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New Military Cyber Service Would Cost $10-11 Billion Using Existing Funds

A commission study released June 4 outlines how a dedicated military cyber service could be formed using existing congressional allocations rather than new funds.

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2 sources·Jun 3, 2:56 PM·1m read
New Military Cyber Service Would Cost $10-11 Billion Using Existing FundsBreaking Defense
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A commission report released on 2026-06-04 estimates that creating a new uniformed military service for cyberspace operations would require an initial budget of $10 billion to $11 billion. The Commission on US Cyber Force Generation produced the study. 0 project.

The report assumes a directive to establish the new cyber service has already been issued and focuses on implementation steps. It provides detailed planning guidance so that any future stand-up order for a cyber service can be executed with fewer delays.

The proposed $10-11 billion budget would come from money Congress has already allocated across the military services rather than new appropriations.

Officials said consolidating those funds under a single service could improve return on investment for existing cyber programs. S. Cyber Command.

U.S. Cyber Command. A unified service would centralize those functions.

Commission members said the study aims to avoid problems that arose during the 2019 creation of the Space Force. The commission includes recently retired two- and three-star cyber commanders, former senior Pentagon cyber officials, and mid-level cyber personnel. "When that go order comes, we have to be better prepared than we were for Space Force," a commission member said at the report release.

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