Rebuilding the Arsenal of Democracy: The Global Maritime Industrial Effort

04/17/2026

By Robbin Laird

When Franklin Roosevelt invoked the phrase ‘Arsenal of Democracy’ in December 1940, he was describing a specific industrial mobilizationL American factories redirected toward supplying a world under siege.

The phrase has echoed through successive generations as shorthand for the proposition that democratic nations, marshaling their combined industrial capacity, can outproduce and outlast authoritarian adversaries.

Today that proposition is being tested again, and the testing ground is maritime.

A new report from the Center for Maritime Strategy — Pier Review: Leveraging the Allied Maritime Industrial Base for U.S. Shipbuilding — makes the case with clarity and urgency: America’s maritime industrial base (MIB) is in its gravest condition since World War II, and no amount of domestic policy reform will be sufficient to reverse that decline within the timelines imposed by current strategic realities.

The answer must be found across allied industrial ecosystems, in Seoul and Genoa, in Helsinki and Vancouver, in Glasgow and Adelaide.

What the Pier Review report makes visible and what its analytical frame suggests is something larger than a shipbuilding deficit.

The allied maritime industrial reconstitution now underway is the 21st-century version of the Arsenal of Democracy, recast not as a single national mobilization but as a distributed network of allied industrial capacity, designed to deter and if necessary defeat authoritarian powers that have made maritime dominance a central instrument of their strategic ambition.

China’s shipbuilding capacity is assessed at over 200 times that of the United States by tonnage. That is not a procurement gap. It is a strategic asymmetry of a kind not seen since the worst years of the Cold War.

The Depth of the Problem

The numbers that frame the Pier Review report are sobering. The United States possessed 55 shipyards capable of building complex naval vessels at the end of World War II. Today, seven remain. American yards once produced approximately five percent of global commercial shipping tonnage; the current figure is effectively zero. The United States accounts for roughly 0.04 percent of global shipbuilding output, ranking nineteenth worldwide. Meanwhile the People’s Liberation Army Navy has surpassed the U.S. Navy in hull count, with assessments projecting growth to 460 ships by 2030. The Office of Naval Intelligence has assessed that one Chinese naval shipyard alone has the capacity of the entire American naval shipbuilding industry combined.

The U.S. Navy currently operates approximately 295 ships, well below its own stated goal of 381. The amphibious assault ship readiness rate dropped to 41 percent in 2025 under the combined strain of operational tempo in Latin America, counter-narcotics operations, and the ongoing Iran conflict, a conflict being fought primarily in the naval domain. In February 2026, the White House Maritime Action Plan acknowledged the gap explicitly and called for a Maritime Security Trust Fund, but funding mechanisms do not repair infrastructure, train welders, or restore institutional knowledge lost across four decades of deindustrialization.

The diagnosis is structural. Decades of inconsistent policy, the elimination of commercial shipbuilding subsidies in the early 1980s, a post-Cold War turn away from the maritime domain, and the long shadow of counterinsurgency operations have hollowed out the industrial base in ways that cannot be reversed quickly from within.

This is the condition the Pier Review study was designed to address and its core conclusion is that rebuilding requires the active engagement of allied industrial ecosystems, not as a supplement to domestic capacity, but as an integral component of a new, distributed Arsenal of Democracy.

The Allied Network Takes Shape

The Pier Review examines five allied maritime industrial bases — South Korea, Italy, Canada, Sweden, and the United Kingdom — across a common analytical framework covering labor, technology, design and manufacturing, government-commercial relations, infrastructure, and supply chains. What the country-by-country analysis reveals, taken together, is not a collection of bilateral arrangements but the rough architecture of a genuinely integrated allied maritime industrial network.

South Korea is the anchor of that network. Hanwha’s Geoje shipyard alone exceeds the combined square footage of Newport News Shipbuilding, Bath Iron Works, and Electric Boat’s Groton and Quonset facilities. The yard operates on firm-fixed-price contracts with financial penalties for late delivery and virtually no tolerance for the schedule slippage that American industry has normalized. One robot can replace 50 workers in welding operations; two technicians monitoring 20 robots can match the output of 1,000 personnel. This is not incremental efficiency improvement. It is a fundamentally different industrial model.

The Make American Shipbuilding Great Again (MASGA) initiative, formalized at the August 2025 U.S.-ROK leaders’ summit, translates that model into a bilateral framework. South Korean firms committed $150 billion in investment in American shipbuilding, defense supply chains, and maritime infrastructure. Hanwha’s acquisition of the Philadelphia Shipyard, the yard that built Iowa-class battleships and Essex-class carriers, represents the first Korean ownership of an American shipyard and a direct transfer of the Geoje model to American soil: smart-yard robotics, digital twin production management, advanced welding automation, and the institutional culture of on-time delivery that has defined Korean shipbuilding for decades.

Italy contributes a different but equally important dimension: multinational co-production. The FREMM frigate program, jointly developed with France since 2007, has produced 22 vessels operated by five Mediterranean navies. The Fincantieri model at Monfalcone where robotic and autonomous manufacturing systems developed for luxury cruise ship production are being directly applied to naval construction demonstrates that commercial and military shipbuilding can share an industrial ecosystem in ways that generate economies of scale unavailable to purely military-focused yards. Italy also provides a cautionary case study in the failed Constellation-class frigate program, where American procurement dysfunction overwhelmed a capable Italian industrial partner, producing cost overruns and delays that ultimately killed the program.

Canada brings Arctic sovereignty and icebreaker expertise, with the Canadian Coast Guard operating the world’s second-largest icebreaking fleet. Swedish shipbuilding, though diminished in volume, demonstrates how a small nation can maintain world-class industrial excellence in a strategic niche, the A26 submarine program, now being built for both the Swedish Navy and Poland, represents niche capability sustained through institutional will rather than scale. The United Kingdom provides the essential cautionary tale: a once-dominant maritime industrial power whose sustained underinvestment has produced a Royal Navy now smaller than the U.S. Coast Guard, with the near-bankruptcy of Harland and Wolff as the symbolic endpoint of a decades-long industrial retreat.

