Pentagon and industry officials acknowledged they are still figuring out how to arm Ukraine in their first public comments on the issue.

According to Pentagon budget chief Mike McCord, high-end conflicts consume a lot of munitions and weaponry. However, they have yet to determine where the supply chains are limited.

The United States has “not been in a position where we’ve gotten only a few days of some critical ammunition left,” McCord said, “but we are now supporting a partner who is.”

Senior Pentagon and business officials insist that efforts are finally picking up to supplant the weapons that the United States and its allies have sent to Ukraine, depleting stockpiles that are deemed crucial to intimidating China or other possible adversaries for years to come.

“As we work with industry to accelerate production on both replenishment systems and direct procurements under the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative or USAI, we’re using a number of tools to get the funding moving, and the contracting happening quickly,” Bill LaPlante, the undersecretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment, said during a briefing today at the Pentagon.

155mm artillery rounds
(Source: picryl.com)

The Ukrainians are using up almost all of the 155mm artillery rounds that have been recently delivered. By the spring, Pentagon notes, we will be able to deliver 20,000 rounds per month.

However, it will take time to produce enough of them, adding that the US will reach a rate of 40,000 rounds per month by the spring of 2025.

Rebuilding plants that produced artillery, rockets, missiles, and air defense systems for peacetime efficiency rather than wartime production is proving to be a challenging endeavor.