
More than a year after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, U.S. plans to increase production of key munitions have fallen short due to shortages of chips, machinery and skilled workers.
Arms makers have added factory shifts, ordered new equipment and streamlined supply chains to boost output of Javelin antitank missiles, artillery shells, guided rockets and much more, which Ukrainian forces are firing by the thousands at the Russian invaders.
Years of stop-start Pentagon funding for munitions led companies to close production lines or quit the industry, while output of many components and raw materials moved overseas. Defense department chiefs estimate the decline will take five or six years to reverse.
#Ukraine: Additional footage from the same place showing two more Russian tanks – T-80BV and T-72B with cope cages – being destroyed by the Ukrainian 59th Motorized Brigade using FPV loitering munitions.https://t.co/7m2EwzOvEP pic.twitter.com/linZj3rNEv
— 🇺🇦 Ukraine Weapons Tracker (@UAWeapons) April 28, 2023