The Pier Review’s five case studies, read together, describe not a collection of bilateral arrangements but the rough architecture of a genuinely integrated allied maritime industrial network or the 21st-century Arsenal of Democracy.

Finland and the Arctic Dimension

The Pier Review treats Finland primarily as context for the Canada case study, a framing that understates one of the most strategically consequential allied industrial relationships now emerging.

Finland is not a supporting actor in the Arctic icebreaker story. It is the lead.

Helsinki Shipyard has built more than half of the world’s icebreakers. Since the 1930s, Finnish yards have produced vessels capable of operating in conditions that would destroy any ship built to conventional ice-class standards. That expertise, once directed partly toward the Soviet Union during the Cold War, is now turning decisively westward.

The Icebreaker Collaboration Effort — the ICE Pact — formalized as a trilateral MOU between the United States, Canada, and Finland in November 2024, and deepened by a bilateral U.S.-Finland agreement signed by Presidents Trump and Stubb in October 2025, is the most concrete expression of that reorientation. Under the arrangement, four Arctic Security Cutters will be built at Finnish yards, with designs and production knowledge then transferred to American shipyards, Bollinger Shipyards in Houma, Louisiana, for domestic production of up to seven additional vessels. Rauma Marine Constructions and Aker Arctic Technology are the Finnish industrial partners; Seaspan Shipyards provides the Canadian link.

The strategic logic is the same logic that runs through the entire Pier Review framework: where the American MIB lacks the capacity to deliver on timeline, allied industrial expertise provides the bridge. The first Finnish-built cutters will give the Coast Guard an operational Arctic presence within this decade; the technology transfer will give American yards the knowledge base to sustain and expand that presence over subsequent decades. The Polar Star, the U.S. Navy’s heavy icebreaker, is approaching 50 years of age; its engineers routinely cannibalize parts from the decommissioned Polar Sea to keep it operational.

The ICE Pact is not a luxury. It is an emergency response. The question is whether American policymakers have the institutional imagination to apply that template systematically across the full range of maritime capability gaps.

AUKUS and the Submarine Industrial Base

The nuclear submarine dimension of allied industrial reconstitution, the AUKUS partnership with Australia and the United Kingdom, represents the most ambitious expression of the distributed Arsenal of Democracy concept. The Virginia-class submarine program is the technological and industrial centerpiece of American undersea power; it is also chronically behind schedule, with backlogs that threaten to leave the submarine force below the numbers required for the operational commitments the Navy has undertaken.

AUKUS addresses this not by building new shipyards in Australia but by integrating the Australian and British submarine industrial bases into the American production and sustainment system. Austal USA’s memorandum of understanding with Australian Submarine Corporation, signed at the INDOPAC 2025 exposition in Sydney, advances additive manufacturing capability across the Virginia-class and Australian Collins-class programs simultaneously. A new 369,600 square foot module manufacturing facility, fully operational in late 2026, will be dedicated to submarine module production, with additive manufacturing techniques developed at Austal’s Additive Manufacturing Center of Excellence in Danville, Virginia, providing critical components that current casting and forging supply chains cannot reliably deliver.

The Pier Review study does not cover the nuclear submarine domain in depth, but the structural logic it articulates applies equally there. Labor shortages, supply chain fragility, outdated infrastructure, and the absence of the culture of delivery that Korean and Finnish yards have institutionalized, these are the same pathologies that afflict both surface shipbuilding and submarine construction. AUKUS is, in this sense, the submarine expression of the same allied industrial reconstitution that MASGA, the ICE Pact, and the FREMM model represent in other domains.

The Arsenal of Democracy, Reconceived

What distinguishes the current moment from previous periods of allied defense industrial cooperation is the convergence of urgency, institutional architecture, and strategic clarity. The strategic context is unambiguous: China’s shipbuilding capacity exceeds America’s by a factor of 200 in tonnage. Russia retains a submarine force capable of threatening critical undersea infrastructure. Iran’s challenge, actively contested in the naval domain as of 2026, has demonstrated that the American fleet’s readiness crisis is not theoretical. North Korea continues to develop missile-armed surface warships. The maritime threat environment has never been more complex or more simultaneous.

The institutional architecture is beginning to align with that threat environment. MASGA, AUKUS, the ICE Pact, the FREMM multinational production framework, the expanding network of Reciprocal Defense Procurement agreements, these are the structural components of a distributed maritime industrial system that no single adversary can match and no single point of failure can disable. South Korea’s chaebols bring production scale and automation sophistication. Finnish yards bring Arctic engineering mastery. Italian yards bring multinational co-production experience and the commercial-military technology crossover that American yards have largely abandoned. Canadian yards bring icebreaker expertise and Pacific Coast capacity that reduces pressure on already-strained American facilities. British yards bring AUKUS integration and Type 26 technology that is already being licensed across three allied navies.

The Pier Review study does not use the phrase ‘Arsenal of Democracy.’ It is a policy document, not a historical argument.

But the strategic logic it advances, examined in the context of MASGA, AUKUS, and the ICE Pact, points unmistakably toward that conclusion.

The American MIB cannot reconstitute itself alone in the time available. Allied industrial capacity, distributed, specialized, technologically sophisticated, and increasingly integrated through formal bilateral and multilateral frameworks, is the mechanism by which the democratic world can restore the maritime balance before the window to do so closes.

The challenge is not primarily industrial. The Korean yards, the Finnish shipbuilders, the Italian primes, the Canadian icebreaker designers — the expertise exists. The challenge is institutional: whether American procurement doctrine, Buy American restrictions, navy design processes notorious for late-stage changes, and a contracting culture that has normalized cost overruns can be reformed rapidly enough to allow allied capacity to flow into the gaps it could fill.

The Pier Review’s recommendations address these institutional barriers directly, firm-fixed-price contracting norms, digital twin adoption, additive manufacturing investment, joint procurement frameworks, but implementation requires political will that has historically been in shorter supply than the industrial expertise itself.

The democratic world’s maritime industrial reconstitution is underway. The question is whether it is moving fast enough and whether America’s institutional culture can adapt quickly enough to allow allied capacity to close the gaps before the adversaries who created them exploit them.

