There’s a bureaucratically complex but perfectly legal way for the administration of Pres. Joe Biden to send to Ukraine the thing Ukrainian brigades need most. Shells.
The U.S. Army years ago determined that these DPICMs—produced in large quantities between the 1970s and 1990s—are unreliable and unsafe, as any particular submunition has up to a 14-percent chance of being a dud.
The Army around 2017 declared a requirement for a new cluster shell with a one-percent dud rate. “Rounds now in the U.S. stockpile do not meet the Office of the Secretary of Defense’s goal,” wrote Peter Burke, then the service’s top ammunition manager.
Their shit is worth nothing. It’s not even being manufactured any more.
It’s a stockpile reserved in case US military needs it. Its value is the replacement value of that functionality, and that goes directly to American businesses
See I know you’re trying to give me valuable information about my point but what I just read is that Ukraine is gonna be pulling the Darktide Ogryn maneuver and start launching crates of the dud shells instead of actually using them as munitions.
More seriously, I was talking more about manufacturer’s current products rather than their stockpile stuff. The argument would go that devaluing any product they’ve made does damage to the demand for all products they still make.
From the article:
Their shit is worth nothing. It’s not even being manufactured any more.
It’s a stockpile reserved in case US military needs it. Its value is the replacement value of that functionality, and that goes directly to American businesses
It’s a stockpile that explicitly doesn’t meet US military standards. It needs to be disposed of anyway.
See I know you’re trying to give me valuable information about my point but what I just read is that Ukraine is gonna be pulling the Darktide Ogryn maneuver and start launching crates of the dud shells instead of actually using them as munitions.
More seriously, I was talking more about manufacturer’s current products rather than their stockpile stuff. The argument would go that devaluing any product they’ve made does damage to the demand for all products they still make.