US Cities Under Siege: Trump's $500 Million Military Occupation Costs Soar.
President Donald Trump has spent an astonishing half a billion dollars deploying active-duty troops and National Guard members to six US cities, sparking outrage over the unprecedented militarization of American neighborhoods.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released a report on Wednesday revealing that these deployments have cost taxpayers $496 million in 2025 alone. However, if current domestic deployments continue, the total expenditure could exceed $1 billion this year. The D.C. occupation is projected to exceed $660 million by December.
These deployments are aimed at quelling dissent, assisting anti-immigration efforts, protecting federal buildings and personnel, or addressing crime. In Chicago, troops were tasked with rousting homeless individuals from parks, cleaning up graffiti, and even battling a non-existent Venezuelan gang. In Memphis, they paint over tags in the city's public art scene.
Critics argue that these deployments are a stark example of authoritarianism, with Trump using the military to intimidate Americans in their own neighborhoods. "Our military budget is not a slush fund for the President to carry out his political stunts," said Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). "The very same Americans he expects to foot the bill for these deployments must end immediately."
Trump has previously threatened to surge troops into other cities, including Baltimore, New York City, Oakland, St. Louis, San Francisco, and Seattle, despite falling crime rates and pushback from local officials.
According to The Intercept's estimates based on data from the National Priorities Project, Trump's urban occupations have cost approximately $473 million in 2025. Hanna Homestead of the National Priorities Project stated that "They are spending billions to militarize our streets while cutting food aid, healthcare, social services, and labor and environmental protections โ at a time of unparalleled wealth inequality."
As The Intercept continues its coverage of Trump's assault on democracy, it relies on the support of members like you. Join us in expanding our reporting capacity to hit the ground running in 2026.
President Donald Trump has spent an astonishing half a billion dollars deploying active-duty troops and National Guard members to six US cities, sparking outrage over the unprecedented militarization of American neighborhoods.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released a report on Wednesday revealing that these deployments have cost taxpayers $496 million in 2025 alone. However, if current domestic deployments continue, the total expenditure could exceed $1 billion this year. The D.C. occupation is projected to exceed $660 million by December.
These deployments are aimed at quelling dissent, assisting anti-immigration efforts, protecting federal buildings and personnel, or addressing crime. In Chicago, troops were tasked with rousting homeless individuals from parks, cleaning up graffiti, and even battling a non-existent Venezuelan gang. In Memphis, they paint over tags in the city's public art scene.
Critics argue that these deployments are a stark example of authoritarianism, with Trump using the military to intimidate Americans in their own neighborhoods. "Our military budget is not a slush fund for the President to carry out his political stunts," said Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.). "The very same Americans he expects to foot the bill for these deployments must end immediately."
Trump has previously threatened to surge troops into other cities, including Baltimore, New York City, Oakland, St. Louis, San Francisco, and Seattle, despite falling crime rates and pushback from local officials.
According to The Intercept's estimates based on data from the National Priorities Project, Trump's urban occupations have cost approximately $473 million in 2025. Hanna Homestead of the National Priorities Project stated that "They are spending billions to militarize our streets while cutting food aid, healthcare, social services, and labor and environmental protections โ at a time of unparalleled wealth inequality."
As The Intercept continues its coverage of Trump's assault on democracy, it relies on the support of members like you. Join us in expanding our reporting capacity to hit the ground running in 2026.