By Noah Rothman
Thursday, December 11, 2025
Congress gets a lot of grief these days. Deservedly, too.
No “buts” about it.
And yet, before the unsatisfying process of legislative
compromise denudes its valuable gestures — before lawmakers meekly decline to
pursue their prerogatives and defer in supine fashion to the executive branch,
to unelected regulatory agencies, to podcasters and celebrities — the
legislature sometimes gets things right. The House-passed National Defense
Authorization Act (NDAA) is, by and large, one of those things.
With nearly three-quarters of the House in support of the
measure — including 197 Republicans and 115 Democrats — the lower chamber of
Congress passed a measure that represents the most direct challenge to the
White House’s unilateral authority to remake America’s relations with the world
in years.
The FY26 NDAA would, if passed, prevent the
administration’s revisionist elements from engineering the divorce with Europe
they so plainly desire. It directs the Pentagon and European Command to “deepen
security cooperation” with Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania — the so-called
Baltic Security Initiative. It restricts the administration from drawing down
U.S. personnel in Europe below 76,000 for more than 45 days. It proscribes the
removal of major equipment and platforms from the theater. It prevents European
Command from divesting real estate and abandoning its footprint on the
continent. It preserves the postwar alliance structure ensuring that EUCOM’s
commander and NATO’s supreme allied commander in Europe will be the same
person: forever an American. And it locks in the Pentagon’s support for
Ukraine’s defense, authorizing the sale of $400 million for the manufacture of
ordnance and platforms destined for the front lines.
In addition, the NDAA compels the executive branch to
provide Congress with all but real-time intelligence about Moscow’s
capabilities and its ongoing efforts to rebuild its forces. The defense bill
treats Russia as a threat on par with China and North Korea — which makes
sense, given the degree to which these anti-American powers are in league with
one another. The bill compels Congress to conduct inquiries into joint defense
and intelligence-sharing operations between our irredentist competitors abroad
— information the administration will have to furnish.
The new NDAA is similarly protective of America’s force
posture in East Asia. It establishes a floor of minimally 28,500 U.S. troops
stationed permanently on the Korean Peninsula. It commits the United States to
“vigorously support” Taiwan’s diplomatic initiatives, and it
authorizes $1 billion annually to support Taipei’s defense — including the
“fielding” of autonomous vehicles and anti-drone capabilities. The legislation
commits the United States to joint maritime and leadership training missions
between our two respective coast guards, and it emphasizes interoperability
between the armed forces of not just the U.S. and Taiwan but also Japan,
Australia, and the Philippines.
In appropriating $8 billion more than even the Pentagon
requested, the NDAA provisions tens of billions for shipbuilding, munitions,
and aircraft and ground-vehicle procurement. It would repeal the 2002
Authorization for the Use of Military Force in Iraq while leaving the 2001 AUMF
intact. It calls for a nearly 4 percent pay hike for many service personnel,
and it funds improvements to housing and military base facilities.
In a sign of Congress’s willingness to pick a fight with
the administration over its defense priorities, the bill goes so far as to
withhold a quarter of Secretary Pete Hegseth’s travel budget unless the
Pentagon provides Congress with information relating to its strikes on alleged
narcotics traffickers in the Caribbean. One provision compels
the release of “unedited video of strikes conducted against designated
terrorist organizations in the area of responsibility of the United States
Southern Command” — a prospect at which the president has bristled.
If nothing else, this iteration of the NDAA is an
antidote to the fundamentally unserious document the administration has
dubiously retailed as a National Security Strategy.
That ideological fever dream dressed up as a national
defense memorandum treats American foreign policy as an extension of domestic
political conflict. That document explicitly rejects the U.S.-led world order —
to which it sneeringly refers to as “permanent American domination of the
entire world.” It elevates illegal immigration to a threat on par with the
enemy action from hostile foreign powers, and it makes American social dynamics
— “spiritual health,” the integrity of “traditional families,” and the like —
into national security priorities. It goes soft on China, defines our only
challenge in relation to Russia as Europe’s refusal to kowtow to it, and heaps
theatrical scorn on America’s Western European partners. It had to be tough
somewhere, so it picks a fight with America’s friends if not its adversaries.
In short, Trump’s National Security Strategy was a
revolutionary document. It was, therefore, incumbent on the first branch of
government to pump the brakes and impose some overdue caution on the
revolutionaries who populate executive branch bureaucracies. Mirabile visu,
the House has done just that. At least for now.
There may still be a bumpy road ahead for the NDAA. Like
any legislative compromise, it has many detractors. Those Republicans who didn’t wholly object to
the document’s recognition of America’s role in the world wanted it to prohibit
the Federal Reserve from backing (and possibly monitoring) digital
cryptocurrency. Although the NDAA doesn’t turn a blind eye to DEI, some on the
right wanted to see a more aggressive rollback of “woke” initiatives in the
Defense Department. Democratic holdouts insist that the document doesn’t go
nearly far enough in imposing stricter oversight on the Trump administration.
Others balked at the document’s failure to address the president’s deployment
of National Guard troops to U.S. cities. Progressives wanted to see funding for
in vitro fertilization for troops and a stronger push to unionize the Pentagon.
These objections are likely to get a hearing in the Senate, but it is unlikely
that the final product will depart dramatically from the NDAA’s currently
desirable outlines.
Speaker Mike Johnson described the NDAA as an extension of Donald Trump’s agenda
of “peace through strength.” We shall see if the president agrees. Still, the
overwhelming support the measure has received in the House could convince him
to quiet the concerns his inner circle will raise with a bill that represents a
direct challenge to the policy of retrenchment on which some in Trump’s orbit
insist. After all, that’s what Congress is supposed to do.
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