Washington: US spy agencies spent nearly $68 billion in fiscal year 2014, about the same level of spending on intelligence gathering in the previous year, the government has said.
Funding for the country's 17 intelligence agencies reached a peak of about $80 billion in 2011 and has gradually declined since, according to figures released every year by the office of the director of national intelligence (ODNI) and the Defense Department.
The numbers released yesterday reflected the total funds approved by Congress in the fiscal year that ended in September, with the national intelligence program -- including the Central Intelligence Agency -- spending at $50.5 billion and military intelligence program funds at $17.4 billion.
Total spending for fiscal year 2013 was also about $68 billion. The proposed intelligence budget for 2013 had been higher but automatic spending cuts mandated by Congress scaled back funding by several billion dollars.
Officials declined to provide a breakdown of the intelligence budget or any further details about how the money was spent.