See the FY 2020 data: https://www.taxpayer.net/budget-appropriations-tax/agency-winners-and-losers-in-the-fy20-budget-request/
This chart shows what percentage of the discretionary budget is allocated to different US agencies. It shows DOD’s estimated share rising from 53.0% in FY 2018 to 61.7% in FY 2023. Complete data is available in this Table, which comes from the Historical Tables of the White House:
New: Interactive tool to add or subtract items from the Department of Defense’s (DoD’s) total operation and support (O&S) costs. From National Priorities Project (The Congressional Budget Office recently calculated the operating costs for every unit in the U.S. armed forces. Using those values, this interactive tool lets you add or subtract brigades, ships, aircraft squadrons, and other units to see the effects on the Department of Defense’s (DoD’s) total operation and support (O&S) costs and the size of the military.)
“Putting the Pentagon’s Pennies in Perspective” (Ben Freeman and William D. Hartung, Defense One)
“The Military-Industrial Complex is On Corporate Welfare” (William D. Hartung, The Nation, originally appeared in TomDispatch)
“16 Years, $5.6 Trillion Later, Are the Post-9/11 Wars Worth It?” (William D. Hartung, The Hill)
“Trump’s Massive Budget Boosts the Military” (National Priorities initial summary of the Trump Budget)
“Congress Strikes a Deal for 54% Military Spending in Federal Budget” (by Lindsay Koshgarian)
“U.S. Military Spending” (National Priorities Project)
“Trump’s FY2019 Budget Request Has Massive Cuts for Nearly Everything But the Military” (National Priorities Project)
“Trump’s Military Budget is Way Out of Whack” (byMiriam Pemberton)
“More than $150 for U.S. Foreign Military Bases” (byDavid Vine)
Brown University: “Costs of War”
Center for Disease Control to cut by 80 percent efforts to prevent global disease outbreak
Paul Shannon: Here’s the Real Agenda Beyind the Tax Bill