The Speed of the Challenge

George Washington’s observation that ‘without a decisive naval force we can do nothing definitive’ invoked in the foreword to the Pier Review by former Secretary of the Navy Kenneth Braithwaite was made about a different kind of alliance: the French fleet at Yorktown, decisive in the defeat of British naval power and therefore in the achievement of American independence.

The insight transcends its original context. Naval power, then as now, is the enabling condition of strategic outcome.

The arsenal of democracy that Roosevelt described in 1940 was built with extraordinary speed once the political will existed to build it. The Philadelphia Shipyard, the same facility now being reconstituted by Hanwha as the anchor of the MASGA initiative, built 48 warships during World War II and supported construction on over a thousand more. That capacity did not emerge from thin air. It was the product of industrial investment, workforce development, government-commercial alignment, and a national culture that treated shipbuilding as a strategic imperative rather than a procurement line item.

The Pier Review, the MASGA framework, the ICE Pact, and AUKUS together describe the architecture of a new such imperative, distributed across allied industrial ecosystems rather than concentrated in a single national effort, but animated by the same strategic logic. The Arsenal of Democracy is being rebuilt. The race is against time, against an adversary that has used the intervening decades to build an industrial base of staggering scale, and against the institutional inertia of systems not designed for the speed the current moment demands.

The allied maritime industrial network now emerging is the answer the democratic world has available. Whether it proves sufficient will depend on decisions being made now — in Washington and Seoul, in Helsinki and Canberra, in London and Rome — about the pace, the investment, and the institutional reform required to turn allied industrial potential into operational maritime power before the window to do so closes.

The Coming Reindustrialization: AI, the Education Reckoning, and the Return of Production as Strategic Power

04/16/2026

For three decades, the dominant narrative of Western economies has been one of deindustrialization, offshoring, and financialization. Manufacturing moved to Asia. Software and services became the prestige sectors. “College for all” became the default cultural script, and anyone who questioned it was accused of writing off an entire generation. The political class signed on enthusiastically, and the think tanks followed suit.

That narrative is now breaking down not because anyone decisively chose to abandon it, but because three converging forces are making it untenable. The advance of AI into white-collar work, the collapse of the economic case for traditional higher education, and the strategic imperative to reshore critical production capacity are all pointing in the same direction: toward a genuine reindustrialization of Western societies. This is not a nostalgic return to the smokestack era. It is the construction of a new, AI-enabled industrial base, one that may prove as central to Western power in the 21st century as steel and shipyards were in the 20th.

Understanding where this is heading requires moving past the slogans of both the old globalization consensus and the new industrial-policy enthusiasm. What is actually happening on the ground, in factories, trade schools, defense procurement offices, and corporate boardrooms, is more interesting, and more consequential, than either camp acknowledges.

AI and the White-Collar Disruption

For most of the postwar period, automation followed a familiar pattern: it displaced manual and routine work while leaving the professional and managerial world largely intact. White-collar workers watched blue-collar jobs disappear and drew the obvious lesson: stay in school, get the degree, enter the office, and you will be insulated. That insulation is now eroding fast.

Advanced AI systems are beginning to automate precisely the categories of work that once defined middle-class and upper-middle-class careers: document review, legal research, basic financial modeling, marketing copy, customer service, and a growing layer of managerial and analytical tasks. This is not a distant prospect. It is happening now, and the firms deploying these tools are not hiding it. They are advertising the productivity gains to their investors.

Economists at major financial institutions have begun estimating that a meaningful share of workers in advanced economies could lose their jobs outright to AI adoption, with many more seeing large fractions of their daily tasks automated away. Some AI leaders warn that as much as half of entry-level white-collar positions could be at risk within five years. Whether or not those projections prove precise, the direction is clear.

What is emerging is a “white-collar recession” structurally unlike past downturns. Companies are profitable and, in some cases, expanding. What they are not doing is hiring junior office workers at the rates they once did. AI allows firms to do more with fewer people, particularly at the entry levels where human labor once formed the apprenticeship pipeline into the professions. The consequence is that the traditional promise, study hard, earn the degree, enter an office, climb the ladder, is becoming less credible for younger cohorts. They know it. And they are adjusting their expectations accordingly.

This has two strategic implications that rarely get discussed together. First, AI is eroding the social foundation of the post-industrial settlement, in which a large professional class derived its economic security and cultural identity from desk-based knowledge work. Second, by automating cognitive routine, AI is highlighting the enduring scarcity of work that requires physical presence, tacit skill, and the capacity to integrate machines, materials, and people in complex real-world environments. In other words, AI is drawing attention back to the industrial and trades domains that Western elites have long taken for granted and often quietly disdained.

The Higher Education Reckoning

At the same time, the economics of traditional higher education especially in the United States have reached a breaking point. Student loan debt in the U.S. has climbed into the trillions of dollars. The tuition gap between trade-oriented programs and four-year bachelor’s degrees is often a multiple of three to five. For many students, the arithmetic simply no longer works: the debt burden is enormous, and the professional job pathways that once justified it are narrowing under the combined pressure of AI and globalization.

The response by younger generations is pragmatic rather than ideological. Surveys of Gen Z show rising respect for skilled trades and a growing share who believe a trade career can provide better economic security than a college degree. In one recent survey, more than 80 percent of respondents cited the advantages of the trades over office work, lower educational costs, lower debt, faster entry into the workforce, and the genuine possibility of self-employment and ownership. These are not the attitudes of people who have been talked out of ambition. They are the attitudes of people who are calculating their odds clearly.

Enrollment trends reinforce this picture. Institutions focused on vocational and technical programs have reported double-digit percentage growth, even as many traditional liberal-arts colleges struggle to sustain their numbers. Trade schools offer shorter, less expensive programs that lead directly to in-demand roles in construction, electrical work, welding, advanced manufacturing, and related fields. The market is voting.

AI is reinforcing the shift in a way that is rarely noted: as AI-driven tools eliminate entry-level roles in data entry, basic analysis, and customer support, young people are turning toward occupations that are harder to automate and that align with the physical infrastructure demands of a digital economy. Data centers, logistics hubs, renewable energy installations, and advanced factories all require electricians, mechanics, and technicians in large numbers. These are not jobs that can be moved to a server farm in Virginia or outsourced to a language model.

