Big C said:
Honest question for you military logistics types: One of Ukraine's biggest needs is "shells"? It would seem as though that would be the easiest thing to help them out with, even if it meant us making more, starting many months ago. Are they specific shells that need to fit their weaponry? Even so...
It's not like the US/NATO aren't capable of manufacturing shells. Jesus. Okay, there is probably a piece here that I'm missing, so what is it?
You'd think. We can't at this level, and bureaucrat are in charge. My question is why didn't dozens of leaders act on this need six months ago?
You're assuming a lot. Europe, after two world wars, is war weary and depends upon America for many military needs. The US and NATO are also apparently more enamored of newer technologies. Russia is waging an older war with a focus on artillery.
They apparently have massive stockpiles and big production capability. Colonel McGregor has explained this is why he believes Russian casualties are low, and Ukraines are high (275K KIA, 200K injured, with 50% able to resume fighting). Even official European Command estimates a 4-to-1 daily artillery advantagecto Russia, while McGregor estimates its up to 10-to-1 ratio, 60,000 shells vs 6,000 shells, per day).
HistoryLegends posted an alleged accounting (summary) of various ammo and missile stockpiles, and yearly production numbers. The US is reportedly planning a 500% increase, which still won't meet Ukraines total need next year. Israel supposedly has one of the last large stockpiles of ammo, and it could be ours. Unclear there. If that supposed allotment of 250,000 shells goes to Ukraine, it might last 41 days.
Don't forget, this is the kind of manufacturing we abandoned to China and Mexico. Could the MIC make money by producing ammo in Mexico?
(Undoutedly some ammo is going sideways to the black market; and if NATO countries are seriously concerned about Russia, wouldn't they preserve ammo for their own defense?)
P.S. Fifty years ago in SoCal there were many skilled craftsmen, machinists, welders that worked at McDonnell Douglass, Hughes, in car manufacturing, military industries, etc. We lost a lot of that talent to Texas, Mexico, Vietnam, China and elsewhere.