Only Japan and Germany, countries occupied by the US military after World War 2, host more US airmen than Britain. Nuclear-capable American B-52 bombers were recently deployed in Gloucestershire amid Ukraine tensions.
US Air Force deployment in Britain is third largest in world
Tag: Lockheed Martin
U.S. & EU Set to Spend Hundreds of Billions of Dollars on Ukraine
The U.S. Government, with virtual unanimity, view the war in Ukraine to be not so much Ukraine’s war with Russia, but actually as America’s war with Russia, and therefore as being the first direct battleground of World War III, which America will win at all costs.
U.S. & EU Set to Spend Hundreds of Billions of Dollars on Ukraine
Whoops, the U.S. Sent So Many Missiles to Ukraine That It Depleted Its Own Stockpiles
Whoops, the U.S. Sent So Many Missiles to Ukraine That It Depleted Its Own Stockpiles
The United States, Poland, and Estonia have sent Javelins to Ukraine, weapons that all three countries will eventually need to replace. The Javelin missile, first issued in the mid-1990s, is still in production. To replenish those stockpiles, Lockheed Martin is set to ramp up production of the Javelin from 2,100 a year to 4,000 missiles a year. Although that sounds like a lot of missiles, it would still take two years at that rate just to backfill America’s Javelin inventory. The company will also require additional time to set up the supply chain to provide parts for the missiles, no small feat considering the global shortage of semiconductors, which the Javelin’s guidance system is reliant upon.
Another lag in the schedule is a lengthy delivery time, which is currently 32 months— meaning missiles are delivered 32 months after the missiles are ordered. Unless this is shortened by boosting production, it will take nearly three years for the first new missiles to get to troops in the field.
Related:
Production Of In-Demand Javelin Missiles Set To Almost Double:
One potential pitfall in the ability to rapidly ramp up production of Javelins has been the availability of microchips and semiconductors, provided through subcontractors, mainly in Asia. Each missile contains upward of 200 of these components.
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Although the Pentagon has said it’s “actively negotiating” a new Stinger contract, manufacturer Raytheon has admitted that shortages of parts and materials could mean that it’s not able to actually produce these new missiles until 2023 or later. The DoD hasn’t bought new Stingers in many years and is now looking to replace it with a new missile, but that doesn’t help in the near term with diminishing stockpiles.
US Coup Specialist Victoria Nuland Visits Brazil
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PayPal Blocks Multiple Alternative Media Figures Critical Of US Empire Narratives
New Reporting Details Corporate Media’s War Industry Pundits
“This type of revolving-door behavior should be prohibited for military officials to serve in a private capacity representing military contractors,” said one consumer advocate.
New Reporting Details Corporate Media’s War Industry Pundits
YouTube Video Source: Midwestern Marx
U.S. Army Proposes to Cut Its Troop Numbers Below 1 Million
The Army would fall below 1 million soldiers for the first time in two decades under a new budget proposal as leaders struggle with recruitment in the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic.
U.S. Army Proposes to Cut Its Troop Numbers Below 1 Million
AUKUS pact expanded to base hypersonic missiles in Australia
On the eve of calling a federal election, Prime Minister Scott Morrison this week took another critical step to placing Australia on the frontline of US preparations for war against China.
AUKUS pact expanded to base hypersonic missiles in Australia
U.S. Spends Billions on War in Ukraine and the Working Class Pays the Price, by Natalia Marques
The largest national defense budget in the world just got larger. Earlier this month, the United States Congress passed $728.5 billion in discretionary funding for the Department of Defense for the 2022 fiscal year, a sharp 5% increase from the previous year. The budget contains a plan for $13.6 billion in aid to Ukraine for the Russia–Ukraine war.
U.S. Spends Billions on War in Ukraine and the Working Class Pays the Price, by Natalia Marques
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