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Compliance & Risk

OMB Says Iran War Cost $30B, Stays Mum on Supplemental

OMB submitted an $87.6 billion supplemental funding request to Congress, of which $67.1 billion is allocated for defense spending tied to Iran operations. The request breaks down into major buckets relevant to government contractors: $21 billion for munitions, $17.3 billion for operational costs,…

Cabrillo Club

Cabrillo Club

Editorial Team · June 30, 2026 · 4 min read

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Segment Impact

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Action Kit

Actionable checklists and implementation guidance.

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In This Guide
  • TL;DR
  • Key Points
  • Who Is Affected
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Definitions
  • Intelligence Response

TL;DR

OMB submitted an $87.6 billion supplemental funding request to Congress, of which $67.1 billion is allocated for defense spending tied to Iran operations. The request breaks down into major buckets relevant to government contractors: $21 billion for munitions, $17.3 billion for operational costs, $12.1 billion for classified programs, and additional billions for cybersecurity, space systems, drones, and readiness. OMB also noted that actual Iran war costs to date are estimated at $30 billion, indicating this supplemental is heavily weighted toward new procurement and capability investments rather than reimbursement of past costs. This creates a major near‑term market opportunity across munitions, aerospace, C4ISR, cyber, space, unmanned systems, intelligence, and logistics. Timeline for congressional action and obligation of funds is TBD pending source review; contractors should immediately posture capture, compliance, and proposal teams to monitor solicitations and prepare compliant capability packages.

Key Points

  • What happened: OMB submitted an $87.6 billion supplemental funding request to Congress with $67.1 billion for defense related to Iran operations, including line items such as $21B for munitions, $17.3B for operational costs, $12.1B for classified programs, and additional billions for cybersecurity, space, drones, and readiness.
  • Who is affected: Defense and related contractor market segments; segmentation explicitly includes NAICS codes 336411, 336412, 336414, 541512, 541513, 541715, 336413, 334511, 334220, 336415, 541330, 541519, 611430 and agencies including DOD, Department of the Army, Department of the Navy, Department of the Air Force, Defense Logistics Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency; contract vehicles listed in segmentation also apply.
  • Timeline: Timeline TBD pending source review.
  • What contractors should do NOW: Stand up capture and compliance teams, map capabilities to the funding buckets (munitions, operational support, classified programs, cyber, space, unmanned systems, readiness), verify CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification)/NIST/DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement)/ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations)/EAR/ICD 503/JSIG posture, enable continuous monitoring for solicitations, and prepare bid packages using Cabrillo workflows.

Who Is Affected

  • Market segments: Defense; Munitions and Ordnance; Cybersecurity; Space Systems; Unmanned Systems/Drones; Intelligence; Classified Programs; Military Readiness; Operational Support; Aerospace; C4ISR; Logistics.
  • NAICS codes: 336411, 336412, 336414, 541512, 541513, 541715, 336413, 334511, 334220, 336415, 541330, 541519, 611430.
  • Agencies: DOD; Department of the Army; Department of the Navy; Department of the Air Force; Defense Logistics Agency; Defense Intelligence Agency; National Security Agency.
  • Contract vehicles: GSA (General Services Administration) OASIS+; SEWP; ITES-SW2; ASTRO; STARS III; 8(a) STARS III; Alliant 2; CIO-SP4.
  • Compliance regimes / regulatory surface: CMMC; NIST 800-171 (NIST Special Publication 800-171); NIST 800-53; ITAR; EAR; DFARS 252.204-7012; DFARS 252.204-7021; FedRAMP (Federal Risk and Authorization Management Program); ICD 503; JSIG.

Specific NAICS codes, agencies, and contract vehicles are listed above as provided in the segmentation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Has Congress approved the supplemental funding?

A: Pending source review. The Summary reports OMB submitted the request; congressional action and timing are not specified in the Summary.

Q: Which programs get the $12.1 billion labeled for classified programs?

A: Pending source review. The Summary identifies $12.1 billion for classified programs but does not break down program-level recipients.

Q: How should contractors prioritize business development against these funding buckets?

A: Prioritize alignment to the high-dollar buckets in the Summary — munitions, operational support, classified programs, cybersecurity, space systems, drones, and readiness — while ensuring compliance posture for CMMC/NIST/DFARS/ITAR/EAR/ICD 503/JSIG. Stand up capture teams, validate contract vehicle eligibility, and prepare compliant proposal artifacts for rapid response when solicitations appear.

Definitions

  • Supplemental funding request: An OMB-submitted request to Congress for additional appropriations beyond the regular budget, here totaling $87.6 billion.
  • Classified programs: Programs funded that require classified handling and oversight; the Summary lists $12.1 billion allocated to such programs.
  • Munitions: Military ordnance and ammunition production and procurement; the Summary lists $21 billion allocated for munitions.

Intelligence Response

  • Cabrillo Signals War Room — Already detected this event and delivered this briefing. Continuously monitors policy and budget filings to flag supplemental requests and major budget reallocations that create new procurement pipelines.
  • Cabrillo Signals Match Engine — Rescores and reprioritizes opportunity pipelines automatically when this type of funding announcement shifts competitive landscapes, elevating opportunities that map to munitions, classified programs, cyber, space, unmanned systems, and readiness.
  • Cabrillo Signals Intelligence Hub — Tracks the affected agencies, NAICS codes, and contract vehicles listed in segmentation and runs saved searches to alert capture teams when related solicitations and task orders appear on SAM.gov (System for Award Management).
  • Proposal Studio (Proposal OS) and Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker — Use for rapid proposal build, compliance matrices (CMMC/NIST/DFARS/ITAR/EAR/ICD 503/JSIG), and 9-gate capture management to assemble audit-ready bids.

Who to notify:

  • Capture/BD Lead — immediate go/no-go and resource allocation.
  • Program Manager — validate delivery capacity for munitions, space, or systems engineering.
  • Security & Compliance Officer — confirm classified handling, CMMC/NIST/DFARS, ITAR/EAR posture.
  • Proposal/CPM Lead — activate 9-gate workflow and bid timelines.
  • Contracts/Legal — verify vehicle eligibility for GSA OASIS+, SEWP, STARS III, Alliant 2, etc.

First 48-hour playbook:

  • Hour 0–4: War Room alert; notify Capture Lead, Security Officer, PM, and Proposal Lead. Lock down PII/CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information) handling and confirm classified capability baseline.
  • Hour 4–12: Run Cabrillo Signals Match Engine to rescore pipeline; push elevated opportunities to Proposal Studio. Start compliance gap assessment (CMMC/NIST/DFARS/ITAR/EAR/ICD 503/JSIG).
  • Hour 12–24: Assign capture teams to highest-priority buckets (munitions, classified, cyber, space, unmanned). Create draft win themes in Proposal Studio and begin evidence collection.
  • Hour 24–48: Finalize bid/no-bid decisions, route proposals through Proposal Studio Workflow Tracker 9-gate process, and set calendar alerts for solicitations via Signals Intelligence Hub saved searches.

For playbooks on capture and compliance, see our primary hub: Winning Federal Contracts Guide (/insights/winning-federal-contracts). For compliance reference, see CMMC Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide) and CUI-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide).

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Cabrillo Club

Cabrillo Club

Editorial Team

Cabrillo Club is a defense technology company building AI-powered tools for government contractors. Our editorial team combines deep expertise in CMMC compliance, federal acquisition, and secure AI infrastructure to produce actionable guidance for the defense industrial base.

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