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Is the US Military Really Out of Ammo in Iran?

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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

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3:09

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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

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kind of acknowledges how unsure they are

5:22

about the exact numbers saying quote

5:24

there might be 10 medium range ballistic

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missiles may maybe not. These

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assessments are built from multiple

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different sources from spies to tracking

5:33

cargo trucks. However, getting these

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kind of ammunition numbers as a civilian

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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

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much easier than determining how much

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ammunition is on the shelf. This is

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partly because ammunition cannot be seen

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even with today's satellite images that

5:51

civilians can purchase. You cannot

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purchase photos of classified US weapons

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inventories off Craigslist and and if

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you do, you might go to prison for it.

5:59

Ammo is stored in hidden covered

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warehouses. They're not free balling it

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out in open fields like main battle

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tanks. It's buried deeply in forward

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locations. It's spread out and

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distributed to thousands of forward

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bases and outposts around the world and

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then thousands of separate units. Anyone

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who's worked retail can appreciate how

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much of a nightmare doing military

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inventory is. The Pentagon doesn't make

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this any easier to track for us. They do

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not publish total inventories for key

6:25

munitions. Thanks a lot, Pentagon. They

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rarely publish numbers of expended

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munitions. The government does not

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publish information on surge rate

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production capacity. So, we're left with

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guessing based on information cobbled

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together from public contracts and

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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

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