Taken together, these trends amount to a fundamental revaluation of practical skill. Where a college degree once functioned as a general-purpose credential signaling suitability for professional work, the labor market is now paying premiums for workers who can build and maintain the physical systems on which digital and service economies ultimately depend. That shift in relative value is not a temporary anomaly. It reflects something durable about what the economy actually needs.

Reshoring and the Strategic Logic of Production

The third major force driving reindustrialization is geopolitical, and it is the most consequential for defense analysts and policymakers. The offshoring wave of the past three decades created intolerable vulnerabilities in critical supply chains. COVID-19 exposed them dramatically. Rising tensions with China, the war in Ukraine, and the deliberate weaponization of trade and technology dependencies have made the strategic dimension impossible to ignore.

Governments in the United States and Europe have begun aggressively promoting reshoring, nearshoring, and “friendshoring” of production. The rhetoric has been matched, at least in part, by policy. In the United States, the CHIPS and Science Act is providing large-scale incentives to bring semiconductor and advanced manufacturing capacity back onshore. Recent data show hundreds of thousands of jobs announced as reshored in a single year, not all of which will materialize, but which collectively signal a real shift in corporate strategy.

Manufacturing is once again being treated as a national security asset rather than a neutral economic activity. Shorter supply chains, domestic control over critical inputs, and the ability to surge production in a crisis are being valued alongside cost efficiency, a combination that would have seemed eccentric to most business-school curricula a decade ago. The pandemic and Ukraine changed the calculation. The competition with China has locked it in.

What makes this reindustrialization distinct from previous episodes is the technology layer. Firms pursuing reshoring are simultaneously investing in AI, digital twins, cloud, 5G, and edge computing to make regionalized production cost-competitive with the globalized model it partly replaces. Surveys indicate that a majority of organizations pursuing reindustrialization report significant cost savings from the adoption of such technologies. The reindustrialized factory is not a revival of old plant. It is a highly automated, data-rich environment where human workers are orchestrating complex cyber-physical systems closer in character to a software operation than to a traditional assembly line.

This is where the kill web logic that I have argued for in the defense context has a direct civilian analogue. The distributed, networked, and resilient industrial base that strategic competition demands is not built by restoring centralized mass-production facilities. It is built by creating a web of interconnected production nodes, each capable of independent operation, each integrated into a larger system, that can absorb disruption and continue to function. The same principles that drive the shift from kill chain to kill web in military operations apply to the industrial economy that supports them.

A New Social Contract Around Work

The convergence of these three forces, AI’s assault on white-collar security, the economic deterioration of the traditional higher-education pathway, and the strategic imperative to reshore industrial capacity, points toward the outline of a new social contract around work and production.

The old prestige hierarchy that placed office work above skilled trades is being quietly overturned. As AI absorbs more of the routine cognitive tasks that filled white-collar time, the scarcity and value of work requiring physical presence, deep tacit knowledge, and hands-on problem-solving is rising. The trades and advanced manufacturing are increasingly seen not as fallback options but as frontline roles in sustaining national resilience. That is a significant cultural shift, one that has not yet been fully absorbed by the institutions, political parties, and media organizations that still largely reflect the old order.

The education-to-work pipeline is fragmenting and diversifying. Instead of a single, four-year degree followed by a linear professional career, individuals are moving through a series of shorter, targeted training programs, apprenticeships, and reskilling opportunities tied to specific industrial and technical roles. Governments and firms that recognize this shift are experimenting with new models of vocational education, public-private training partnerships, and lifelong learning frameworks better suited to an economy in which both technologies and strategic priorities change rapidly. This is promising, but it remains fragile and undersupported relative to the scale of the transition underway.

The geographic distribution of opportunity may also change. Reindustrialization and reshoring can create new industrial clusters in regions that lost factories and jobs during the great offshoring wave, potentially restoring a measure of social and political balance. But this is not guaranteed. The new industrial facilities are capital-intensive, highly automated, and often demand a smaller but more technically skilled workforce than the plants they are notionally replacing. If the skills gap is not addressed with seriousness and speed, reindustrialization could coexist with persistent local underemployment and the political frustration that follows.

Risks and the Requirement for Strategic Clarity

Reindustrialization is not inevitable, and it is not guaranteed to be broadly beneficial if it is mismanaged. There are at least three significant risks that policymakers and strategists need to take seriously.

The first is institutional lag. AI is advancing rapidly; reshoring projects are underway; but educational systems, credentialing frameworks, and cultural narratives still largely reflect the old paradigm. If schools and policy continue to push young people toward saturated professional tracks while failing to build genuinely attractive pathways into industrial and trade roles, the result will be social frustration rather than renewal. The mismatch between what the economy needs and what institutions are producing cannot be solved by rhetoric alone.

The second is distributional. The benefits of AI-enabled industry may flow disproportionately to capital owners and a small cadre of highly skilled technologists and managers, while the broader workforce finds itself in precarious gig work or intermittent project-based employment. A genuine reindustrialization that reinforces democratic stability needs to ensure that industrial jobs offer decent wages, real bargaining power, and genuine prospects for advancement. History suggests that this will not happen automatically. It requires deliberate policy choices and, in some cases, uncomfortable confrontations with corporate interest.

The third risk is geopolitical. Reindustrialization in the West is unfolding in a context of intensifying competition with China and other major powers. Policies framed as resilience and security in Washington, Brussels, or London will be read as containment or decoupling elsewhere. The risk is a fragmented global system in which overlapping industrial policies fuel inefficiencies, trade conflicts, and the consolidation of rival technological blocs. Navigating this environment requires deliberate strategy: building robust domestic capacity without collapsing the wider system into mutually hostile economic fortresses. That is a fine line, and it demands the kind of strategic clarity that has not always been evident in recent Western policy.

