When Your Government Ends A War But Increases The Military Budget, You're Being Scammed by Caitlin Johnstone published on 2021-12-17T13:03:54Z The US Senate has passed its National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) military spending bill for the fiscal year of 2022, setting the budget at an astronomical $778 billion by a vote of 89 to 10. The bill has already been passed by the House, now requiring only the president's signature. An amendment to cease facilitating Saudi Arabia's atrocities in Yemen was stripped from the bill. The US military had a budget of $14 billion for its scaled-down Afghanistan operations in the fiscal year of 2021, down from $17 billion in 2020. If the US military budget behaved normally, you'd expect it to come down by at least $14 billion in 2022 following the withdrawal of US troops and official end of the war in Afghanistan. Instead, this new $778 billion total budget is a five percent increase from the previous year. Reading by Tim Foley. Genre News & Politics Comment by dialectical integrities Article I, Section 8, Clause 12 no longer applicable 2021-12-20T13:58:42Z