A few days after submitting last month’s Vaba Eesti Sõna article (“Baltic Security Initiative Update: To Be or Not to Be?”) about the endangerment to the BSI, there were positive developments, this time coming from the United States Senate.
By a vote of 77-20 on October 9, the Senate passed the Fiscal Year 2026 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), the massive defense bill that is a priority for Congress. The bill included strong support for the Baltic Security Initiative and related programs. It now needs to be reconciled with the House version before it can be enacted.
The BSI component of the NDAA, as reported by Estonian Public Broadcasting ERR, would be over 50% more than in recent years, at $350 million across all three Baltic states for each year 2026-2028.
As Alex Raufoglu reported in the Kyiv Post on October 10: “The passage is being hailed as a critical victory for America’s commitment to its Eastern European allies, delivering a significantly strengthened security pledge to the Baltic states and providing new tools to counter Russian aggression, even as the fate of funding for the war in Ukraine remains a pressing global concern.”









