Sinéad Baker's face on a grey background

NATO official says members often aren’t buying weapons together, and it’s a mistake

NATO members aren’t regularly buying weapons together, limiting how quickly and cheaply they can build up stockpiles, a senior alliance official said.

Tarja Jaakola, NATO’s assistant secretary general for defense industry, innovation, and armaments, said that allies can acquire weaponry most cost-effectively by jointly purchasing it.

Having multiple countries trying to independently develop similar weaponry means fewer resources per program and higher per-unit costs than working together.

But she said that’s often not what is happening.

“When I talk with the industry, the industry keeps telling me many nations still approach them individually with their individual requirements. And that is something that we should avoid,” she told UK think tank Chatham House.

Instead, “we should look at how much can we collaborate, work together,” Jaakola said. She said shared systems also make it easier for allies to operate together in a war.

She said that countries need to “make sure that we use the taxpayer’s money cost efficiently,” especially given that “the cost escalation within defense systems is higher than in the civilian market.”

She said that allies should be embracing collaboration, co-production, and joint procurement: developing, building, and buying weapons together. NATO is made up of 32 countries, some of which are small. Internal competition for resources and contracts isn’t desirable.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has driven worries of wider war across the alliance and a flurry of defense spending. As more money flows into defense, questions are being raised about traditional development and acquisition processes.

The traditional defense development cycles are too slow, and the resulting arsenals are too small. Ukraine is demonstrating that it can build and modify weapons more quickly and cheaply than its partners typically can.

Officials across the alliance have noted the issue and advocated for joint production.

NATO has been increasingly pushing for greater joint production and encouraging allies to take out multinational contracts. The alliance said last year that member states are invited to “make joint procurement the preferred procurement choice.” The European Union, where most of NATO’s members are based, has also changed rules to incentivize joint procurements.

NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said that joint procurement should reduce costs for alliance members when buying gear.

Many leaders in Europe feel the same. Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, said last year that joint procurement would “reduce costs, reduce fragmentation, increase interoperability, and strengthen our defence industrial base.”

“We are living in the most momentous and dangerous of times,” she warned. “The real question in front of us is whether Europe is prepared to act as decisively as the situation dictates. And whether Europe is ready and able to act with the speed and the ambition that is needed.”

Jaakola said that one “very good example” of effective joint production is the interceptor missiles for the US MIM-104 Patriot air defense system. There is increasing co-production for them, including Germany’s establishment of facilities to produce missiles there. But her comments suggest there is much more to be done.

A briefing presented last year to European Parliament members revealed that joint procurement across the union was far below targets, even though it said doing so would allow for better industrial leverage, better interoperability, and annual savings of several billion euros.

Jaakola also said that NATO militaries need to change how they develop weapons. She said Ukraine has shown how weapons can be developed and fielded far faster than in NATO systems.

She said it’s an “important lesson that we need to learn from Ukraine” and that NATO needs to “actually see how we can change our own mindset and our own way of working when we talk about capability development.”




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Jake Epstein

The Iran war is becoming a proving ground for the newest US weapons

The US military is launching new ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and attack drones at Iran, using the conflict to test experimental weapons in combat for the first time.

Adm. Brad Cooper, the head of US Central Command, confirmed on Tuesday that US Army units fired the Precision Strike Missile, or PrSM, at Iranian targets, calling it “a historic first” and “an unrivaled, deep-strike capability.”

The PrSM is a short-range ballistic missile that entered service just over two years ago and can be fired from an M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or HIMARS, launcher. It is manufactured by the US defense contractor Lockheed Martin and costs an estimated $1.6 million on the low end.

US officials said over the weekend that HIMARS had been used to strike Iran, though they declined to disclose which specific munitions were launched. Visuals of the strikes, however, strongly indicated that the PrSM had been used.

The PrSM’s operational debut “signals the beginning of a new chapter of Army strike capability, with significantly greater reach and accuracy,” Patrycja Bazylczyk, an associate director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Missile Defense Project, told Business Insider.

The PrSM is not the only new munition whose debut has been confirmed by the US military since American and Israeli forces began striking Iran on Saturday.


The Precision Strike Missile (PrSM) fired from a U.S. Army M270A2 and HIMARS at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico.

The Precision Strike Missile, or PrSM, can be fired from a HIMARS launcher.

US Army photo by Christopher Bohn



Hours after the first bombs dropped, CENTCOM, which oversees the military’s Middle East operations, said its Scorpion Strike task force had used one-way attack drones for the first time in combat.

CENTCOM established the task force in December, marking the first American one-way attack drone squadron in the region. Its combat debut over the weekend demonstrates a relatively rapid turnaround from fielding to operational use.

The new task force employs the Low-Cost Unmanned Combat Attack System, or LUCAS. US officials said that it is based on the Iranian-made Shahed, a drone that has gained notoriety because of its extensive use by Tehran in the Middle East and by Russia in Ukraine. Each costs roughly $35,000 apiece.

“These drones were originally an Iranian design. We took them back to America, made them better, and fired them right back at Iran,” Cooper said in a video address on Tuesday.

The heavy use of cheap one-way attack drones in Ukraine and the Middle East has forced military leaders to explore more cost-efficient air defense options so that they aren’t left relying on expensive surface-to-air or air-to-air missiles.

Bazylczyk said that “headlines have been dominated by recounts of US forces using million-dollar interceptors against thousand-dollar drones.”

“The cost imbalance is shifting,” she added. “The employment of LUCAS drones against Iran demonstrates that the US is willing to give Iran a taste of their own medicine.”


