Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 14
Hegseth Rejects Patriot Shortage Claims as CSIS Says Iran War Used Over 1,060 Interceptors
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 14

Hegseth Rejects Patriot Shortage Claims as CSIS Says Iran War Used Over 1,060 Interceptors

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 14

Summary

  • On CBS' "Face the Nation," Pete Hegseth dismissed concerns that U.S. weapons reserves are strained, calling stockpiles "great" and saying production is rising as Europe funds Ukraine arms purchases.
  • Margaret Brennan pressed him with his own congressional testimony that some munitions could take months or years to replace and asked whether Ukraine should be allowed to produce Patriot interceptors; Hegseth did not directly answer.
  • An April CSIS report estimated the Iran campaign consumed more than 850 Tomahawks, over 1,000 JASSMs and roughly 1,060 to 1,430 Patriot interceptors—more than half the prewar U.S. Patriot inventory.
  • Those estimates, drawn from budget documents and reported battlefield use because exact stockpiles are classified, reinforced warnings that U.S. precision-munition reserves were already thin for a potential conflict with China.

Insights

As U.S. arms deliveries lag, will allies be forced to turn to other global suppliers?
Can America's industrial base rebuild its arsenal fast enough to deter the next major conflict?
With replacement costs soaring, what is the true price for restoring America’s depleted military stockpiles?