The US is dropping bombs quicker than it can make them
[image: Aviation ordinancemen organize 1000 pound MK-83 JDAM (Joint Direct 
Attack Munition) bombs on their racks on the flight deck of the USS Kitty 
Hawk aircraft carrier in this archival photo taken in the northern Persian 
Gulf March 18, 2003.] 
<http://www.globalpost.com/photo/6758322/2016/04/11/us-bombs-2016-4-11>

Aviation ordinancemen organize 1000 pound MK-83 JDAM (Joint Direct Attack 
Munition) bombs on their racks on the flight deck of the USS Kitty Hawk 
aircraft carrier in this archival photo taken in the northern Persian Gulf 
on March 18, 2003. 
 Paul HannaReuters

Ongoing air wars in Middle East have caused an unexpected dip in 
the Pentagon’s stockpile of air-to-ground munitions — and Washington has 
been slow to address the supply problem.

The Pentagon has had months to deal with it. 

“We're expending munitions faster than we can replenish them,” USA Today 
quoted Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh  
<http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2015/12/03/isil-iraq-syria-hellfire-missiles-drones/76741954/>as
 
saying in December.

Since then Secretary of Defense Ash Carter has asked Congress to include 
funding 
for 45,000 smart bombs 
<http://www.defense.gov/News/Speeches/Speech-View/Article/672855/submitted-statement-house-appropriations-committee-defense-fy-2017-budget-reque>
 in 
the Defense Department’s 2017 budget. But it could take a while to 
rebuild the stockpile.

“The US maintains a pretty steady inventory of bombs and missiles for 
full-on war scenarios,” says Roman Schweizer, aerospace and defense policy 
analyst at Guggenheim Securities in Washington. “But 2 1/2 years of 
fighting ISIS and continued bombing in Afghanistan have exceeded 
weapons-use projections.”

Operation Inherent Resolve, the US-led military intervention against the 
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant flies bombing missions in Syria and 
Iraq <http://www.defense.gov/News/Tag/55843/airstrike-update>. The United 
States, which flies a majority of the missions 
<http://www.airforcetimes.com/story/military/2016/03/24/air-force-f-16s-fly-most-sorties-against-isis-b-1s-drop-most-bombs/82212394/>,
 strikes ISIS 
targets with laser- and GPS-guided bombs, Joint Direct Attack Munition 
bombs, Joint Standoff Weapons, and air-to-ground missiles, such as the 
Hellfire. Per unit pricetags on these munitions range from around $25,000 
<http://www.bga-aeroweb.com/Defense/JDAM.html> to close to $400,000 
<http://www.bga-aeroweb.com/Defense/AGM-154-JSOW.html>. 

"In the early days of the [Syria] campaign the Navy fired a bunch of 
Tomahawk cruise missiles," notes Schweizer, "and those are in the $1 million 
<http://www.bga-aeroweb.com/Defense/Tomahawk.html> cost range — but they're 
really the higher end of what you might use if you have a contested 
airspace and you don't want to put aircraft over targets."

In the war against ISIS, the United States and its allies control the 
airspace, allowing their planes to fly low and close to targets. "Pilots 
are able to get close because you are not fighting a very sophisticated 
— albeit a brutal — enemy, and you're able to use shorter range- but more 
precision-guided munitions."

There is good reason for precision, notes Schweizer.

"Because these are obviously some congested environments, and the enemy 
adapts and puts himself in positions where he's hard to target without 
collateral damage or civilian casualties." Estimates of the numbers of 
civilian deaths in the air war against ISIS vary, but the independent 
watchdog group Airwars.org <http://airwars.org/> estimates more than 1,000 
civilians killed, mostly by Russian or Syrian air strikes.

The United States dropped more than 20,000 guided bombs and missiles on 
Iraq and Syria in 2015. In recent months the US has transferred additional 
quantities of bombs to allies in the region. "There are also NATO and Gulf 
Cooperation Council allies participating in these strikes as well, and in 
some cases they're drawing off of US stockpiles because their own domestic 
inventories may not be sufficient."

The Gulf countries — primarily Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates 
— have been less active in the war against ISIS 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/12/10/middleeast/isis-what-arab-states-are-doing/>, 
instead focusing their military efforts since March 2015 on defeating a 
rebel group that controls much of the territory in their neighbor Arab 
country, Yemen. 

The Saudi-led coalition, with American support 
<http://www.pri.org/stories/2016-03-16/us-senator-saudis-stop-bombing-civilians-yemen>,
 
has been bombing Yemen with munitions made by US companies including 
Raytheon, Boeing, General Dynamics and Lockheed-Martin. They have purchased 
American smart bombs and missiles through US State Department-brokered 
deals for more than a decade.

Following a Camp David summit in May 2015, the US approved a new sale of 
$1.29 billion in munitions to the Saudis 
<http://www.dsca.mil/major-arms-sales/government-saudi-arabia-air-ground-munitions>
 intended 
to replace bombs already used in the Yemen War. It also approved a 
$380 million sale of guided bombs to the UAE 
<http://www.dsca.mil/major-arms-sales/united-arab-emirates-uae-joint-direct-attack-munitions-jdam-sustainment-and-support>
. 

While the US does not routinely report when weapons are delivered to its 
foreign customers, State Department spokesman David McKeeby did say 
<http://www.defensenews.com/story/defense/policy-budget/budget/2016/03/25/state-33-billion-gcc-weapon-sales-11-months/82255660/>
 in *US Defense News* in January this year that “the US government and 
industry … delivered 4,500 precision-guided munitions to the GCC countries 
in 2015, including 1,500 taken directly from US military stocks — a 
significant action given our military’s own needs.” 

So is the US in danger of running out of bombs?

Roman Schweizer says US bombmakers have the capacity for producing 
enough weapons to meet military demands. “If we were in a state of war we’d 
be running three 8-hour shifts, 24 hours a day” to supply the war effort. 

He adds, "Lockheed-Martin has said they've been asked to increase their 
Hellfire missile production facilities. As well, Boeing, which makes the 
Joint Direct Attack Munition, [is] also ramping up production. There are a 
few categories of munitions that are sort of the preferred, or most widely 
used, and I think they are definitely busy." In December*CNN* reported an 
unidentified US official saying it could take "up to four years 
<http://www.cnn.com/2015/12/04/politics/air-force-20000-bombs-missiles-isis/index.html>"
 
to rebuild the Hellfire missile inventory.

“What the Pentagon wants to do now is an unresolved 
question,” Schweizer observes. "We’re using munitions at a rate we didn’t 
expect, and we don’t yet know how long the current rate of use will 
continue.”

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