2026年4月24日 / 美国东部时间上午7:32 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻
华盛顿 ——美国对伊朗发动军事行动数日后,特朗普总统试图展现美国战争准备的信心,宣称美国拥有“几乎无限量”的关键弹药供应,并称美国可以用这些弹药“永远”打下去。
这番言论塑造了人们熟悉的美国军事强国形象,展现出美国技术无与伦比、后勤占优且能够无限期持续作战的姿态。但五角大楼官员近期在国会的证词以及对美国武器库的分析却指向一个更为受限的现实:美国的优势与其说是无限供应,不如说是拥有高度先进但数量有限的武器系统。
人们尤其担忧的是能够打击数百英里外目标的先进远程导弹,以及用于保护美军抵御 incoming 攻击的拦截弹药。
特朗普总统本周早些时候宣布无限期延长与伊朗的停火协议,这延长了美国在为期五周的轰炸行动后,利用现有库存为中东地区美军装备重整军备的窗口。
总统周四对记者表示,美国没有任何结束冲突的压力,并称“我们从未拥有过这么多弹药”。
长期供应问题依然存在。
这张由美国中央司令部提供的照片显示,2026年3月1日,阿利·伯克级导弹驱逐舰“托马斯·哈德纳”号在“史诗愤怒行动”中发射战斧对地攻击导弹。美国海军/美联社
战略与国际研究中心对美国弹药库存进行分析后得出结论,美国至少四种关键弹药的战前库存“可能已消耗过半”,其中包括战斧导弹。
该报告称,“美国拥有足够的导弹在任何合理场景下继续这场战争。风险——这一风险将持续多年——在于未来的战争。”
周二,美国印度洋-太平洋司令部司令塞缪尔·帕帕罗海军上将在参议院军事委员会作证时表示,像洛克希德·马丁公司和雷神技术公司(RTX旗下)这样的企业,要扩大战斧巡航导弹或AGM-158联合空对地距外导弹(JASSM,一种隐形远程武器)等高端系统的产量可能需要数年时间。
“我认为他们需要一到两年时间才能扩大产能,”帕帕罗说,他的职责包括为包括与中国在内的太平洋地区任何潜在冲突做准备。“这来不及了。弹药库存在有限的限制,我完全相信这些弹药会被审慎使用。”
一张关于美国与伊朗冲突初期动用军事资产的信息图,截至2026年3月2日。穆拉特·乌萨利/阿纳多卢通讯社/盖蒂图片社
国防规划者通常会区分能力与产能。尽管美国拥有非凡的作战能力,但现有武器数量以及替换它们的能力更为有限。
多年来,国防官员一直警告称,关键弹药库存承受着压力,尤其是在美国同时支持多项行动的情况下。例如,防空拦截弹不仅在中央司令部负责的中东地区需求旺盛,在欧洲和印度洋-太平洋地区同样需求巨大,这些地区的防空拦截弹是规划与中国潜在冲突的核心装备。
这些重叠的需求迫使各方做出艰难的权衡。在一个地区消耗或部署的武器,往往取自原本计划用于另一个地区的同一库存。与此同时,生产无法轻易跟上步伐,许多先进弹药依赖复杂的供应链和专用零部件。
当康涅狄格州民主党参议员理查德·布卢门撒尔被问及帕帕罗是否同意他对向中东转移弹药和作战能力的担忧时,这位海军上将强调了现代战争会大量消耗弹药的现实。
“我认为我们保持着充足的弹药储备,无法回避武器的定量使用问题。我们的前进方向是强化国防工业基础,同样重要的是与非传统主承包商开展创新,”帕帕罗说道,他指的是像帕尔默·勒基的安都里尔公司这样的小型科技初创企业,这些企业生产低成本无人机技术。
3月初,特朗普在白宫与国防承包商高管举行会议,他表示这些高管同意将“精品级武器”的产量提高三倍。
在五角大楼的惯用说法中,国防官员通常用“精品”一词来描述位于军方武器库最顶端的一小类武器。这些系统的定义不仅在于其精度和射程,还在于其复杂性、成本和稀缺性,比如战斧巡航导弹或爱国者导弹系统。
“我们希望尽可能快速地达到最高产量水平,”总统在社交媒体上发帖称。
2025年9月3日,得克萨斯州卡瓦佐斯堡,第69防空炮兵旅的士兵在野外演习中完成全套爱国者导弹系统的部署。拉塞尔·雪莉-琼斯上尉
自白宫会议以来,国防部已宣布多项“框架协议”,以提高终端高空区域防御(THAAD)系统的产量,该系统用于击落来袭导弹,是弹药和更具进攻性的精确打击导弹的关键组件。
“通过授权企业在工厂车间进行投资,我们正在为我们的作战人员建立决定性且持久的优势,以超越任何潜在对手,”负责采购与 sustainment 的国防部副部长迈克尔·达菲当时在一份声明中表示。
这些协议旨在向行业发出需求信号,激励他们进行长期投资。
五角大楼今年的预算申请还要求获得超过700亿美元用于采购导弹及相关设备,较去年增长近两倍。
2019年7月15日,在白宫南草坪举行的“美国制造”展示活动中,特朗普总统从洛克希德·马丁公司的终端高空区域防御(THAAD)反导防御系统驾驶座上下来。安德鲁·哈尼克/美联社
实际生产时间表可能有所不同。战略与国际研究中心在对七种关键弹药的分析中指出,当前的生产时间表显示,将武器交付给军方需要数年时间。
“恢复到战前水平……将需要1至4年时间,因为在生产线上的导弹将陆续交付,”战略与国际研究中心的报告称。
特朗普表示,他将于5月再次与国防企业会面。
对弹药库存的担忧并非新鲜事。在俄罗斯全面入侵乌克兰后,这些担忧浮出水面,当时美国和欧洲的盟友明显发现生产速度不够快。
但当时主要涉及乌克兰堑壕战所需的火炮,而现在人们担忧的是可能在未来与中国的战争中发挥关键作用的远程导弹。
“特朗普总统在伊朗发动的这场选择之战,导致印度洋-太平洋地区和朝鲜半岛的军事态势发生重大变化,”罗德岛州民主党参议员杰克·里德在周二的国会听证会上表示。“在过去两个月里,特朗普总统已将包括一个航母打击群、一个两栖Ready群、各种导弹防御能力和其他弹药在内的装备从你们的防区转移到中央司令部。”
当被问及有关美国制造的反导系统THAAD从朝鲜半岛转移到中东的报道是否属实时,美国驻韩部队司令泽维尔·布伦森陆军上将表示,相关报道不实。但他补充称,他们正在向前部署弹药,这凸显了原本计划用于一个地区的弹药如何被调往另一个地区。
“我们没有移动任何THAAD系统。所以THAAD目前仍留在半岛上。我们正在向前部署弹药,这些弹药现在正待命转移,”布伦森说。“此前曾有过雷达向前部署的行动,那是在2025年6月‘午夜铁锤’行动(美国轰炸伊朗主要核设施)之前。其中一些设备尚未返回。”
归根结底,一个严酷的现实是,即使是世界上最强大的军队也必须在有限的范围内运作。
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/us-forces-ready-restart-fighting-if-necessary-officials-say/
