The United States House of Representatives passed legislation that will allocate $768 billion for the nation's military in the fiscal year 2022. The majority approved a package that includes establishing an independent commission to probe the United States' 20-year war in Afghanistan, $300 million in help to Ukraine's military forces, and a pledge of support for self-ruled Taiwan's defence.
The ultimate cost of
the law was $24 billion more than what President Joe Biden asked in his
original budget plan. The bill now proceeds to the Senate, which is anticipated
to vote on later this week after legislators there failed to approve their
version.
The defence policy
bill would approve a 2.7% pay raise for the country's troops.