Professor Neta Crawford, who also serves as the director of the Costs of War Project at BU, breaks down this cost projection in detail in a recently-released paper titled âUnited States Budgetary Costs of the Post-9/11 Wars Through FY2019: $5.9 Trillion Spent and Obligatedâ.
Crawfordâs computation factors in not just the Defense Departmentâs war funding since FY 2001, which, on its own, amounts to roughly $1.9T as of FY 2019, but also war-related expenses across the federal government â such as those incurred by the State Department and the Homeland Security Department â bringing the running total to roughly $4.9T.
Crawford then incorporates the cost of having to take care of U.S. veterans in the next few decades, an obligation that the professor says would amount to around $1T.
Crawford notes, however, that actual costs would likely be higher since there is no projected end date for U.S. overseas contingency operations.
Crawford estimates an additional $808B in war expenses through FY2023.