As U.S. re-arms during Iran ceasefire, long-term concerns emerge about advanced munitions supplies
April 24, 2026 / 7:32 AM EDT / CBS News
Washington — Days after the United States opened its military campaign against Iran, President Trump sought to project confidence in the nation’s war footing, declaring that America possessed a “virtually unlimited supply” of key munitions and could fight wars “forever” using them.
The remark conveyed a familiar image of American military power, a projection of being technologically unmatched, logistically dominant and capable of sustaining operations indefinitely. But recent congressional testimony from Pentagon officials and an analysis of the U.S. arsenal point to a more constrained reality, where the U.S. advantage lies less in limitless supply than in highly advanced, but finite, systems.
Of particular concern are supplies of advanced long-range missiles capable of striking targets hundreds of miles away, as well as interceptor munitions used to defend U.S. forces against incoming attacks.
Mr. Trump’s announcement of an indefinite ceasefire extension with Iran earlier this week prolonged a window for the U.S. to re-arm assets in the Middle East with existing stocks after a five-week bombing campaign.
The president told reporters Thursday the U.S. isn’t under any pressure to wrap up the conflict, saying, “we’ve never had so much ammunition.”
Long-term supply questions remain.
This image provided by U.S. Central Command shows the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Thomas Hudner firing a Tomahawk Land Attack Missile in support of Operation Epic Fury, on March 1, 2026. U.S. Navy via AP
The Center for Strategic and International Studies analyzed U.S. munitions stocks and concluded that the U.S. “may have expended more than half of the prewar inventory” of at least four key munitions, including Tomahawk missiles.
The report said the “United States has enough missiles to continue fighting this war under any plausible scenario. The risk — which will persist for many years — lies in future wars.”
Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, Adm. Samuel Paparo, the head of U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, said that scaling up output of high-end systems such as the Tomahawk cruise missile or AGM-158 JASSM, a stealthy long-range weapon, could take years for companies like Lockheed Martin and RTX’s Raytheon.
“I think it will take one to two years for them to scale,” said Paparo, whose responsibilities include preparing for any potential conflict in the Pacific region, including with China. “It won’t be soon enough. There are finite limits to the magazine, and I have all the faith in the world that they’re being employed judiciously.”