Low-cost Unmanned Combat Attack System (LUCAS) drones are positioned on the tarmac at a base in the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) operating area, Nov. 23.

The LUCAS drones cost roughly $35,000 apiece.

US Central Command photo



Dan Rice, a former US Army artillery officer who served as a special advisor to Ukraine’s military leadership, said that the PrSM and LUCAS were likely selected for their strikes based on “proper targeting,” rather than the US trying to show off its capabilities.

“Targets have been planned for a long time in most cases,” Rice told Business Insider, adding that a thorough planning process matches the right weapons with the desired combat effects. “These new weapons are part of our platform and are doing their role.”

That said, their use in combat gives the US valuable operational information about these capabilities.

The US military has hit more than 2,000 targets in Iran, the Pentagon said on Wednesday. Many of these strikes have been carried out by ground forces and aircraft, including stealth bombers and fighter jets.

US Navy destroyers have also played a key role, firing Tomahawk cruise missiles at Iranian targets.

Images of one launch from the destroyer USS Spruance on Saturday show a Tomahawk with what appears to be a black, glossy coating, notably different from the typical gray color that the cruise missiles usually sport.

Defense experts have said that the black coloring may be a low-observable coating. The War Zone, a military news site, reported that the missile could be an upgraded version of the Maritime Strike Tomahawk, used for anti-ship strikes. CENTCOM declined to provide additional information on the weapon.




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Trump muses about wars being fought ‘forever’ with just weapons stockpiles amid Iran war

President Donald Trump said on Monday that wars “could be fought ‘forever,’ and very successfully” solely with munitions stockpiles, as the US engages in major combat operations against Iran.

In a late-night Truth Social post, Trump praised the US’ supply quantities of “medium and upper medium grade” weapons. It’s not immediately clear exactly which munitions or weapons he was referring to.

“As was stated to me today, we have a virtually unlimited supply of these weapons. Wars can be fought ‘forever,’ and very successfully, using just these supplies (which are better than other countries finest arms!),” he added.

His comments come amid global uncertainty over how long the US and Israel’s war with Iran will last.

Earlier on Monday, Trump told reporters that the campaign could last four to five weeks, but that the White House was prepared “to go far longer than that.”

Washington and Tel Aviv pummeled Iran with hundreds of strikes on Saturday, killing Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in the first wave of attacks.

Iran and its allies have responded by launching ballistic missiles, rockets, and drones at Israel and Gulf nations known to host US military bases. The fighting has plunged residential and tourist areas into chaos, disrupted hundreds of flights, and sent oil prices spiking.

In his Truth Social post, Trump admitted that weapons stockpile quantities are “not where we want to be.”

“Much additional high grade weaponry is stored for us in outlying countries,” he added. It’s unclear if the president was implying that the war with Iran may require munitions from other theaters.

The White House did not respond to a request for comment sent outside regular business hours by Business Insider.

The strike campaign on Iran has raised questions in some circles about remaining US stockpiles of long-range munitions, such as the Tomahawk cruise missile. There are fears that the Pentagon may need these weapons to deter a potential conflict with other adversaries, chiefly China.

US officials said they had used a wide variety of munitions, including drones, offensive missiles, and interceptors, against Iran.




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China is going after US defense firms and execs over weapons sales to Taiwan — and Palmer Luckey’s on the list

China announced sanctions against 20 US defense companies and 10 senior executives on Friday, citing US arms sales to Taiwan as its motive.

In a statement, China’s foreign ministry said its assets within China, including movable and immovable properties, would be frozen and that domestic organizations and individuals would be prohibited from doing business with them.

Individuals named on the list would also be denied visas and entry to the country, the ministry added.

The sanctions list includes Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation, Boeing’s St. Louis branch, Epirus, and Anduril Industries founder Palmer Luckey.

In a statement, a spokesperson for the foreign ministry said: “We stress once again that the Taiwan question is at the very core of China’s core interests and the first red line that must not be crossed in China.”

“Any company or individual who engages in arms sales to Taiwan will pay the price for the wrongdoing,” they added.

When reached for comment, Anduril pointed Business Insider to an X post from Luckey in which the CEO joked that he was honored.

“I want to thank my family, my team, and my Lord Jesus Christ for this award,” Luckey wrote on X. “Anduril has been sanctioned for a while now, as have many of my peers, but it means so much to finally have my non-existent Chinese assets seized and repurposed.”

China’s sanctions follow the US announcement of a $11 billion military package for Taiwan last week.

The deal, which includes self-propelled Howitzers and HIMARS rocket launchers, still needs to be approved by Congress — but it drew a swift response from Beijing.

Lin Jian, a spokesperson for the foreign ministry, said in a statement at the time that China “strongly deplores and firmly opposes” the sales.

China regards Taiwan as a breakaway province that will one day come under Beijing’s control, and Chinese President Xi Jinping has refused to rule out an invasion of the island. Taiwan’s ruling Democratic Progressive Party views Taiwan as separate from China.

Under the Taiwan Relations Act, the US is obligated to assist Taiwan in defending itself.

Beijing has ramped up pressure around the island in recent years, holding frequent military exercises in the surrounding skies and waters.

A 2024 report by the Washington, D.C.-based think tank the Center for Strategic and International Studies suggested that China may be able to exert power over Taiwan without launching an invasion.

The report said China could impose a quarantine of the island using its coast guard.

“The purpose of a quarantine is not to completely seal Taiwan off from the world but to assert China’s control over Taiwan by setting the terms for traffic in and out of the island,” it argued.

“A key goal is to compel countries and companies to comply with China’s terms.”




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