Alpha Crypto Alerts Alpha Crypto Alerts
  • Investing
  • Stocks
  • Business
  • Politics
Search the Site
Popular Searches:
Adventure Samsung Community
Recent Posts
Dem Senate primary erupts in key state as candidate teams up with radical streamer: ‘America deserved 9/11’
April 8, 2026
Trump-backed candidate aims to pad GOP’s fragile House majority battle in showdown for MTG’s seat
April 8, 2026
White House unleashes on Stacey Abrams in latest clash over Trump’s election order
April 8, 2026
Alpha Crypto Alerts Alpha Crypto Alerts
  • Investing
  • Stocks
  • Business
  • Politics

    Smarter markets start here.
    Join our newsletter

    Copyright © 2026 acryptoalert.com | All Rights Reserved
    Home/Politics/Trump says defense giants will quadruple production of ‘exquisite class’ weapons after White House meeting
    Politics

    Trump says defense giants will quadruple production of ‘exquisite class’ weapons after White House meeting

    March 7, 2026 3 Min Read

    President Donald Trump said Friday that during a meeting with defense executives they had agreed to increase production of what he called ‘exquisite class’ weapons by four times as his administration looks to accelerate weapons production while military operations against Iran continue.

    ‘Expansion began three months prior to the meeting, and Plants and Production of many of these Weapons are already under way,’ Trump wrote on Truth Social after the meeting. 

    ‘We have a virtually unlimited supply of Medium and Upper Medium Grade Munitions, which we are using, as an example, in Iran, and recently used in Venezuela,’ he said. ‘Regardless, however, we have also increased Orders at these levels.’

    Trump said the meeting concluded with executives agreeing to come back to the White House in two months. 

    The White House emphasized the session was scheduled weeks ago and was not convened in response to immediate battlefield shortages. Officials described the meeting as part of a broader effort to strengthen the U.S. defense industrial base and speed production of American-made weapons.

    Companies in attendance Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, RTX Corporation, Boeing, Honeywell, BAE Systems and L3Harris Technologies. 

    The meeting comes as U.S. forces remain engaged in Operation Epic Fury, a campaign targeting Iranian military assets following coordinated U.S.-Israeli strikes. Administration officials have maintained that U.S. readiness remains strong, even as the pace of missile defense operations has drawn scrutiny on Capitol Hill.

    During the 2025 12-day Iran conflict, U.S. forces fired more than 150 Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) interceptors — roughly a quarter of the global inventory — to shield Israel and U.S. assets from Iranian missile attacks, according to defense assessments. Patriot PAC-3 MSE missiles are currently produced at a rate of roughly 600 to 650 annually, with replenishment timelines measured in months or years rather than weeks.

    U.S. and Israeli officials previously estimated that Iran had a large ballistic missile arsenal — roughly 2,000 to 3,000 missiles of various types at the outset of the conflict. Central Command chief Adm. Brad Cooper said Thursday Iran’s missile attacks have decreased 90% since the start of the conflict.

    Defense planners have described missile defense inventories as part of a broader strategic balancing act. The same high-end systems used to protect U.S. bases and partners in the Middle East are also supplied to Ukraine and positioned in the Indo-Pacific, creating what some analysts characterize as a ‘zero-sum’ competition for inventory across theaters.

    Lawmakers emerging from recent classified briefings have raised questions about sustainability if operations expand. 

    Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., warned the campaign could become a ‘math problem,’ balancing incoming missile volumes against finite interceptor supplies and production capacity. 

    Other members, including Republicans briefed on the operation, have said officials assured Congress U.S. forces remain in strong shape.

    Current and former defense officials have drawn a distinction between offensive strike weapons — which can often be surged from prepositioned stocks — and defensive interceptors such as Patriot and THAAD systems, which require longer production timelines and cannot be rapidly manufactured at scale.

    Related Article

    Operation Epic Fury destroys Iran’s navy and cuts missile attacks by 90% in ongoing campaign
    This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

    Previous Post

    Kristi Noem’s firing fails to sway Democrats as DHS shutdown drags on

    Next Post

    King Charles to address ‘increasing pressures of conflict’ in speech as Trump criticizes British PM on Iran

      Smarter markets start here.
      Join our newsletter

      Popular Posts
      Politics
      Trump’s apocalyptic Iran warning raises stakes for sweeping US strike threat
      Politics
      Graham eyes ‘down payment’ on Trump-backed SAVE Act without Democratic support
      Politics
      Midterm alarm bells: Democrats face steep favorability deficit despite election gains
      American journalist kidnapped in Iraq is set free, must leave country ‘immediately,’ her employer says
      What falling wage growth says about where the U.S. economy is heading
      Iran war nears ‘completion’ as Trump eyes deadline — what the endgame could look like
      Popular
      What falling wage growth says about where the U.S. economy is heading
      Iran war nears ‘completion’ as Trump eyes deadline — what the endgame could look like
      Trending
      Trump’s apocalyptic Iran warning raises stakes for sweeping US strike threat
      Graham eyes ‘down payment’ on Trump-backed SAVE Act without Democratic support
      • Terms and Conditions
      • Privacy policy
      Copyright © 2026 acryptoalert.com | All Rights Reserved