Title 10 › Subtitle Subtitle A— - General Military Law › Part PART I— - ORGANIZATION AND GENERAL MILITARY POWERS › Chapter CHAPTER 3— - GENERAL POWERS AND FUNCTIONS › § 127
The Secretary of Defense, the Department of Defense Inspector General, and each military department secretary may spend money set aside for unexpected emergency or extraordinary expenses that cannot be planned. They can approve the spending and sign a certificate as proof instead of giving detailed paperwork. They may give this approval power to other people in their offices, and those people can be allowed to pass the power on to others. Money that is part of the Military Intelligence Program for secret or emergency intelligence work is handled under section 429a, not under these rules. Before using more than $500,000 under this authority, the Secretary of Defense must tell the congressional defense committees. If the amount is over $1,000,000, the Secretary must wait 15 days after telling the committees before obligating the funds. If the amount is over $500,000 but not more than $1,000,000, the Secretary must wait 5 days. If waiting would harm national security, the Secretary can act sooner but must immediately notify the committees and give relevant (including classified) information to the chairman and ranking member. For intelligence or counterintelligence spending, no amount over $100,000 can be used until both the defense and intelligence committees are notified and 15 days pass, unless the Secretary waives that wait for urgent national security reasons and then sends written notice and justification within 48 hours. By December 1 each year, the Secretary must report past-year emergency spending to the defense committees and intelligence-related spending to the intelligence committees, and include details for each item over $100,000 (purpose, amount, who approved it, why other authorities could not be used, and any other info the Secretary thinks is relevant). The congressional intelligence committees are the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence.
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Armed Forces — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
10 U.S.C. § 127
Title 10 — Armed Forces
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73