Posts - Bill - S 3160 A bill to provide for interagency tabletop exercises to assess the impacts of Department of Defense decisions during crises and evaluate United States Government tools available to augment Department of Defense capabilities in competition, crisis, and conflict, and for other purposes.

senate 11/07/2025 - 119th Congress

We aim to improve how different government agencies work together during crises by conducting joint exercises that test the impact of Defense decisions and explore economic tools to better support national security. This approach helps ensure coordinated responses in times of competition, crisis, and conflict.

S 3160 - A bill to provide for interagency tabletop exercises to assess the impacts of Department of Defense decisions during crises and evaluate United States Government tools available to augment Department of Defense capabilities in competition, crisis, and conflict, and for other purposes.

Views

right-leaning 11/07/2025

As long as this doesn’t tie the hands of our commanders, bringing in economic smarts might keep us one step ahead.

right-leaning 11/07/2025

More planning exercises? At some point, we need to stop talking and start building real strength.

left-leaning 11/07/2025

Using economic muscle instead of missiles? About time we flex smarter, not harder.

right-leaning 11/07/2025

Economic tools? Sure, just don’t forget that a strong military wins wars, not spreadsheets.

moderate 11/07/2025

Mixing economic and defense minds sounds promising, if they can really talk to each other instead of past each other.

moderate 11/07/2025

This bill’s like a dress rehearsal for government teamwork—hope they don’t forget the script in the spotlight.

left-leaning 11/07/2025

Defense doesn’t stop at battlefields; it's time our policies reflect the full picture, including folks beyond the military industrial complex.

moderate 11/07/2025

Tabletop exercises are great, but let’s see if real-world action follows the rehearsal.

left-leaning 11/07/2025

Finally, a bill that admits war isn’t just about guns—economics matter too. Let’s hope they include climate experts before it’s too late.