トランスクリプトEnglish

Is the US Military Really Out of Ammo in Iran?

21m 10s4,048 単語622 segmentsEnglish

全トランスクリプト

0:00

Experts warn the US military is in

0:02

danger of running out of critical

0:03

missiles. They claim US forces burned

0:05

through 50% of their arsenal in just a

0:08

few weeks of the war in Iran. The

0:09

American think tank CSIS warned that

0:12

it'll take between 2 and 5 years to

0:14

rebuild America's arsenal at this point.

0:16

Others claim that it'll take a decade.

0:18

But is that really the case? Public

0:20

estimates of weapon stockpiles in the

0:22

past have been wrong. It was widely

0:24

reported that Russia would run out of

0:25

missiles within 3 months of the start of

0:27

the war in Ukraine. This turned out to

0:29

be incorrect. The media claimed that

0:31

Iran was nearly out of missiles in 2025,

0:33

which also turned out to be wrong. I've

0:35

been lied to and hurt before in the

0:37

past. How can I trust you now when you

0:39

tell me that the US military, which

0:40

spends a trillion dollars on defense

0:42

each year, is running out of ammo? Sir,

0:44

how many tomahawks did we just fire?

0:47

Yes, Roger. Today, I thought it would be

0:50

interesting to look deeper at this

0:51

question. Why is it so hard to estimate

0:53

a country's classified weapon stockpile?

0:56

Whose job is it to make sure too many

0:58

missiles aren't fired? And is the US

1:00

really running out of ammo? The first

1:01

way to determine what's left in a

1:03

stockpile is by looking at the

1:04

Pentagon's own public estimates. The

1:07

Pentagon themselves reported that they

1:08

fired off a gigantic load, striking

1:10

13,000 Iranian targets in the war. But

1:13

how much of that was from the critical

1:15

munition stockpile? Multiple sources

1:17

state the US expended 850 Tomahawk

1:20

cruise missiles or about 30% of the

1:22

total stockpile. Over a thousand of the

1:24

long range joint air-to-s surface

1:26

standoff missiles Jasms were then fired

1:28

from fighter jets, roughly 20% of the

1:31

inventory. These munitions flew hundreds

1:33

of miles to blow up heavily defended

1:35

Iranian ballistic missile launchers deep

1:37

in the country. Once the skies were

1:39

safer from that initial standoff

1:41

strikes, then US forces reportedly

1:43

switched to dropping thousands of

1:46

relatively cheap JDAM bombs from F-15

1:49

bomb trucks with big dumpers. Jams are

1:52

typically launched from only 15 miles

1:54

away from their target. The Air Force

1:56

maintains a gigantic inventory of over

1:58

200,000 of these and they continue to

2:00

add 30,000 more per year. Okay, so those

2:03

aren't going anywhere anytime soon.

2:05

During the course of the Iran War,

2:07

Iranian forces fired thousands of drones

2:10

and missiles in order to defend against

2:12

that incoming fire. US warships and navy

2:14

shot off more than 20% of their critical

2:17

SM3 and SM6 interceptors. This photo

2:20

allegedly taken on board the USS Ford

2:23

aircraft carrier says that the closest

2:25

Iranian missile that got to the aircraft

2:27

carrier was about 15 miles away, too

2:29

close for comfort. Meanwhile, on the

2:31

ground, US forces shot off their Patriot

2:34

missile interceptors to defend seven

2:36

different countries in the Gulf. 1,400

2:39

of these were reportedly depleted, or

2:41

allegedly about 50% of the rounds. To

2:43

give you an idea of how intense the

2:45

initial fighting was, one new report

2:47

claims that an Iranian F5 fighter jet

2:50

bombed Camp Buring in Kuwait. Similar

2:52

burn rates were reported for the army's

2:54

precision strike missiles fired from

2:56

highar bad interceptors. But can

2:58

civilian experts, open- source

3:00

intelligence, and the media really know

3:02

these top secret classified numbers? And

3:04

what is their record of accuracy when it

3:06

comes to claiming inventories are low?

3:08

And we're going to get into all that in

3:09

a minute. But first, today's episode is

3:11

sponsored by Abacus AI. As a new father,

3:13

the thing that I use these the most for

3:15

is questions about my baby. So, I'll ask

3:17

it, "How can I be a better father? My

3:18

daughter just turned 10 months old, and

3:20

it says, "Be present in small moments.

3:22

Put the phone away when you're with her.

3:23

Even 15 minutes of fully focused play

3:25

matters more than hours of half

3:27

attention." So, my favorite thing about

3:28

Abacus is that it has access to all of

3:31

the large language models in one place

3:33

at once. From ChatGpt, Gemini, Claude,

3:35

Grock, and Deepseek, its route LLM

3:38

feature automatically picks the best

3:40

model for my specific prompt. I usually

3:42

ask a million questions like, "Is it

3:43

normal my baby is as gassy as me?" Phew.

