Republican South Carolina Rep. Ralph Norman, who previously raised alarms about America’s rising national debt, defended new spending tied to operations in Iran on Monday, saying national security takes priority over fiscal concerns.
During a brief exchange with a reporter, Norman said he worries about debt at every level, but insisted military action cannot be weighed the same way as domestic spending decisions. When asked whether the conflict in Iran is worsening the national debt and whether the money could have been used elsewhere, Norman rejected the premise.
“Are you concerned that the war in Iran is raising our national debt?” one reporter asked.
“I’m concerned about the debt at every level, not just the war,” Norman answered.
WATCH:
PabloReports: Are you concerned that the war in Iran is raising our national debt?
Norman: We had to do the war. We’ll pay the debt back. pic.twitter.com/giAO4ZcH35
— Acyn (@Acyn) April 16, 2026
“Why not spend it on other things or save money or pay down the debt with the money that we’re spending on war?” the reporter asked.
“Well, you want the… Iran’s… What they said they were going to do is blow us up. Do we want to get blown up? No, we don’t,” Norman said. “And we’ll have to do whatever… We’ll pay the debt back.”
“The war is OK to spend on?” the reporter asked further.
“Yeah. With this, with the… It’s the number one sponsor of terror,” Norman answered.
Norman has repeatedly said that the national debt is a serious long-term threat to the country’s economic stability. He has warned that continued deficit spending will place a heavy burden on future generations and weaken fiscal security.
Norman also said Congress must curb spending and stop policies that expand borrowing beyond sustainable levels. Norman also said that restoring budget discipline is necessary to prevent the debt from growing further.
The Guardian reported that the first week of the Iran war cost the United States about $11.3 billion in military operations alone, driven largely by missile strikes, deployments, and rapid force mobilizations. TIME estimated that total early spending had already climbed into the $12–18 billion range within the first 10 to 14 days.
(Featured Image Media Credit: Rep. Ralph Norman speaking in 2023 (Dr. Blazer / Wikimedia Commons)
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