Our Declining Arsenal

Rightguide

Prof Triggernometry
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A Shrunken Arsenal: The Alarming Decline of U.S. Munitions​

By Joe Buccino
December 23, 2023

American forces require an enormous volume of critical munitions to fight against a technologically advanced military force. This ammo is also necessary to equip partner forces in Asia, such as Australia, with the long-range anti-ship munitions needed to defeat the Chinese flotilla or prevent it from ever embarking. The stockpile also ensures that American industrial output is sustained in times of crisis and preserves the United States' global military edge.

The U.S. also provides Taiwan with munitions sufficient to blunt an initial Chinese blow. This strategy – codified by the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act – involves ensuring Taiwan has sufficient defense capabilities against a Chinese attack. The U.S. arms Taiwan only to a level that does not disrupt the diplomatic equilibrium between Washington and Beijing. But, there is growing concern in the Pentagon and the Indo-Pacific that Taiwan does not have enough of the high-tech munitions to hold off a PRC attack. Here again, the shrinking U.S. munitions reserve represents a risk.

In a U.S. fight with China, American forces will likely burn through munitions stocks within three weeks. Even with a surge of the U.S. industrial base, replenishing stocks will take more than six months. In the interim, the U.S. will be without sufficient bombs and bullets for its cutting-edge systems, such as fifth-generation fighter jets and High Mobility Rocket Launcher Systems, and anti-air missiles needed to protect our nuclear aircraft carriers and bases in the Pacific.

Right now, the warning indicators are blinking red. The massive need for ammunition in such conflicts highlights weaknesses in the American defense industry, which no longer produces munitions at the rate it did decades ago. The post-Cold War defense budget reductions led to a swift merger of the defense sector, which saw a drop from fifty-one major defense providers in the early 1990s to five by the end of that decade. This consolidation led to a tightened capacity.

Much more here: https://www.realcleardefense.com/ar...alarming_decline_of_us_munitions_1000816.html

This is where Joe Biden and his masters have brought us to.
 
Trump needs a strong force of Losers and Suckers to support him during and after his next coup attempt. Trouble is, they all swore an oath to support the Constitution and not a full diaper.

So it looks like the next insurrection will be much like the first; a bunch of hill-billies taking on a disciplined force (but without the French to help them out).
 
Um, a large part of Ukraine funding was dedicated to restocking U.S. stockpiles with more advanced munitions than the old and expiring munitions being sent to Ukraine.

Nice self own RussiaGuide.

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👉 RussiaGuide 🤣

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Maybe if Trump hadn't diverted funds from the military to build his vanity fence they'd have more resources.
 
How many threads do you need on this same subject?
Is there a particular thread on our declining arsenal that addresses the subject in detail or are you just being a contrary old coot?
 
Is there a particular thread on our declining arsenal that addresses the subject in detail or are you just being a contrary old coot?
It's the same topic of yours. Why do you need multiple threads to discuss it?
 
The fuck up here, intentional or otherwise, is dicking about with tv friendly sanctions like seizing mega yachts that changes nothing, but allowing mainly German engineering support for RUS military production to carry on as normal.
 
Neither one applies in detail to the fact of our declining arsenal which has probably declined further than that which might have been alluded to in those threads.
You have more.

It's about 1/4 of your posts.
 
How to say you're a lonely old man during the Holidays without saying it.

Make a dozen threads on Christmas Eve. 🤣🙄
 
It’s not like it’s impossible to fix…….gearing up ammunition production takes only foresight, political will and budget.

There’s every reason to think though that the US has gone to political ratshit, such that what would once have been a common sense bipartisan strategic decision would nowadays be turned into a political football.
 
It’s not like it’s impossible to fix…….gearing up ammunition production takes only foresight, political will and budget.
And huge quantities of cheap fuel. Some manufacturing may eventually return to the US, but we can't match the production we had when we had the world's largest supply of fossil fuels.
 
And huge quantities of cheap fuel. Some manufacturing may eventually return to the US, but we can't match the production we had when we had the world's largest supply of fossil fuels.
The manufacturing left due to offshoring. IE it went to places that could pay less money in wages, not because of the price of gasoline....
 
The US military is more expensive than ever, but less capable than it has been in a long time.

You can see that plainly right now in the navy’s inability to keep open shipping lanes in the Middle East.

The proliferation of relatively inexpensive missiles appears to have made the carrier battle group ineffective, except in the open ocean.

I have no doubt the rest of the world is taking notes.
Guess you missed this then eh?
https://www.axios.com/2023/12/25/maersk-red-sea-shipping-us-led-force-deploys
 
Nope. Well aware.

One company, moving only certain size ships, and only with naval escort, isn't an "open shipping lane."
It's a parody of an open shipping lane.
One company? They are the largest company, and they move more sea cargo than the next ten companies combined. Also BP is about to return as well.
Yes there is an issue, but saying the US will be overcome by the Huothis is fucking laughable. That is sort of like claiming you and Wat and the gang will over throw the US government........
 
As the old tech gets used up in battle we are able to modernize.

Battlefield drones are now key, we’re better off with clouds of micro drones than with howitzers.

Battlefield robots are on the horizon.
 
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