opinionliberal

War Costs: Why the Numbers Keep Rising

Washington DC, USAWednesday, April 1, 2026

The United States has a long history of underestimating military expenses, and the current Middle East conflict is no exception. In 2002, officials projected a $50 billion price tag for Iraq—yet the war cost taxpayers over $3 trillion. A new campaign now launches with a similarly low estimate, raising doubts about its accuracy.


Direct Spending

  • Early estimates: $3.7 billion to over $5 billion
  • Daily costs: up to nearly $2 billion if troops land
  • Missile costs: Tomahawk, Patriot ~ $4 million each
  • Equipment losses: aircraft and radar systems add billions

The Bigger Picture

Ending the conflict sooner would reduce both financial and human tolls. Continuing a costly, unclear mission only weakens the nation and heightens global instability.

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