An infographic on military assets used in the early days of the U.S.’s conflict with Iran, as of March 2, 2026. Murat Usubali/Anadolu via Getty Images
Defense planners often draw a distinction between capability and capacity. While the United States retains extraordinary capabilities, the number of those weapons available and the ability to replace them are more limited.
For years, defense officials have warned that stockpiles of key munitions are under strain, particularly as the United States supports multiple operations at once. Air defense interceptors, for example, are in demand not only in the Middle East under U.S. Central Command, but also in Europe and the Indo-Pacific, where they are central to planning for a potential conflict with China.
Those overlapping requirements have forced difficult trade-offs. Weapons expended or deployed in one region are often drawn from the same inventories intended for another. Meanwhile, production cannot easily keep pace, and many advanced munitions rely on complex supply chains and specialized components.
When asked by Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut if Paparo agrees with his concern over the transfer of munitions and capabilities to the Middle East, the admiral underscored the realities that modern wars consume munitions in large volumes.
“I think we maintain deep magazines and there’s no walking away from the quantitative use of weapons. And our way forward is to supercharge our defense industrial base and equally important is to innovate with non-traditional primes,” said Paparo, referring to smaller companies, often tech startups such as Palmer Luckey’s Anduril, which makes lower-cost drone technology.
In early March, Mr. Trump held a White House meeting with executives from defense contractors whom he said agreed to increase production of “Exquisite Class Weaponry” fourfold.
In Pentagon shorthand, defense officials often use the term “exquisite” to describe a narrow class of weapons that sit at the very top of the military’s arsenal. The systems are defined not just by their precision and range, but by their complexity, cost and scarcity, such as the Tomahawk cruise missile or Patriot missile system.
“We want to reach, as rapidly as possible, the highest levels of quantity,” the president posted on social media.
Soldiers from the army 69th Air Defense Artillery Brigade conduct a full Patriot missile system setup during field operations at Fort Cavazos, Texas, on Sept. 3, 2025. Capt. Russell Shirley-Jones
Since the White House meeting, the Defense Department has announced several “framework agreements” to boost production for Terminal High Altitude Air Defense (THAAD) systems to take down incoming missiles, critical components for munitions and more offensive Precision Strike Missiles.
“By empowering industry to invest in the factory floor, we are building a decisive and enduring advantage for our warfighters to outpace any potential adversary,” Michael Duffey, the under secretary of defense for acquisition and sustainment, said in a statement at the time.
The agreements are intended to give industry a demand signal that incentivizes them to make long-term investments.
The Pentagon’s budget request this year also asked for more than $70 billion to procure missiles and related equipment, a nearly threefold increase compared to last year.
President Trump gets out of the driver’s seat of Lockeed Martin Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) anti-ballistic missile defense system during a Made in America showcase on the South Lawn of the White House on July 15, 2019. Andrew Harnik / AP
Actual timelines for production could vary. CSIS, in its analysis of seven critical munitions, noted current production timelines show it takes several years to deliver the weapons to the military.
“Rebuilding to prewar levels…will take from one to four years as missiles in the pipeline are delivered,” the CSIS report said.
Mr. Trump said he would meet again with the defense companies in May.
Concerns about stockpiles are not new. They rose to the forefront after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, when it became clear that Ukraine’s allies in the U.S. and Europe were not producing fast enough.
But that was largely about artillery needed in the trench-like warfare seen in Ukraine, whereas now there are concerns about long-range missiles that could be crucial in a potential war against China.
“President Trump’s war of choice in Iran has resulted in significant military posture changes in the Indo-Pacific region and on the Korean Peninsula,” said Democratic Sen. Jack Reed of Rhode Island during a congressional hearing on Tuesday. “Over the past two months, President Trump has transferred out of your theaters to Central Command, including a carrier strike group, an amphibious ready group, various missile defense capabilities and other munitions.”
Asked about claims that THAAD missile systems, which are American-made anti-ballistic missile defense systems, were moved from the Korean Peninsula to the Middle East, Army Gen. Xavier Brunson, commander of U.S. Forces Korea, said that reporting was incorrect. But he added that they were sending forward munitions, underscoring how munitions intended for one region get shuffled to another.
“We’ve not moved any THAAD systems. So THAAD still remain on the peninsula currently. We’re sending munitions forward and those are sitting right now waiting to move,” said Brunson. “There was previous moves where radars were taken forward, this was in advance of Midnight Hammer [in June 2025 when U.S. bombed major nuclear facilities in Iran]. Some of those things have not come back yet.”
Ultimately, the stark reality is that even the world’s most powerful military has to operate within limits.
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/us-forces-ready-restart-fighting-if-necessary-officials-say/
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