Friday, June 19, 2026 -US President Donald Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to compel defense companies to increase weapon manufacturing after the recent war with Iran depleted critical American stockpiles.
In a presidential determination signed last week, Trump
declared that "conditions exist which may pose a direct threat to the
national defense or its preparedness programs."
“In particular, systemic constraints in the munitions
industrial base, including limited production capacity, fragile supply chains,
long-lead dependencies, and related production bottlenecks, may impair the
ability of the United States to produce, sustain, and expand the availability
of munitions, missiles, and equipment required for the national defense,” the
document, sent to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, states.
The intervention suggests a substantial level of concern
within the administration regarding the Pentagon’s weapons reserves following
the war with Iran, alongside concurrent security assistances to Israel and
Ukraine. The Pentagon has long harbored concerns about the defense industry’s
turnaround speed—an issue exacerbated by the heavy expenditure of key missile
stockpiles during the regional conflict.
Speaking from the G7 summit in France on Wednesday, Trump
noted that the final days of the war were “brutal” and that “$200 million worth
of bombs” were used, adding, “It is expensive too, by the way, aside from
everything else.”
While Hegseth and other Pentagon officials publicly
maintained throughout the conflict that the US retained sufficient readiness to
manage multiple global fronts, munition levels have been a significant private
concern. A recent analysis by the Center for Strategic and International
Studies (CSIS) found that the US expended at least 45 percent of its Precision
Strike Missile stockpile, and roughly half of its stockpiles of Patriot air
defense interceptor missiles and THAAD missiles.
Despite these findings, Hegseth downplayed the inventory
strain during an appearance on CBS News’ Face the Nation, stating that there
was no crisis and characterizing the stockpile shortage as "a manufactured
story."
The Defense Production Act (DPA), a 1950s-era law, grants the
executive branch broad authority to expedite and expand the supply of resources
from the domestic industrial base to support national security. The act allows
the government to force companies to prioritize military contracts, create
financial incentives for critical material production, and form unique
agreements with private firms.
Trump’s June 11 order instructs Hegseth to utilize the DPA to
"provide for the making of voluntary agreements and plans of action to
help provide for the national defense," which includes the establishment
of a specialized industrial advisory committee.
Prior to the outbreak of hostilities, Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Gen. Dan Caine had warned that a prolonged military campaign
against Iran would heavily impact US ammunition reserves.

0 Comments