The Strategic Opportunity

Despite these risks, the current moment presents a genuine strategic opportunity for Western nations. The forces destabilizing the old order, AI’s disruption of white-collar work, the higher-education crunch, and the shock of geopolitical competition, can serve as catalysts for rebuilding a more balanced, production-centered economic model, if Western societies have the will and the institutional imagination to seize them.

If AI is treated not simply as a cost-cutting tool but as a complement to human capability in advanced manufacturing and critical infrastructure; if educational systems are reoriented toward flexible, high-status pathways into trades and industrial roles; and if industrial policy is pursued with a clear-eyed understanding of national security imperatives and alliance structures then the result could be a more resilient and coherent Western industrial base than the one that was allowed to atrophy over the past generation.

Such a base would underpin not only economic prosperity but also strategic autonomy: the ability to field advanced defense systems without dependence on foreign choke points, to sustain critical infrastructure under duress, and to adapt rapidly to technological and geopolitical shocks. This is not a secondary consideration. It is the central strategic challenge facing the Western alliance. Defense industrial capacity, the ability to design, build, and sustain the systems that modern warfare and deterrence require, depends directly on the broader industrial and skills base of society. You cannot have one without the other.

The West has been living off the legacy of its industrial might for a long time. The Cold War victory, the globalization dividend, and the dominance of the dollar and Western financial institutions all sustained a comfortable illusion that production could be delegated to others while the West kept the high-value cognitive work. That illusion is dissolving. The question now is whether Western societies can deliberately build a new, technologically sophisticated industrial foundation that matches the realities of AI, contested globalization, and shifting expectations of work.

The trends are opening the door. The convergence of AI disruption, educational economics, and strategic necessity is creating conditions that have not existed for decades. Whether Western governments, institutions, and societies walk through that door is a matter of political will, institutional imagination, and strategic clarity. The analysis is not especially difficult. The execution will be.

Note: My first professional publication was on post-industrial society and published in the UK journal Survey.

Across my career, I have treated post‑industrial society as a strategic condition that reshapes how power is generated, organized, and contested in advanced states. My early work on the “scientific‑technological revolution” and Soviet policy analyzed how large political systems try to harness science, complex management, and emerging information technologies to sustain military and economic power.

Later, I extended this to Western democracies, showing how networked economies, information‑rich but institutionally constrained politics, and globally distributed industrial bases change the possibilities for military transformation, mobilization, and alliance management. In recent years, I have returned to these themes in the context of industrial resilience, Ukraine, and great‑power rivalry, asking whether post‑industrial democracies can rebuild the strategic depth and organizational coherence needed to act effectively under sustained pressure.

I am publihsing a book next year entitled: Forces in Motion: Essays on the Transformation of Western Societies.

The European Defence Industrial Base in Transition

04/15/2026

European primes can evolve into kill web ecosystem orchestrators but only if they move faster than their current political, financial, and organizational wiring allows, and Ukraine’s war laboratory window will not stay open indefinitely.

The strategic question is deceptively simple: Can Europe’s defense primes make the transition from platform manufacturers to kill web ecosystem orchestrators?

The answer depends not on money—the money is arriving in quantities unprecedented since the Cold War but on whether entrenched industrial and political cultures can move faster than the war laboratory in Ukraine is running out of time.

Russia’s full-scale invasion has triggered the sharpest jump in European defense spending in decades. Equipment spending alone is projected to rise by hundreds of billions of euros over the next five to ten years. But this is not simply a larger version of the old demand. It is qualitatively different—driven by what Ukraine’s battlefield has demonstrated about distributed, software-driven combat at operational scale.

What Ukraine has shown, month after month since February 2022, is that the center of gravity in modern warfare has shifted. Power no longer flows primarily from the single exquisite platform—the premium fighter, the flagship warship, the armored breakthrough force. It flows from the network: sensors, shooters, and decision-aids connected across domains, where drones, counter-drone systems, electronic warfare, and battlefield software are iterated in months rather than years.

The distinction between the kill chain and the kill web is not merely conceptual. The kill chain describes a linear, sequential process—sensor to shooter—optimized around a single platform or system. The kill web describes something fundamentally different: a distributed, resilient, data-rich network in which “good enough” assets, continuously upgraded through software and payload evolution, generate combat power that no single exquisite platform can replicate or defeat. Ukraine’s long-range drone strikes into Russian airbases, the continuous adaptation of FPV tactics, loitering munitions employment, and mobile electronic warfare packages are not anomalies. They are early operational expressions of kill web logic working in practice against a peer adversary.

European primes, built to deliver the exquisite platform, are now being asked to underwrite the kill web.

The gap between those two missions is the central industrial challenge of this decade.

Ukraine has turned necessity into something close to an innovation machine. Its defense industrial base now functions as a live testbed for drones, autonomy systems, electronic warfare, and battlefield management tools under the most demanding conditions any weapons system will ever face. What distinguishes Ukraine’s innovation cycle from anything in peacetime Western procurement is the feedback loop: combat validation in weeks, iteration in days, field deployment within months.

Several dimensions of this matter directly for European industrial strategy. Ukraine’s defense technology ecosystem has demonstrated the capacity to take commercial off-the-shelf components, commercial code, and field improvisation and turn them into combat-validated products on cycles measured in weeks to months. That capability does not disappear when the shooting stops. It gets exported in software, intellectual property, and the veterans who built it.

European and NATO actors have begun institutionalizing this link. The EU Defence Innovation Office in Kyiv, emerging joint ventures, and co-production schemes are designed to pair Ukrainian innovators with European capital and industrial capacity. New EU instruments, particularly the European Defence Industry Programme—explicitly include integration of Ukraine’s industry into the EU defense industrial base, with funding earmarked for counter-drone systems, missiles, ammunition, and joint industrial projects involving Ukrainian firms.

The implication is strategic, not just commercial. Ukraine is not only a war laboratory but a prospective source of kill web building blocks—autonomous software architectures, drone designs, electronic warfare solutions—that European primes could orchestrate across the continent. But only if they choose to treat Ukraine as a core partner rather than an exotic adjunct to legacy programs.

