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Mark Cancian
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Mark Cancian

CSIS senior adviser on US defence budgets, procurement, and munitions burn rates.

Last refreshed: 1 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

How long will it take the US to rebuild missile stockpiles used in the Iran war?

Timeline for Mark Cancian

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Common Questions
Who is Mark Cancian at CSIS?
Mark Cancian is a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), specialising in US defence budgets and military procurement. He previously worked at the Office of Management and Budget and served as a Marine Corps Reserve colonel.Source: CSIS
What did CSIS say about US missile stockpiles and the Iran war?
CSIS analyst Mark Cancian was cited in Bloomberg reporting that the Iran war was consuming roughly 1,000 JASSM-ER Cruise Missiles per month, representing about 2.5 years of planned US production capacity, creating an 18-to-30-month restock gap even under surge production.Source: Bloomberg / CSIS
How many JASSM missiles has the US used in Iran?
Bloomberg reported more than 1,000 JASSM-ER Cruise Missiles were fired in the first four weeks of Operation Epic Fury, drawn partly from stockpiles earmarked for Pacific Command.Source: Bloomberg

Background

Mark F. Cancian is a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington DC, where he specialises in US defence budgets, military readiness, force structure, and procurement. He previously served as a defence analyst in the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and retired as a colonel in the US Marine Corps Reserve. His estimates on weapons stockpile consumption, production timelines, and the gap between wartime burn rates and industrial base capacity are cited by major news organisations when the Pentagon withholds its own figures. He co-authored, with CSIS research associate Chris H. Park, the Defence 360 programme's munitions-burn-rate analysis series that became the reference point for Congressional and media coverage of the Iran war's impact on Pacific readiness.

Cancian's Iran-war analysis established two key figures that entered public debate. First, Bloomberg's reporting on JASSM-ER consumption in Operation Epic Fury drew on his estimate that at ~1,000 missiles consumed in the first 28 days, the war was burning through 2.5 years of planned production each month, leaving an 18-to-30-month restock gap even under surge conditions. Second, his analysis was referenced in coverage of Hegseth's FY27 Posture Statement, which disclosed the war's $25 billion cost and a defence budget request 40% above FY26. On 27 May 2026, Cancian and Park published a CSIS Defence 360 brief warning that high expenditure of key munitions in Operation Epic Fury had created a window of vulnerability until inventories return to pre-war levels, a conclusion cited in briefing reports on CENTCOM's subsequent measured strikes on Qeshm and Goruk.

Cancian's public role is to translate Pentagon procurement jargon into figures Congress and the public can assess. His estimates carry weight precisely because the DoD releases strategic stockpile data only selectively, and his OMB background means he reads the budget mechanics as well as the hardware counts.

More questions
Who is Mark Cancian and why does his analysis matter?
Mark F. Cancian is a senior adviser at CSIS, a former OMB defence analyst and USMC Reserve colonel. He is the principal public-domain analyst of US munitions burn rates; his estimates on JASSM-ER consumption in the Iran war became the reference figures for Bloomberg, the NYT and the WSJ when the Pentagon declined to publish its own numbers.Source: CSIS
What did CSIS say about US missile stockpiles after the Iran war?
Cancian and Park (CSIS) warned on 27 May 2026 that Operation Epic Fury had consumed munitions at a rate that created a window of vulnerability, with inventories significantly below pre-war levels. Earlier analysis showed the war was burning through 2.5 years of planned JASSM-ER production each month, leaving an 18-30 month restock gap under surge conditions.Source: CSIS Defence 360
How many JASSM missiles did the US fire in Operation Epic Fury?
Bloomberg reported the US fired more than 1,000 JASSM-ER Cruise Missiles in the first four weeks of Operation Epic Fury. Annual production capacity is 396, expandable to 860 at surge. At the wartime burn rate, the US was consuming 2.5 years of production per month, drawing heavily on stocks reserved for a potential Pacific contingency.Source: Bloomberg / CSIS