Robust Defense Spending Is Pro-Woman
In an era of budget tightening, military and defense spending often appear to many, especially women, as an area ready to be pared back. The benefits can feel remote compared to the immediate demands of childcare, education, or healthcare. Yet history tells a different story. When security erodes, it is women who feel the fracture first. We are the ones who hold families together when communities are disrupted, who shoulder the emotional and social costs when husbands and sons are sent to war, and who rebuild when violence tears at the seams of daily life. To argue for robust defense is not to argue for war. It is to argue for the preservation of the world in which peace is even possible.
Frighteningly, there is a belief that appears to be taking hold that peace is the natural order of things—that if America simply withdraws from its defense and security commitments, peace will expand to fill the space we leave. But peace is not the mere absence of conflict, it is the product of deterrence: the understood capacity and willingness to resist those who would impose harm.
When a nation possesses the capability to defend what it values, others are forced to calculate the cost of aggression. When that capability erodes, the calculation changes. A society that lacks the means to protect what it loves is vulnerable. And vulnerability, in a world where predation and ambition remain facts of human behavior, is not a gentle state but an invitation. History is full of examples of what happens when well-intentioned societies convince themselves that restraint alone ensures safety.
Conflict begins now with hacked energy grids, disrupted supply chains, disinformation campaigns designed to fracture democracies from within, and long-range strikes launched from hundreds of miles away by unmanned systems. The field of battle may never touch the ground on which we stand, but the consequences can and do. Victory no longer goes to the side with just the most people and equipment, but to the side that sees first, decides fastest, and acts with precision.
Those capabilities do not appear on their own. They are built deliberately and over time through a defense industrial base that is both strong and innovative. This is not only about projecting strength abroad. It is also about protecting our homeland. Established defense firms and new mission-driven innovators are developing layered missile defense networks, early-warning radar systems, counter-drone technologies, and cyber-resilience tools that guard American cities, power grids, ports, and hospitals. Relatedly, surveillance tools, used with real oversight help us catch threats before they become tragedies. This is not to watch ordinary people; they’re about giving us the warning we need to keep our communities safe.
We need both the scale of major defense contractors and the agility of emerging companies pushing the boundaries of new technology. But we also need acquisition systems designed to move quickly, reward performance, and hold every contractor accountable to timelines, budgets, and measurable outcomes. These are arguments for smarter investment and better contracting, not for retreat.
Calls to slow, shrink, or abandon this effort are not morally neutral. They shift leverage to actors who do not share our values and do not hesitate to use violence to secure their aims. The question is not whether the United States will hold military power, but whether that power will be stewarded wisely and tied to a vision of order that protects not invades.
To pretend that disengagement produces peace is to forget the lessons women have carried in our bones for centuries: safety is the prerequisite for everything else.
The stability that allows a child to walk to school without fear, that allows families to gather, that allows communities to plan for futures longer than the next month is not born of hope alone. It is secured, enforced, and maintained. And that work, though often invisible, is fundamentally about care. To support a strong national defense is not to prioritize war. It is to prioritize home, the lives we are building, the children we raise, and the communities we love.
Women have always been the quiet stewards of peace. The only question now is whether we will recognize that safeguarding peace requires investing in strength.
Meaghan Mobbs, PhD, is Director of the Center for American Safety and Security at Independent Women and President of the R.T. Weatherman Foundation. She also serves as a presidential appointee to the United States Military Academy Board of Visitors.