European primes were engineered for a different era. Long acquisition cycles. Platform-centric programs negotiated with national ministries, with industrial policy and employment as design variables alongside operational capability. Their comparative advantage has been managing complex hardware programs under tight certification and security constraints. It has not been orchestrating open, fast-moving software- and data-centric ecosystems of the kind that kill web logic requires.

The structural obstacles are not minor. Listed primes remain answerable to shareholders conditioned to steady, predictable margins, not to high-risk bets on new ecosystem architectures and Ukrainian or startup partners. European markets are still carved up by national preferences, protection of industrial champions, and divergent requirements, which encourages replication of platforms rather than cross-border kill web architectures. Export controls, certification processes, and environmental and labor regulations make rapid capacity expansion and product cycling genuinely difficult, especially in munitions and energetics. And the cultural center of gravity inside most primes still runs toward the airframe, the hull, the vehicle—not toward the software stack and data architecture that define kill web performance.

The industrial operating system is still version 1.0 of the platform age. The kill web age demands version 2.0, in which primes become system-of-systems integrators, curators of open standards, and portfolio managers of many smaller contributors whose combat-validated products plug into a common architecture.

Despite the structural drag, the outline of an orchestrator role is becoming visible. The fragmented sub-prime segments, sensors, electronics, specialist services, represent exactly the consolidation opportunity where private capital and primes can drive standardization and align many small suppliers with common architectures. Combat-proven defense-tech startups, often founded by veterans with direct Ukraine experience, are increasingly finding their way into prime supply chains. The case of Occam’s AI autonomy software, tested through Ukraine’s Brave1 platform and now partnering with European primes—illustrates the pathway that is forming.

EU instruments are creating the financial architecture. EDIP and related mechanisms are earmarked for joint industrial projects, joint procurement, and innovation initiatives that bring together primes, European startups, and Ukrainian companies in shared programs. The political language around €800 billion in projected annual NATO defense spending by 2030 increasingly includes concepts like fostering innovation ecosystems alongside traditional platform procurement.

These developments are embryonic.

But they are directionally consistent with an orchestrator model in which primes control standards, interfaces, and certification while drawing Ukrainian and European innovators into a common kill web architecture rather than managing them as peripheral subcontractors.

The kill web transition is not just a strategic question. It is a race against three clocks running simultaneously.

  • The battlefield clock is the most urgent. Every month, Ukrainian firms run real experiments under fire, iterating drone packages, electronic warfare configurations, and AI-enabled command tools against a peer adversary that is adapting in real time. These capabilities can be exported in software, intellectual property, and trained personnel even if physical production eventually relocates. The window during which Ukraine’s war laboratory is generating maximum innovation value will not stay open indefinitely.
  • The budget clock defines the stakes. By 2030, Europe’s NATO members are projected to spend roughly €800 billion annually on defense, up approximately €300 billion from the mid-2020s baseline. A large share flows into equipment and associated services. Contracts signed in the next five to seven years will lock in architectures and supply chains for a generation. If those contracts flow into familiar platform structures with only marginal kill web adaptation, the opportunity cost is measured in decades.
  • The political clock is the most unpredictable. Windows for deep EU-level integration, ambitious industrial policy, and risk-tolerant procurement open and close with political cycles in key capitals and in Brussels. The current alignment of political will and financial resources is unusual. It will not persist indefinitely regardless of what Russia does.
  • The transition from platform manufacturer to kill web ecosystem orchestrator requires changes in at least four dimensions, none of them cosmetic.

The first is architectural leadership. A prime functioning as a kill web orchestrator owns and publishes open interface standards and data models across domains, air, land, maritime, cyber, space, enabling many third-party sensors, shooters, and software modules to plug into a common architecture. Internal engineering priorities shift from optimizing a single asset’s performance in isolation to managing system-of-systems resilience and reconfigurability.

The second is portfolio-style integration of diverse suppliers. This means building structured pipelines to scout, test, and integrate startups and Ukrainian firms whose products carry battlefield validation but need scaling, certification, and integration into larger architectures. It means using balance sheet capacity and political capital to drive consolidation in fragmented segments while leaving room for competitive innovation at the edges.

The third is software and data at the core. Combat power in the kill web age flows from autonomy stacks, mission management software, and battle management AI, supported by modular hardware, not the reverse. That requires developing internal capabilities for continuous integration and deployment of military software, with combat telemetry and Ukrainian lessons feeding regular updates rather than waiting for scheduled capability blocks.

The fourth is a new relationship with the state and with EU institutions. This means working with procurement authorities to design acquisition that buys architectures and services over time—not one-off platforms—and using programs like EDIP to co-invest with governments and Ukrainian partners in shared facilities, test ranges, and digital infrastructure that underpin a continental kill web.

In this model, a prime’s value lies less in owning every building block and more in curating and evolving the ecosystem that connects them.

Failure to move decisively carries three specific risks.

  • Ukrainian innovation is already being courted by U.S. primes, global venture capital, and non-European defense actors who can offer capital, global market access, and integration into established architectures. If European primes do not move first, they will not move at all—the integration will happen elsewhere, and the architectural standards that result will not be European.
  • The second risk is locking in sub-optimal architectures. The next decade of procurement could cement platform-centric, nationally fragmented systems that are far harder to retrofit into kill web architectures later, compounding dependence on external integrators for the software and data layer that actually determines combat performance.
  • The third risk is the erosion of industrial sovereignty. Europe’s stated ambition of strategic autonomy depends on owning not just metal-bending capacity but also the software, data, and integration layer that defines kill web performance. Ceding the orchestrator role to others would hollow out that ambition regardless of how many platforms European factories produce.

European primes can become kill web ecosystem orchestrators.

But doing so fast enough requires a deliberate break with business-as-usual, supported by political decisions that reward architectural thinking and risk-taking over the comfort of incremental platform upgrades.

The necessary elements are visible: Ukraine’s war laboratory, EU-level funding and integration tools, a cohort of combat-hardened defense technology startups, and an emerging analytical consensus that the old model is insufficient.

The question is whether European primes will accept near-term disruption, reshaping portfolios, opening architectures, partnering deeply with Ukrainian and European innovators—in order to own the orchestration layer. Or whether they will cling to legacy platform models while others capture the kill web.

