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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Guardian staff

Trump news at a glance: president’s war on Iran is pulling billions from the US till

Silhouette of a man standing behind a bomb on a stand almost as long as he is tall, with a jet silhouetted beyond him.
Munitions, believed to be JDAM bunker-busting bombs, are loaded into a US air force B-1B Lancer bomber at RAF Fairford on 12 March in Fairford, England. Photograph: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Part of Donald Trump’s pitch to voters was that, if he became president again, he would rein in government spending and not send US troops to war. He may have campaigned with promises, but he’s governing with billions of dollars worth of bombs dropping on Iran.

In the six days that followed the US and Israel’s joint attack on Iran on 28 February, $11.3bn was spent on American taxpayer-funded bombs that hit the country and caused hundreds of deaths, the Pentagon has told lawmakers. This figure does not capture the full cost of the conflict, such as deployment of forces, and will now be far higher given the ongoing nature of the war.

The cost of the first week of the Iran war would be more than enough to fully fund the Environmental Protection Agency this year (at $8.8bn), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention ($9.2bn) or the National Cancer Institute ($7.4bn). The $11.3bn is also more than the total amount allocated this year for federal scientific research funding, via the National Science Foundation.

“This just shows a disturbing prioritization of militarism over the health and welfare of the American public,” said Adam Gaffney, a professor at Harvard Medical School who has studied the health impacts of the administration’s policies.

US spending on first week of Iran war raises stark questions about priorities

The US spent $11.3bn on just the first week of its military assault on Iran. This huge expenditure dwarves the annual budgets of many of the public health and scientific agencies the Trump administration has sought to cut, raising stark questions about the country’s priorities.

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Tulsi Gabbard tells Senate panel US strikes on Iran are strategic success

Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence who in 2019 was selling “No War With Iran” T-shirts, told the Senate intelligence committee on Wednesday that US strikes on Iran had been a strategic success.

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Kash Patel admits under oath FBI is buying location data on Americans

The Federal Bureau of Investigation has started buying location data on Americans, FBI director Kash Patel said under oath at the Senate intelligence committee worldwide threats hearing on Wednesday.

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Markwayne Mullin strikes softer tone but defends Trump policies in Senate hearing

Markwayne Mullin defended his ability to lead the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and expressed regret for comments he made about a US citizen killed by immigration agents at his confirmation hearing on Wednesday, which began on an unusually quarrelsome note when a fellow Republican senator accused him of encouraging violence.

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Nancy Mace draws White House ire over independent Middle East rescue efforts

White House officials have grown increasingly frustrated with Republican representative Nancy Mace, accusing her of complicating efforts to evacuate Americans stranded in the Middle East by attempting to conduct her own rescue missions, according to people familiar with the matter.

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Fed holds interest rates steady as Iran war drives up oil prices and inflation fears

Fed officials faced a confluence of issues to consider in their meeting this week: soaring oil and gas prices, fluctuating inflation that still remains above the Fed’s target of 2% and a weakened job market that unexpectedly saw 92,000 losses last month.

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What else happened today:

Catching up? Here’s what happened on 17 March 2026.

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