KEY POINTS
  • President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that colossal defense spending bill he signed earlier this year gives troops the largest pay raise in the last decade.
  • However, the two largest increases in the last decade occurred in 2008 at 3.5 percent and 2009 at 3.4 percent raise, according the Department of Defense.
  • What's more, Trump told lawmakers in August that he wants to scrap pay raises for tens of thousands civilian federal workers. The move would include civilians that work alongside U.S. troops in the Defense department.
Sgt. Maj. Scott T. Pile speaks to 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit Marines and sailors embarked aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Makin Island.

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump has repeatedly said that he helped broker the first pay raise for the U.S. military in a decade, but a closer look reveals that troops have actually received a pay hike every year since 2007.

In August, Trump approved a colossal defense policy bill that authorizes a top-line budget of $717 billion to cover a litany of defense spending. During his remarks at Ft. Drum in upstate New York, Trump lauded the defense-friendly bill which includes a 2.6 percent pay raise for troops. Trump referred to the pay hike as the first and largest in nearly a decade.