The stakes are not ambiguous.

This is a race not only against Russia but against competing industrial ecosystems that have already recognized what Ukraine’s war laboratory is worth.

Always Ready, Persistently Under-Resourced: The U.S. Coast Guard in the 21st Century

04/13/2026

I arrived at the Pentagon on the morning of September 11th, 2001, expecting a routine meeting on post-Soviet nuclear security issues. Within hours, the world had changed.

So had the trajectory of American defense analysis.

For those of us who felt the building rock that morning, September 11th is not history.

It is lived experience, as present and immediate now as the smell of burning jet fuel that hung over Arlington for days afterward.

That moment reshaped everything, including how I thought about the United States Coast Guard. I had been tracking the USCG since the late 1990s, drawn by a challenge that proved prescient: non-state adversaries and bad actors could access modern commercial technology far faster than a federal acquisition bureaucracy could respond. That asymmetry was already eroding maritime security before the towers fell. After 9/11, it accelerated dramatically.

My new book, Always Ready, Persistently Under-Resourced: The Modern United States Coast Guard Story, is the product of more than two decades of engagement with this organization. It draws on interviews and visits spanning roughly 2002 to 2016, updated to assess where the USCG stands today. The honest verdict: the mission set has expanded enormously. The resourcing has not.

The Deepwater Moment and Its Legacy

When I first began examining the Coast Guard seriously, the service was developing what would become the Deepwater program, an ambitious, forward-looking acquisition strategy designed to address block obsolescence across the fleet. What made Deepwater conceptually interesting was not its scale but its philosophy. Rather than simply replacing old hulls with new ones, Deepwater prioritized payloads, sensor integration, and C4ISR connectivity. The idea was that capability, persistent maritime awareness, real-time data sharing, genuine multi-mission flexibility, mattered more than platform counts alone.

That conceptual instinct was correct, and in important ways it anticipated the security, deterrence and kill web logics that now runs through advanced joint force thinking. Deepwater was early, imperfect proof that platform-centric thinking was giving way to something more networked, more distributed, more operationally adaptive.

The program ran into serious management problems, and the acquisition turbulence that followed set back modernization efforts considerably. But the acquisition wave Deepwater generated did reshape the organization. The transition from legacy assets, aircraft like the HU-25 Falcon, optimized for sprint speed and little else, to the HC-130J Hercules and HC-144 Ocean Sentry represented a genuine shift in operational philosophy. Where legacy platforms were built around what I would characterize as ‘take the search out of search and rescue’ dash capacity, the new generation brought high endurance, integrated sensor suites, and real-time data sharing across services.

The Cape Hatteras rescue operation makes the point concretely. That success was not the product of luck. It was the product of the HC-130J’s ability to maintain contact with survivors in extreme conditions, a capability impossible for the platforms it replaced. The difference between those two generations of aircraft is the difference between crisis response and persistent maritime awareness. That shift matters enormously.

The DHS Transfer and the Mission Focus Problem

The post-9/11 transfer of the Coast Guard to the Department of Homeland Security was one of the most consequential institutional decisions in the service’s modern history and not in a uniformly positive sense. The creation of DHS assembled a hodgepodge of organizations that were never coherently integrated. For the USCG, being moved into this departmental structure while simultaneously trying to navigate Deepwater acquisition complications was a compounding problem.

As the second-largest element of DHS, the Coast Guard found itself competing for finite resources against the Transportation Security Administration, which received substantial aviation security funding in the immediate post-9/11 period, and against Customs and Border Protection, which operated in overlapping spaces. The structural friction this created has never been fully resolved.

What has persisted — and this is perhaps the most damaging pattern in the USCG’s 21st-century history is the cycle of mission focus swings. Each administration arrives with its own priorities. One emphasizes border security. The next redirects toward drug interdiction. Another emphasizes search and rescue or environmental protection or national defense. The language changes. The emphasis shifts. But the underlying mission set never shrinks. Responsibilities accumulate. Resources remain constrained. The result is an organization perpetually asked to do more with the same, or less.

These are not primarily problems of leadership or organizational dysfunction. The USCG’s officers and enlisted personnel are among the most dedicated professionals in uniform. The problems are structural, rooted in how this nation conceives of national security and allocates resources accordingly. The Coast Guard operates at the intersection of defense, law enforcement, environmental protection, and economic security, and it does not fit neatly into any of the traditional budget categories that govern how Washington funds things.

The Away Game: Gray Zone Competition and the White Fleet

One of the dimensions most consistently underappreciated in coverage of the USCG is the service’s role as an away game force. The name implies coastal and inland waters. The reality is something considerably more expansive. The Coast Guard has significant operational engagements in the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the Middle East. That international presence is frequently overlooked. It is strategically crucial.

In the Indo-Pacific, the Coast Guard’s National Security Cutters and its status as a ‘white fleet’, committed to maritime security and management rather than war-fighting, give it a distinct operational character. As China has emphasized gray zone operations, activities below the threshold of conventional warfare, the USCG offers capabilities that a kinetic-focused conventional military force simply cannot replicate. The white fleet can engage as an honest broker. It can operate as the glue of international maritime cooperation in ways that a gray fleet cannot.

The tyranny of distance in the Pacific is absolute. A cutter traveling from Alameda to American Samoa takes ten days. In that theater, presence is deterrence. When Admiral Brown visited Tonga and observed large structures built by the Chinese government, that was not a peripheral observation, it was a direct indicator of rival influence expanding into Oceania. Without enduring Coast Guard presence, that kind of strategic encroachment faces no credible pushback below the threshold of military confrontation.

The Arctic tells a similar story. Russia maintains a fleet of more than 40 icebreakers. The United States has three, with only one fully operational heavy breaker. The strategic exposure this creates is not abstract. A catastrophic maritime incident, a cruise ship mishap in the Bering Sea with a thousand passengers, in a region where no response infrastructure exists would be a national catastrophe. The U.S. remains roughly a decade behind Canada and Russia in Arctic infrastructure development. That gap did not open overnight, and it will not close without sustained, deliberate investment.

