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Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost weapons ... - CBS News
Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost weapons ... - CBS News
President Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to address constraints in the production of munitions, according to a presidential memo released on Tuesday. The war against Iran has
highlighted concerns over munitions stockpiles
and rates of production.
The
memo
delegates the Defense Secretary to use the Defense Production Act, which can be used to jumpstart production of key items. The memo says the mechanism is warranted because fragile supply chains and production bottlenecks may "impair the ability" for the U.S. to expand the availability of munitions, missiles and equipment required for the national defense.
The memo — which says it is scheduled to be formally published on Wednesday — invoked a section of the 1950 law that allows the government and private firms to forge "voluntary agreements and plans of action to help provide for the national defense."
"Sometimes we need the collective wisdom of all the assembled companies to collaborate and solve our problems for us and we want them to provide their best advice from the industrial side," Michael Cadenazzi, the assistant secretary of defense for ind…
US Considers Licensing Missile Production to Europe and Ukraine
US Considers Licensing Missile Production to Europe and Ukraine
June 17, 2026Clash Report
The Scranton Army Ammunition Plant in Pennsylvania, US, April 13, 2023 - AP
U.S. President Donald Trump plans to ask domestic defense companies to manufacture weapons under license in Europe and Ukraine, according to Bloomberg.
The initiative aims to address severe shortages in air defense capabilities as Western allies struggle to meet production demands.
When asked directly on the subject matter at the G7 summit the U.S. president told reporters that his administration was considering it.
“They would like to be able to do that. We'll take a look at it; they have asked about it,” Trump said Wednesday.
The proposal comes amid an acute need in Ukraine for interceptor missiles capable of halting Russian ballistic strike operations.
The U.S. remains the sole producer of these specific systems, complicating procurement efforts for Kyiv.
U.S. stockpiles have faced severe depletion due to recent military consumption in Iran.
This depletion, combined with the extensive timeframe required to scale domestic U.S. output, prompted Trump to present licensing alternatives to allies.
Speaking at …
US missile production could expand to Europe and Ukraine under Trump ...
US missile production could expand to Europe and Ukraine under Trump ...
Trump moves to involve US firms in missile production in Europe and Ukraine
Thu, June 18, 2026 - 06:30
2 min
What is known about Trump's plans regarding missile production?
Kateryna Serohina
Donald Trump (photo: Getty Images)
US President Donald Trump plans to ask American defense companies to produce weapons under license in Europe and Ukraine, according to
Bloomberg
.
Bloomberg notes that Ukraine needs air defense systems, particularly interceptor missiles, to shoot down Russian ballistic missiles. However, the problem is that such missiles can only be produced by the United States.
But given that the US has exhausted its stockpiles in Iran, and replenishing them will take time, Trump told allies at the G7 summit that he would consider granting licenses. That is, to allow missiles to be produced in Europe and Ukraine.
The relevant information was provided to the publication by officials speaking on condition of anonymity. At the same time, Trump himself also publicly commented on the matter.
"They would like to be able to do it, we’ll take a look at it," the US leader told journalists in response to a quest…
Trump administration could order U.S. manufacturers to make more ...
Trump administration could order U.S. manufacturers to make more ...
U.S. sailors signal to an E-2D Hawkeye aircraft as it taxis in support of Operation Epic Fury on Saturday.
U.S. Navy / Getty Images
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March 4, 2026, 6:00 AM EST
By
Gordon Lubold
,
Courtney Kube
,
Julie Tsirkin
and
Katherine Doyle
WASHINGTON — Concerns over depleting munitions used to defend American forces in the Middle East may lead the Trump administration to force defense companies to produce more weaponry quickly, according to three people familiar with the discussions.
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In private briefings with Congress, Trump administration officials have discussed the prospect of invoking the Defense Production Act to accelerate the production of munitions as the U.S. carries out a war with Iran, known as Operation Epic Fury, these people said. Such a move would go beyond President Donald Trump’s public urging that defense companies manufacture more weaponry.
