The U.S. Army has found a steal of a deal–or at least what said is a deal–on a group of World War I paintings. They have already been approved to spend $600,000 on the paintings, which will be a part of its large collection of art, Defense News reported.

On October 16, the Army filed an "unusual and compelling urgency" notice to pull funds to purchase 23 paintings by Samuel J. Woolf, an artist that was embedded with American forces in Europe during World War I. The service said its collection of World War I art is small. Paul McLeary of Defense News reports: