
Dominance 
(future fighter) 
 
AH-64 
APA 
7 
AH-64 Apache Block IIIA 
 
Reman 
 
8 
AH-64 Apache Block IIIA 
 
Reman (AP-CY) 
 
CH-47 
APA 
14 
CH-47 Helicopter 
 
 
15 
CH-47 Helicopter (AP-CY)   
 
Future vertical 
RDT&E, A 
90 
Aviation - Advanced 
 
lift, attack 
Development 
reconnaissance 
aircraft 
 
Improved 
RDT&E, A 
224 
Improved Turbine Engine 
 
helicopter 
Program 
engine 
 
UH-60  
APA 
11 
UH-60 Blackhawk (MYP) 
 
 
12 
UH-60 Blackhawk (MYP) 
 
(AP-CY) 
 
13 
UH-60 Blackhawk A and L 
 
Models 
 
KC-46A tanker 
APAF 
4 
KC-46A tanker 
 
 
RDT&E, AF 
111 
KC-46A Tanker Squadrons 
 
 
MQ-9 
APAF 
20 
MQ-9 
 
 
 
68 
MQ-9 mods 
 
 
65 
MQ-9 UAV 
 
 
RDT&E, AF 
184 
MQ-9 
 
 
RDT&E, DW 
256 
MQ-9 
 
 
MQ-4/RQ-4  
APN 
21 
MQ-4 Triton 
 
 
65 
MQ-4 Series (mods) 
 
 
APAF 
65 
RQ-4 UAV Mods 
 
 
RDT&E, N 
244 
MQ-4C Triton 
 
 
252 
RQ-4 Modernization 
 
 
RDT&E, AF 
270 
RQ-4 UAV 
 
 
272 
NATO AGS 
 
 
MQ-25 
RDT&E, N 
159 
Unmanned Carrier 
 
Aviation 
Source: CRS analysis of House Appropriations Committee report (H.Rept. 116-453) to accompany H.R. 7617; 
H.R. 7617 (Division A); Explanatory Statement to accompany Senate Appropriations Committee draft of the 
Department of Defense Appropriations Bil , 2021, November 10, 2020; U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Congressional Research Service 
51 
FY2021 Defense Appropriations Act: Context and Selected Issues for Congress 
 
Appropriations, 
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, H.R. 133 / Public Law 116–260, [Legislative Text and 
Explanatory Statement] Book 1 of 2, Divisions A-F, committee print, 117th Cong., 1st sess., March 2021, 43-750 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 2021), at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CPRT-117HPRT43749/pdf/CPRT-
117HPRT43749.pdf. 
Notes: APA is Aircraft Procurement, Army; APAF is Aircraft Procurement, Air Force; APN is Aircraft 
Procurement, Navy; MIPA is Missile Procurement, Army; MPAF is Missile Procurement, Air Force; PDW is 
Procurement, Defense-Wide; PMC is Procurement, Marine Corps; PSF is Procurement, Space Force; RDT&E, A 
is Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation, Army; RDT&E, AF, is Research, Development, Test, and 
Evaluation, Air Force; RDT&E, DW is Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation, Defense-Wide; RDT&E, N 
is Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation, Navy; RDT&E, SF is Research, Development, Test, and 
Evaluation, Space Force; SCN is Shipbuilding and Conversion, Navy; WPN, is Weapons Procurement, Navy; 
WTCV is Procurement of Weapons and Tracked Combat Vehicles, Army. 
 
 
Author Information 
 Brendan W. McGarry 
   
Analyst in U.S. Defense Budget     
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and 
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other 
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in 
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not 
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Congressional Research Service  
R46812
 · VERSION 1 · NEW 
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