“We have unlimited middle and upper ammunition, which is really what we’re using in this war,” Trump told reporters Tuesday, though there is…
Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration about the shortfall of munitions, according to a memo filed in the Federal Register on T...
Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration about the shortfall of munitions, according to a memo filed in the Federal Register on Tuesday.
Donald Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost weapon deliveries
Donald Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost weapon deliveries
Donald Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost weapon deliveries
The Cold War-era law is being dusted off again as the administration moves to ramp up munitions output and shore up critical mineral supply chains
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by
Editorial Team
Jun. 16, 2026
President Donald Trump has turned to one of the most powerful tools in the executive branch’s arsenal, the Defense Production Act, to accelerate US weapon production. The move is aimed at strengthening the domestic defense industrial base at a time when geopolitical tensions are stretching American stockpiles thin.
The DPA, originally passed in 1950 during the Korean War, gives the president authority to direct private industry to prioritize government contracts, expand production capacity, and secure critical supply chains.
What Trump actually did
On May 23, 2025, Trump issued a memorandum waiving certain statutory requirements under Section 303 of the Defense Production Act for both munitions and critical minerals, clearing regulatory hurdles slowing down domestic production of bullets, bombs, and the raw materials needed to make them.
Adver…
Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost munitions supply chains
Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost munitions supply chains
Trump invokes Defense Production Act to boost munitions supply chains
The Cold War-era law gives the president sweeping power to prioritize contracts and direct resources toward national defense production.
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by
Editorial Team
Jun. 16, 2026
President Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to ramp up munitions and supply chain production, deploying one of the most powerful tools in the executive branch’s arsenal to address growing concerns about military readiness.
What the Defense Production Act actually does
Signed into law in 1950 during the Korean War, the DPA gives the president authority to prioritize contracts with private companies, allocate materials and resources for defense purposes, and essentially tell industry where to focus its efforts. When the president invokes the DPA, the government can direct manufacturers to fill military orders before commercial ones, provide financial incentives to expand production capacity, and ensure critical supply chains don’t have bottlenecks that could compromise national defense.
The law has been used by presidents of both parties for purp…
AMERICAN consulted in White House, District of Columbia, United States
Michael Cadenazzi, the Department of War’s assistant secretary for industrial base policy, discussed President Trump’s move to invoke the Defense Production Act to boost munitions production using voluntary agreements.
Michael Cadenazzi, the Department of War’s assistant secretary for industrial base policy, said President Donald Trump has invoked theDefense Production Act, or DPA, to establish a framework that allows munitionsmanufacturers to coordinate with the Pentagon on supply chain, production and industrial base challenges through voluntary agreements, Breaking Defense reported Tuesday.
Table of Contents
As the defense industrial base works to expand capacity and address munitions production challenges, military and industry leaders will gather at upcoming Potomac Officers Club events focused on military modernization and readiness.Register nowfor the2026 Army Summit, taking place Thursday, June 18, andsecure your spotat the2026 Air and Space Summiton July 30. You can alsosign upfor the2026 Navy Summiton Aug. 27 to hear experts discuss the priorities shaping the future of DOW and the defense industrial base.
Speaking at a Center for a New American Security event, Cadenaz…
Trump taps Defence Production Act to boost US weapons stockpiles drained by Iran war
Trump taps Defence Production Act to boost US weapons stockpiles drained by Iran war
US President Donald Trump invoked the Defence Production Act in an effort to bolster delivery of weapons whose stockpiles critics say have been strained by the war in Iran and other conflicts.
The president cited “systemic constraints in the munitions industrial base” in his order for Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth to make “voluntary agreements and plans of action” to address the depleted US defence capacity, according to a memo dated June 11 and posted in the Federal Register.
It was not...
