President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth have promised a major ramp-up in U.S. weapons production, aiming to replenish depleted stockpiles and modernize the military. However, new federal data and industry officials suggest that many of these ambitious plans will take years to materialize.
The defense industry has publicly announced billions of dollars in new investments to expand manufacturing lines for munitions and missiles. Much of this added capacity, according to company projections and government reports, will not begin delivering significant quantities until the next decade.
A key bottleneck involves specialized machinery and long-lead components needed to produce precision-guided weapons. Defense contractors have cited supply chain delays and workforce shortages as persistent obstacles to faster production.
Federal audits indicate that some planned production lines are still years away from full operation. The delays complicate the Pentagon’s push to replenish weapons sent to Ukraine and other allies, with some stockpiles at their lowest levels in decades.
While the administration has used emergency authorities to fast-track orders, industry executives note that physically building new factories and furnishing them with tooling takes time. One major contractor publicly projected its first new production line would not hit peak output until 2028.
The Trump administration has argued that long-term investment in base capacity is necessary, even if immediate benefits are limited. Officials have highlighted new contracts aimed at incentivizing private sector investment in larger, more resilient supply chains.
In the near term, the military will likely rely on slower, incremental deliveries from existing production lines. The gap between political promises and industrial reality underscores the structural challenges of rapidly accelerating weapons production in a peacetime economy, experts said.





