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Pentagon Seeking
2009 Budget of $711 Billion, Amounting to 48% of World Military
Spending
By Christopher Hellman by Travis Sharp
Arms Control Center, May 29, 2008
The FY 2009 Pentagon Spending
Request - Global Military Spending
On February 4, 2008, the Bush
administration released its budget request for Fiscal Year 2009,
which begins on October 1, 2008.
For FY 2009, the White House is seeking
$711 billion for
the military --
$541
billion for the Pentagon and the nuclear weapons-related
activities of the Department of Energy, and, according to
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, at least
$170
billion for ongoing
military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The United States is far and away the global
leader in military spending. Consider the following:
- The United States spends more
than the
next
45 highest spending countries in the world
combined.
- The United States accounts for
48 percent of the world's total military spending.
- The United States spends on its
military 5.8 times more than China,
10.2 times more than Russia, and 98.6 times
more than Iran.
- The United States and its strongest
allies (the NATO countries, Japan, South Korea and
Australia) spend $1.1 trillion on their militaries
combined, representing 72 percent of the
world's total.

U.S. MILITARY SPENDING VS. THE WORLD
(EXPENDITURES IN BILLIONS OF U.S. DOLLARS)
Country |
Military Spending
(Billions of $) |
World Ranking |
United States |
711.0 |
1 |
China |
121.9 |
2 |
Russia |
70.0 |
3 |
United Kingdom |
55.4 |
4 |
France |
54.0 |
5 |
Japan |
41.1 |
6 |
Germany |
37.8 |
7 |
Italy |
306 |
8 |
Saudi Arabia |
29.5 |
9 |
South Korea |
24.6 |
10 |
India |
22.4 |
11 |
Australia |
17.2 |
12 |
Brazil |
16.2 |
13 |
Canada |
15.0 |
14 |
Spain |
14.4 |
15 |
Turkey |
11.6 |
16 |
Israel |
11.0 |
17 |
Netherlands |
9.9 |
18 |
United Arab Emirates |
9.5 |
19 |
Taiwan |
7.7 |
20 |
Greece |
7.3 |
21 |
Iran |
7.2 |
22 |
Myanmar |
6.9 |
23 |
Singapore |
6.3 |
24 |
Poland |
6.2 |
25 |
Sweden |
5.8 |
26 |
Colombia |
5.4 |
27 |
Norway |
5.0 |
28 |
Chile |
4.7 |
29 |
Belgium |
4.4 |
30 |
Egypt |
4.3 |
31 |
Pakistan |
4.2 |
32 |
Denmark |
3.9 |
33 |
Indonesia |
3.6 |
34 |
Switzerland |
3.5 |
35 |
Kuwait |
3.5 |
36 |
South Africa |
3.5 |
37 |
Oman |
3.3 |
38 |
Malaysia |
3.2 |
39 |
Mexico |
3.2 |
40 |
Portugal |
3.1 |
41 |
Algeria |
3.1 |
42 |
Finland |
2.8 |
43 |
Austria |
2.6 |
44 |
Venezuela |
2.6 |
45 |
Czech Republic |
2.5 |
46 |
Romania |
2.3 |
47 |
Qatar |
2.3 |
48 |
Thailand |
2.3 |
49 |
Morocco |
2.2 |
50 |
Argentina |
1.9 |
51 |
Ukraine |
1.7 |
52 |
Cuba |
1.7 |
53 |
Angola |
1.6 |
54 |
New Zealand |
1.5 |
55 |
Hungary |
1.3 |
56 |
Ireland |
1.1 |
57 |
Jordan |
1.1 |
58 |
Peru |
1.1 |
59 |
North Korea |
n/a |
n/a |
Global Total (not all
countries shown) |
1,472.7 |
n/a |
*NOTES:
The figure for the United States is the budget request for
Fiscal Year 2009 and includes $170 billion for ongoing military
operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as funding for DOE
nuclear weapons activities. All other figures are projections
based on 2006, the last year for which accurate data is
available. All countries that spent over one billion per year
are listed.
Sources:
International Institute for Strategic Studies, The Military
Balance 2008, U.S. Department of Defense.
For more information:
Christopher Hellman is the Military Policy Fellow at the
Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation where his work
focuses on national security spending, military planning and
policy, trends in the defense industry, global military
spending, and homeland security. Hellman is a frequent media
commentator on these issues. Previously, Hellman worked for
the Center for Defense Information, Physicians for Social
Responsibility, and spent ten years as a congressional
staffer working on national security and foreign policy
issues.
Travis Sharp is the Military Policy Analyst at the Center
for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation where he performs
policy work on national security spending, military policy,
and Iraq. He has published letters and articles in the New
York Times, Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, Foreign
Policy in Focus, United Press International, and Peace
Review.
This article was originally published on February 22, 2008.
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