119th CONGRESS 1st Session
To pause development of the new Sentinel program, extend the life of the Minuteman III, and redirect savings from Sentinel toward the Department of Education, and for other purposes.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES · July 23, 2025 · Sponsor: Mr. Khanna
$946 billion over the 2025–2034 period, or an average of about $95 billion a yearNunn-McCurdy Act chapter 325predominantlylaunch on warning launch under attackthe man who saved the worlddestabilizing because it invites an attack some of the most dangerous weapons in the world could even trigger an accidental nuclear war[T]he greatest danger is not a Russian bolt but a US blunder—that we might accidentally stumble into nuclear war. As we make decisions about which weapons to buy, we should use this simple rule: If a nuclear weapon increases the risk of accidental war and is not needed to deter an intentional attack, we should not build it. … Certain nuclear weapons, such as … the [intercontinental ballistic missile], carry higher risks of accidental war that, fortunately, we no longer need to bear. We are safer without these expensive weapons, and it would be foolish to replace them.I would have removed land-based missiles from our arsenal a long time ago. I’d be happy to put that mission on the submarines. So, with a significant fraction of bombers having a nuclear weapons capability that can be restored to alert very quickly, and with even a small component of Trident submarines—with all those missiles and all those warheads on patrol—it’s hard to imagine we couldn’t get by.bolt from the blueappropriate congressional committees means—