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Home » Intel Officials Predict the Pentagon’s Bill for the Iran War Will Exceed $100 Billion
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Intel Officials Predict the Pentagon’s Bill for the Iran War Will Exceed $100 Billion

News RoomBy News Room15 July 2026Updated:15 July 2026No Comments
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Intel Officials Predict the Pentagon’s Bill for the Iran War Will Exceed 0 Billion

President Donald Trump restarted the Iran conflict with days of missile strikes, and US intelligence officials now estimate the total military cost of the war for the Pentagon could exceed $100 billion, according to two people directly familiar with the matter.

The officials were tracking the total cost of Operation Epic Fury to be in the $50 to $100 billion range at the end of May, dovetailing with confidential congressional estimates putting the costs to date at around $80 billion.

The Trump administration has not disclosed its cost estimates for the Iran war. In June the White House made a request for $88 billion to cover some of the costs of the war, but even that is an undercounting, the people say.

Part of the reason why a final cost is not available is that the Pentagon is still deciding whether to replace all the aircraft destroyed or damaged beyond repair during the conflict, the people say.

If the Pentagon decides not to replace certain aircraft, defense officials have told lawmakers, they will not request money for it—and therefore not factor that into the total cost of the war, the people say.

Presented with a detailed breakdown of this reporting, a War Department official told Inner Loop: “We have nothing further to announce at the moment.”

The nonpartisan Congressional Research Service said in a report on May 20 compiled using only publicly available reporting that the US had lost at least 17 manned aircraft and 25 drones since the start of the conflict.

The CRS report also showed the US had been losing an increasing number of drones, which are not cheap to replace. Among the 25 drones lost was an MQ-4C Triton, a high-altitude Navy surveillance aircraft that costs more than $600 million per airframe.

The cost of repairing US bases in the region, some of which sustained heavy damage from Iran firing retaliatory missiles and one-way attack drones in response to US strikes, will also be high.

Defense officials have told lawmakers behind closed doors they have not accounted for the costs of repair—and may never do so—if the US ultimately decides to shutter those bases because they are too vulnerable to Iranian attacks, the officials say.

Iran has been able to repeatedly hit several key bases in the Middle East in retaliatory strikes, including the headquarters of the US Navy’s Fifth Fleet at Naval Support Activity, Bahrain, which the Pentagon has not publicly acknowledged.

The only actual cost provided publicly by a top defense official has been from then acting Pentagon comptroller Jay Hurst, who testified in an oversight hearing in May that the cost of the war had risen to roughly $29 billion.

On Tuesday, at his nomination hearing to permanently become comptroller, Hurst declined to provide an updated figure but said the $29 billion was mainly munitions and the costs like fuel associated with having two US aircraft carriers steaming around the Middle East.

Operation “Gold Eagle” Has Arrived

The Trump administration on Tuesday launched a clearinghouse that will try to identify and patch any software vulnerabilities before malicious actors can hack them with the most powerful AI models.

An administration official told Inner Loop the clearinghouse, named “Gold Eagle,” will be run by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which will itself use AI models that are not publicly available, to identify vulnerabilities.

It marks the first major implementation of Trump’s June 2 executive order that aims to create a framework to oversee the rapidly growing threat of advanced AI models.

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