Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
8JUN

Iran War Burns Through Pacific Missile Reserves

3 min read
09:58UTC

The US has fired more cruise missiles into Iran in four weeks than it can build in two and a half years. The replacements were earmarked for a China contingency.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Pacific deterrence is being spent in Iran faster than production can replace it.

Bloomberg reported on 4 April that the US has fired more than 1,000 JASSM-ER cruise missiles in the first four weeks of Operation Epic Fury. The missiles were drawn from stockpiles previously allocated to Pacific Command for a potential Taiwan contingency. 1

Annual JASSM-ER output stands at 396, expandable to 860 under surge capacity. At 1,000 consumed in 28 days, the Iran war is burning through 2.5 years of planned production each month. Total funded inventory since 2009: just over 6,200. The restock gap runs 18 to 30 months under even the most optimistic surge scenario.

Combined with Arrow-3 interceptors at 81% depletion and THAAD stocks within one month of exhaustion, the US is simultaneously drawing down its primary standoff strike capability and its missile defence inventory. No emergency resupply announcement has been made for any of these systems. The RUSI report that documented 11,294 munitions expended in the campaign's first 16 days at $26 billion now has a sequel: the specific weapon designed for a Taiwan Strait scenario is being consumed at a rate that leaves the Pacific defenceless through at least mid-2028.

Pentagon officials declined to comment. China does not need classified intelligence to calculate what this means. Bloomberg published the numbers.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US had a stockpile of advanced cruise missiles that it was keeping in reserve to deter China from invading Taiwan. It has now used more than 1,000 of those missiles in the Iran war in just four weeks. America makes only about 400 of these missiles per year, even at maximum factory effort. Replacing what was used will take at least two years. During those two years, the missiles that were supposed to stop a China attack on Taiwan are not available. China's military planners can read the same news report that Bloomberg published.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

JASSM-ER is built at a single Lockheed Martin facility in Troy, Alabama. The production bottleneck is tooling and component supply, not labour or willingness. The US decision to deprioritise precision munitions production following the Cold War and to rely on just-in-time inventory assumptions left the industrial base unable to surge beyond 860 units annually on any notice period shorter than 18 months.

The Pacific Command allocation problem is structural: JASSM-ER is the primary weapon for the US Air Force's anti-access/area denial penetration concept in a Taiwan scenario, designed to defeat Chinese S-400 equivalents from beyond their engagement range. No alternative weapon with equivalent standoff range and payload exists in current US inventory, meaning the depletion has no near-term tactical substitute.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Pacific deterrence is materially degraded for 18-30 months regardless of how the Iran conflict ends, creating a window Chinese strategic planners can observe and potentially exploit.

  • Consequence

    The $200 billion war supplemental debate in Congress will now include a Pacific industrial base dimension, potentially increasing the final figure and the political complexity.

First Reported In

Update #59 · Day 37: A Ground War Inside Iran That Nobody Will Name

Jerusalem Post / Bloomberg· 5 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
Gulf shipping and insurance markets
With Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb both hostile at once, war-risk underwriters face their first dual-chokepoint pricing problem; the rerouting hedge that absorbed one closure is gone for Israeli-linked hulls. Any deal that reopens Hormuz without a Houthi stand-down clause delivers only partial shipping relief.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Russia and China met IAEA chief Grossi jointly in Geneva on 5 June to coordinate an advance blocking position against Washington's censure resolution, the first documented instance of proactive pre-session obstruction rather than reactive post-vote dissent. Beijing's move came four days after OFAC designated Shanghai Qianye Energy under Iran energy sanctions.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia was left out of the emergency $4.01 billion Patriot waiver Qatar received on 2 May as its own PAC-3 stocks ran near-empty from intercepting Iranian salvoes over Aramco facilities. Riyadh is on a standard 18-month FMS queue behind a production line booked through 2030, with no equivalent priority to Qatar's Al Udeid basing role.
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
Houthis (Ansar Allah)
The Houthis declared a complete ban on Israeli Red Sea navigation on 8 June and struck Jaffa, their first attack on Israeli territory since April, seven days after the Tasnim authorisation to activate other fronts including Bab el-Mandeb. The declaration put both chokepoints under hostile authority simultaneously.
Iran
Iran
Iran agreed the 9 June mutual halt after the Mahshahr exchange and coordinated with Russia and China to block Washington's IAEA censure resolution, using the Board as a second front while the bilateral pause held on the military one. Tehran's acceptance of the Lebanon carve-out contradicts the linkage position it stated on 1 June.
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Benjamin Netanyahu and the IDF
Israel struck the Karun Petrochemical plant at Mahshahr on 8 June over Trump's explicit objection, then agreed a halt with Iran the following day scoped on Israeli terms with Lebanon carved out. Netanyahu's posture is that the IDF will not accept Iranian missile factories as off-limits regardless of US diplomatic timelines.