3:46

Gemini says that it is. But it's more

3:48

than just helping me not screw up as a

3:49

parent. Abacus AI also has the latest

3:52

image and video generation tools. It has

3:54

PPT generation that creates deeply

3:56

crafted research presentations. It has a

3:58

powerful general agent that helps you

3:59

build full apps, websites, mobile apps,

4:02

and even other AI apps. It's priced

4:04

affordably at just $10 a month, which is

4:06

a lot less than paying for your LLM

4:08

separately. Visit chatlm.abacus.com.

4:11

abacus.ai or click my link in the

4:13

description and pin comment below. Back

4:15

to is the US military really running out

4:17

of ammo? Then in a report from

4:18

Bloomberg, they said that the vast

4:20

majority of the remaining 80% of

4:22

America's Jasm extended range air

4:25

launched missiles were just allocated to

4:27

the Middle East, leaving only around 400

4:30

remaining for the rest of the whole

4:32

world. Enough to last for 30 days to

4:35

defend Taiwan. But the real question is

4:37

whether or not this anonymous source

4:39

actually has classified access to the

4:41

full endtoend operational picture of

4:43

total ammo inventory for America or if

4:46

they're just speculating based on

4:48

numbers that they are actually familiar

4:50

with. Knowing a country's total weapon

4:52

stockpile is some of the world's most

4:54

closely guarded and valuable

4:55

information. In fact, Russia, China, and

4:58

the United States intelligence services

4:59

have poured millions of dollars over the

5:02

past few years into trying to figure out

5:04

each other's stockpiles and production

5:06

rates. We know this is the case because

5:07

of recently declassified intelligence

5:10

documents. Look at this sanitized top

5:12

secret assessment of China's growing

5:14

missile stockpile from 1971, closely

5:16

tracking their progress. I like how the

5:18

case officer here writing this report

5:20

kind of acknowledges how unsure they are

5:22

about the exact numbers saying quote

5:24

there might be 10 medium range ballistic

5:27

missiles may maybe not. These

5:29

assessments are built from multiple

5:30

different sources from spies to tracking

5:33

cargo trucks. However, getting these

5:35

kind of ammunition numbers as a civilian

5:37

in the media is a much bigger challenge.

5:39

Figuring out how many tanks, aircraft,

5:41

and troops an army has as a civilian is

5:43

much easier than determining how much

5:45

ammunition is on the shelf. This is

5:47

partly because ammunition cannot be seen

5:49

even with today's satellite images that

5:51

civilians can purchase. You cannot

5:53

purchase photos of classified US weapons

5:55

inventories off Craigslist and and if

5:57

you do, you might go to prison for it.

5:59

Ammo is stored in hidden covered

6:01

warehouses. They're not free balling it

6:03

out in open fields like main battle

6:05

tanks. It's buried deeply in forward

6:07

locations. It's spread out and

6:08

distributed to thousands of forward

6:10

bases and outposts around the world and

6:12

then thousands of separate units. Anyone

6:15

who's worked retail can appreciate how

6:16

much of a nightmare doing military

6:18

inventory is. The Pentagon doesn't make

6:20

this any easier to track for us. They do

6:23

not publish total inventories for key

6:25

munitions. Thanks a lot, Pentagon. They

6:27

rarely publish numbers of expended

6:29

munitions. The government does not

6:30

publish information on surge rate

6:32

production capacity. So, we're left with

6:34

guessing based on information cobbled

6:36

together from public contracts and

6:38

anonymous sources. Essentially, TMZ

6:40

levels of credit, but no, no, worse than

6:42

that. TMZ does some of the best open-

6:44

source intelligence reports on people

6:45

out there. The CIA should hire them. But

6:47

what about the anonymous sources

6:49

speaking to the press? A major challenge

6:51

with estimating weapon stockpiles, even

さらにアンロック

無料でサインアップしてプレミアム機能にアクセス

インタラクティブビューア

字幕を同期させ、オーバーレイを調整し、完全な再生コントロールでビデオを視聴できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

AI要約

動画コンテンツ、キーポイント、および重要なポイントのAI生成された要約を即座に取得します。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

翻訳

ワンクリックでトランスクリプトを100以上の言語に翻訳します。任意の形式でダウンロードできます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

マインドマップ

トランスクリプトをインタラクティブなマインドマップとして視覚化します。構造を一目で理解できます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトとチャット

動画コンテンツについて質問します。AIを利用してトランスクリプトから直接回答を得られます。

無料でサインアップしてアンロック

トランスクリプトをもっと活用する

無料でサインアップして、インタラクティブビューア、AI要約、翻訳、マインドマップなどをアンロックしてください。クレジットカードは不要です。

    Is the US Military Really Out… - 全文書き起こし | YouTubeTranscript.dev