Trump Invokes Defense Production Act to Tackle Munitions Supply Crunch
Trump Invokes Defense Production Act to Tackle Munitions Supply Crunch
Trump Invokes Defense Production Act to Tackle Munitions Supply Crunch
By
Marius Bujor
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Updated on:
June 17, 2026
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Trump Invokes Defense Production Act to Tackle Munitions Supply Crunch
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Trump’s June 11 Defense Production Act order lets the Pentagon’s top official strike voluntary deals with industry after finding munitions bottlenecks threaten national defense readiness.
President Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act on June 11, directing the Pentagon’s top official to pursue voluntary industry agreements after finding munitions supply-chain constraints may threaten national defense preparedness.
The order, made public Tuesday and formally published Wednesday in the Federal Register, rests on a legal finding that conditions in the munitions industrial base pose a potential threat to national defense. The finding triggers a process that lets the government sanction cooperation among defense contractors that antitrust law would otherwise restrict.
For aerospace executives, the stakes are direct. The bottlenecked subsystems named in the order — solid rocke…
Trump uses Cold War-era law to boost US weapons supplies after stocks ...
Trump uses Cold War-era law to boost US weapons supplies after stocks ...
US President
Donald Trump
has invoked the US Defence Production Act in a bid to accelerate the delivery of weapons after stockpiles were depleted during the war with Iran and other conflicts.
Mr Trump cited “systemic constraints in the munitions industrial base” in his order for Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth to make “voluntary agreements and plans of action” to address the reduced US defence capacity, according to a memo dated June 11 and posted in the
Federal Register
.
While the document didn’t detail how those agreements would go beyond the administration’s engagement with defence contractors like Lockheed Martin and RTX, the Pentagon’s industrial base policy chief said the DPA allowed for consultations with private businesses without violating antitrust law.
Arab leaders convene at G7 in France to discuss Iran-US agreement
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The “voluntary agreements” are meant to allow for “conversations with them, for us to articulate problems to them, around nasty issues in the supply chain or the industrial base,” Michael Cadenazzi told Bloomberg on Tuesday.
“We are asking them to work together in a way t…
Trump invokes law to increase weapons production | CNN Politics
Trump invokes law to increase weapons production | CNN Politics
US President Donald Trump reacts and gestures during a bilateral meeting with India's Prime Minister as part of the G7 summit, in Evian, eastern France, on June 17, 2026.
Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
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Summary
President Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to compel defense companies to increase weapons production.
The war with Iran depleted significant portions of key US missile stockpiles, according to experts and officials.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth publicly said there was not a crisis while analysis shows the US expended roughly half of critical missile inventories.
AI-generated summary was reviewed by a CNN editor.
President Donald Trump has invoked
the Defense Production Act
to force defense companies to manufacture more weapons after the war with Iran depleted stockpiles
In a document signed last week, the president says that he finds “that conditions exist which may pose a direct threat to the national defense or its preparedness programs.”
“In particular, systemic constr…
Trump invokes Defense Production Act for U.S. munitions supply chains
Trump invokes Defense Production Act for U.S. munitions supply chains
Rising pressure on the U.S. defense industrial base is pushing Washington to address weak points in weapons manufacturing capacity. The action targets bottlenecks in munitions production and related supply chains as demand tests the ability of manufacturers to deliver.
The June 11 memorandum says conditions exist that may pose a direct threat to national defense or its preparedness programs. Trump points to limited production capacity, fragile supply chains, long-lead dependencies and other production bottlenecks in the defense sector.
Among the most capacity-constrained sub-systems are solid rocket motors, igniters and guidance systems, which are critical for both legacy weapons systems and future modernization programs.
The move comes as concern grows in Washington over whether U.S. weapons manufacturers can meet current demand. By focusing on supply chain weaknesses and production delays, the administration is seeking to improve output in a sector that remains central to military readiness.
Our earlier article on General Motors partnering with Lockheed Martin covered how the companies plan to scale U.S. …
Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration about the shortfall of munitions, according to a memo filed in the Federal Register on T...
Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration about the shortfall of munitions, according to a memo filed in the Federal Register on Tuesday […]
Trump is forcing U.S. companies to manufacture more weaponry
ByJustin Goldman
Jun 16
Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration abo...
