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Golden Dome moves to contracts amid cost and feasibility doubts

Golden Dome moves to contracts amid cost and feasibility doubts

Space Force picks 12 firms for space-based interceptors as estimates swing from $175B to $3.6T

Defence·Conflicts· contested-result Dinheiro de quem·O jogo longo ·8 takes ·atualizado 24 de jun. de 2026

Summary

Trump's Golden Dome homeland missile shield is inching from vision to contracts. The Space Force named 12 companies in April 2026 for space-based- interceptor prototypes under OTA deals worth up to $3.2B; the FY26 appropriations bill carried $13.4B for space and missile-defence systems. But cost and feasibility doubts dominate: estimates run from $175B (White House) to $1.2T over 20 years (CBO) to $3.6T (AEI), and industry press reports the program "spinning its wheels" on unresolved architecture. Space Force Gen. Michael Guetlein conceded boost-phase intercept from space will not proceed "if it is not affordable and scalable." Initial capability is targeted for 2028, full architecture mid-2030s. The push tracks the Chinese and Russian threats it cites.

By the numbers

  • 12 — firms picked for space-based-interceptor prototypes (up to $3.2B).
  • $13.4B — FY26 funding for space and missile-defence systems.
  • $175B → $1.2T → $3.6T — White House / CBO / AEI cost estimates.
  • 2028 — targeted initial capability; mid-2030s full architecture.

Why it matters

Golden Dome is the most expensive missile-defence bet in decades, and its space-based layer is the least proven. If it consumes budget without working, it crowds out the interceptor rebuild that the Iran war showed is the real near-term gap.

What to watch

  • Whether boost-phase SBI prototypes pass affordability/scalability tests.
  • FY27 appropriations: sustained funding or congressional pushback.
  • How the cost estimate settles as the architecture firms up.