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Alarm sounded as Trump in frantic rush to pump up weapons stockpiles

Дата публикации: 04-07-2026 17:54:34


During his first presidency, Donald Trump was often described as an "isolationist." But he took a much more interventionist turn during his second term, from going to war with Iran to capturing former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to calling for U.S. annexation of Greenland. Now, according to The Hill, Trump is encountering some obstacles in a frantic rush to increase the United States' weapons supplies.The Hill's Ellen Mitchell, reporting on the 4th of July, explains, "President Trump's talk of boosting U.S. munitions stockpiles is facing the harsh reality of America's production capacity. Even if Congress passes his enormous $1.5 trillion request for defense spending, which is looking less likely with each passing week, defense contractors are simply unable to rapidly refill caches that have been badly depleted during the wars in Ukraine and Iran."Trump, Mitchell notes, recently met with executives for Boeing, Lockheed and Honeywell to discuss delays in weapons programs. But according to Mitchell, "highly sophisticated missiles and interceptors take years to churn out" and are "at the mercy of government funding cycles" — which "means recently announced intentions to expand assembly lines are still years away from yielding tangible results."Jerry McGinn, director of the Center for the Industrial Base at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, discussed the weapons timeline with The Hill.McGinn told the publication, "The problem is these systems, they're really, really great, but they were not designed for producibility — they were designed for performance. They're not really built to be made at scale. They're essentially handmade in some ways."According to analysis from the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), restoring some of the United States' weapons systems to pre-Iran war levels will take one to four years. "Even with the ceasefire and recent memorandum of understanding between Washington and Tehran," Mitchell reports, "U.S. forces have periodically conducted additional strikes against Iran in response to attacks near the Strait of Hormuz, including on Friday and Saturday. The Defense Department has not publicly disclosed how many munitions it has used thus far in the Iran war. Apart from its own missile use, the United States has also supplied allies with large quantities of weapons."According to Katherine Thompson — who served in the Pentagon during the first Trump administration and is now a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute — the U.S. may be unable to rebuild some of its weapons systems until the next decade.Thompson told The Hill, "Those timelines are not something that the defense contractors are giving, but I think at a minimum, we can say we're not going to be back to pre-war levels until — based on the data that's out there — the early 2030s."

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During his first presidency, Donald Trump was often described as an "isolationist." But he took a much more interventionist turn during his second term, from going to war with Iran to capturing former Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro to calling for U.S. annexation of Greenland. Now, according to The Hill, Trump is encountering some obstacles in a frantic rush to increase the United States' weapons supplies.

The Hill's Ellen Mitchell, reporting on the 4th of July, explains, "President Trump's talk of boosting U.S. munitions stockpiles is facing the harsh reality of America's production capacity. Even if Congress passes his enormous $1.5 trillion request for defense spending, which is looking less likely with each passing week, defense contractors are simply unable to rapidly refill caches that have been badly depleted during the wars in Ukraine and Iran."

Trump, Mitchell notes, recently met with executives for Boeing, Lockheed and Honeywell to discuss delays in weapons programs. But according to Mitchell, "highly sophisticated missiles and interceptors take years to churn out" and are "at the mercy of government funding cycles" — which "means recently announced intentions to expand assembly lines are still years away from yielding tangible results."

Jerry McGinn, director of the Center for the Industrial Base at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, discussed the weapons timeline with The Hill.

McGinn told the publication, "The problem is these systems, they're really, really great, but they were not designed for producibility — they were designed for performance. They're not really built to be made at scale. They're essentially handmade in some ways."

According to analysis from the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), restoring some of the United States' weapons systems to pre-Iran war levels will take one to four years.

"Even with the ceasefire and recent memorandum of understanding between Washington and Tehran," Mitchell reports, "U.S. forces have periodically conducted additional strikes against Iran in response to attacks near the Strait of Hormuz, including on Friday and Saturday. The Defense Department has not publicly disclosed how many munitions it has used thus far in the Iran war. Apart from its own missile use, the United States has also supplied allies with large quantities of weapons."

According to Katherine Thompson — who served in the Pentagon during the first Trump administration and is now a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute — the U.S. may be unable to rebuild some of its weapons systems until the next decade.

Thompson told The Hill, "Those timelines are not something that the defense contractors are giving, but I think at a minimum, we can say we're not going to be back to pre-war levels until — based on the data that's out there — the early 2030s."

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