Trump is forcing U.S. companies to manufacture more weaponry
ByJustin Goldman
Jun 16
Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration about the shortfall of munitions, according to a memo filed in the Federal Register on Tuesday.
Trump invokes defense production act for munitions, supply chains
Trump invokes defense production act for munitions, supply chains
US President Donald Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to address constraints in weapons supply and development for munitions production and supply chains, according to a memo made public on Tuesday.“I hereby find that conditions exist which may pose a direct threat to the national defense or its preparedness programs,” Trump said in a June 11 memorandum to the Pentagon chief.For all the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app.He cited “limited production capacity, fragile supply chains, long-lead dependencies, and related production bottlenecks.”Read more: Trump says Iran deal to be public soon and will rule out nuclear weapon for Tehran
Corroboration
No verdict, no pronouncement. The model extracts atomic factual claims with verbatim quotes; every quote is validated against the source text and corroboration is computed by counting how many editorially-opposed blocs assert each fact. 2 fabricated/unverifiable quotes were rejected by the cite-or-die gate.
The spine · 3 facts corroborated across ≥2 opposed blocs
2×broadly confirmedPresident Donald Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to address constraints in the production of munitions and supply chains.
gulfother
alarabiya“Trump invokes defense production act for munitions, supply chains”
bluesky“Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration about the shortfall of munitions”
cbsnews.com“President Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to address constraints in the production of munitions”
2×broadly confirmedPresident Trump cited 'limited production capacity, fragile supply chains, long-lead dependencies, and related production bottlenecks' as reasons for invoking the Defense Production Act.
gulfother
alarabiya“He cited “limited production capacity, fragile supply chains, long-lead dependencies, and related production bottlenecks.””
cbsnews.com“The memo says the mechanism is warranted because fragile supply chains and production bottlenecks may "impair the ability" for the U.S. to expand the availability of munitions, missiles and equipment required for the national defense.”
2×cross-perspective · 2The Defense Production Act invocation was motivated by concerns that munitions stockpiles have been strained by the war in Iran and other conflicts.
chinaother
scmp“Trump taps Defence Production Act to boost US weapons stockpiles drained by Iran war”
cbsnews.com“The war against Iran has highlighted concerns over munitions stockpiles and rates of production.”
Single-source · 3 — reported by one bloc only (uncorroborated)
President Trump cited 'systemic constraints in the munitions industrial base' as a reason for invoking the Defense Production Act.
scmp
The Defense Production Act invocation authorizes the Defense Secretary to establish voluntary agreements and plans of action with munitions manufacturers to address supply chain and production challenges.
cbsnews.com
Michael Cadenazzi, the Department of War’s assistant secretary for industrial base policy, discussed President Trump’s invocation of the Defense Production Act.
gdelt
Framing · 5 — loaded language surfaced (spin shown, not adopted)
alarabiya
“Trump invokes defense production act for munitions, supply chains”
→ President Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to address constraints in munitions and supply chains.
bluesky
“Trump quietly invoked the Defense Production Act last week to address rising concerns within his administration about the shortfall of munitions”
→ President Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to address a shortfall in munitions.
scmp
“Trump taps Defence Production Act to boost US weapons stockpiles drained by Iran war”
→ President Trump invoked the Defense Production Act to address depleted U.S. defense capacity.
gdelt
“Michael Cadenazzi, the Department of War’s assistant secretary for industrial base policy, discussed President Trump’s move to invoke the Defense Production Act to boost munitions production using voluntary agreements.”
→ Michael Cadenazzi discussed President Trump’s invocation of the Defense Production Act to boost munitions production.
cbsnews.com
“The war against Iran has highlighted concerns over munitions stockpiles and rates of production.”
→ The war in Iran has raised concerns about U.S. munitions stockpiles and production rates.
Entities
Donald Trumpperson
United Statesplace
Iranplace
The U.S.place
Trump administrationorg
CBS Newsorg
ADMINISTRATIONorg
Federal Registerorg
Defense Production Actorg