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The defense package, which the House approved by a 375 to 34 vote last week, still contains a few provisions likely to rankle the White House: It shrinks the size of the National Security Council from 400 to 200 staff positions and taps a war funding account to authorize $3.2 billion above the amount lawmakers agreed to last year as part of a two-year budget deal.

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The White House has not threatened to veto the legislation.

The defense policy bill directs funding toward improving military readiness, increasing the size of the services and reconfiguring acquisition programs. But it also leaves a great deal of decision-making authority in the hands of the Pentagon, particularly on issues governing where military aid dollars will be spent and how new defense priorities, such as an expanded authority to pursue missile defense, will be implemented.

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Many of the provisions in the bill respond to requests made by President Obama’s Defense Department — but it will be primarily up to President-elect Donald Trump to decide how to use them. In some instances, Trump’s global stance may not line up with authorities granted under the bill. For example, Congress has provided millions in lethal aid to Ukraine to help the government in its war against Russian-backed separatists. The Obama administration never took advantage of that authority and Trump’s stated affinity toward Russia may make him loath to act where the Obama did not. The bill also gives Trump the authority to send surface-to-air missiles to help Syrian fighters — but during the campaign, Trump expressed a preference for getting out of Syria, not getting more involved in its ongoing civil war.

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