From Crisis Management to Chaos Management

The conceptual framework I have used across much of my recent analytical work, the distinction between crisis management and chaos management, applies with particular force to the USCG’s situation in the 21st century.

Traditional crisis management operates on an assumption of recoverable equilibrium. A crisis erupts, responses mobilize, the situation is brought back to something resembling the previous state of affairs. That model made a certain kind of sense in a world of discrete events and bounded adversaries.

That is not the world the Coast Guard operates in. Transnational threats — illegal fishing, human trafficking, drug flows, gray zone maritime competition — are not crises to be resolved. They are permanent features of the maritime environment. The Coast Guard’s challenge is not to restore equilibrium but to build adaptive capacity that can manage persistent complexity. Chaos management requires different organizational habits, different resource strategies, and different metrics of success than crisis management does.

The Book’s Core Argument

Always Ready, Persistently Under-Resourced traces the USCG’s 21st-century history through the practitioner voices that have shaped it — Commandants, area and district commanders, logistics officers, acquisition professionals, the men and women flying and sailing these platforms in demanding conditions. The interviews and analysis span roughly 2002 to 2016, with updated assessment of where the service stands today.

The book is dedicated to Rear Admiral Ed Gilbert, retired, one of the founders of the Deepwater approach and one of the most respected senior USCG officers of his generation. Ed understood better than almost anyone I have known the difficult space the Coast Guard inhabits between defense and diplomacy, between crisis and calm, between the inherited tradition of maritime service and the evolving demands of 21st-century security. Many of the insights in this book trace back to conversations with him over years of visits to Coast Guard facilities, platforms, and commands.

The conclusion I reach is not complicated, though it is uncomfortable. The Coast Guard’s strategic value has never been higher. Its relevance to the full spectrum of American security challenges from Arctic access to Indo-Pacific gray zone competition to Caribbean drug interdiction to domestic disaster response is demonstrably greater than at any point in the service’s modern history.

And yet the resource trajectory has not matched that strategic reality. Platform recapitalization continues to lag. Shore infrastructure deteriorates. Mission focus swings with each administration without commensurate investment. Personnel face demands that consistently exceed available support.

The nation is, in effect, asking the Coast Guard to be always ready while persistently under-resourcing it to fulfill that obligation. That is a strategic choice, whether or not it is recognized as one.

My book is an argument grounded in two decades of practitioner interviews and operational observation that it is time to make a different choice.

The Coast Guard’s story is, in many ways, America’s security story in the 21st century: ambitious in scope, constrained in resources, adapting continuously, essential always.

Always Ready, Persistently Under-Resourced: The U.S. Coast Guard in the 21st Century

04/12/2026

“Always Ready, Persistently Under‑Resourced” examines how the modern U.S. Coast Guard has been transformed since 9/11 into a globally engaged, multi‑mission security force, while remaining chronically misaligned between assigned missions and available resources.

The book opens with a first‑person account of 9/11 at the Pentagon, using that experience to frame a broader shift from Cold War–style crisis management to “chaos management,” an era of persistent, overlapping threats that blur boundaries between domestic and international security. In this environment, the Coast Guard’s blend of law‑enforcement authority, military capability, and humanitarian ethos becomes central to U.S. security, even as the Service is repeatedly treated as a budgetary afterthought. From 2002 onward, the Coast Guard attempts to modernize through the Deepwater program and subsequent recapitalization while coping with an expanding mission set across ports, coastal waters, the high seas, the Arctic, and distant theaters such as the Western Pacific.

Part 1 presents the perspectives of Commandants and Area Commanders and establishes the core theme: the Coast Guard is operationally indispensable yet structurally under‑resourced. Admiral Thad Allen in 2010 highlights aging assets, procurement slowdowns, and widening gaps between mission demands and available platforms, using the Haiti earthquake response to show how persistent presence and Coast Guard–Navy interoperability made the Service the first responder in a major humanitarian crisis. He underscores how Deepwater’s C4ISR modernization, particularly on aircraft like the HC‑130J, enabled complex rescues such as the Hatteras case, even as Department of Homeland Security budget decisions threatened to slow or truncate that modernization. Allen’s Arctic discussion epitomizes the strategic risk: almost all non‑submarine Arctic missions fall to the Coast Guard, but the Service has only a handful of aging icebreakers against rapidly growing U.S. and allied requirements.

Admiral Zukunft’s 2016 interview shows an organization that has become intelligence‑driven and globally networked, increasingly responsible for Western Hemisphere security “by default and design” as other Defense Department assets shifted to the Middle East and Pacific. Operations are structured around risk‑informed intelligence, transit‑zone choke points, and a layered, offensively minded border strategy that pushes enforcement far from U.S. shores. Zukunft also stresses the National Security Cutter (NSC) as the central recapitalization asset: a long‑range, high‑endurance platform that can anchor forward presence, integrate advanced ISR, and exploit the Coast Guard’s unique Title 10 and Title 14 authorities across gray‑zone and law‑enforcement missions. Discussion of the Arctic and unmanned systems points toward a future in which icebreakers, C2‑capable platforms, and autonomous vehicles are essential if the United States is to avoid becoming a marginal player in polar security.

In the Atlantic and Pacific Area Commander interviews, the lens widens to show how the Service actually operates on a global canvas. The Atlantic Area Commander explains that his area spans from the Rockies to the Arabian Gulf, working with multiple geographic combatant commands and maintaining cutters and port security units alongside the U.S. Navy from Africa to the Gulf. He emphasizes the Coast Guard’s worldwide role in protecting the marine transportation system, its dense network of authorities, and its culture of collaboration across agencies and allies. His discussion of knowledge management, Deepwater Horizon, and Haiti illustrates how operationally useful C4ISR is less about technology per se and more about designing information architectures around crisis decision‑making, authoritative data sources, and the needs of first responders rather than IT convenience.

The Pacific Area Commander underlines the “tyranny of distance” and the economic stakes in a theater that holds 85 percent of U.S. EEZ waters and some of the world’s richest tuna fisheries. He links fisheries enforcement, illegal fishing, and ship‑rider programs with broader strategic competition, warning that vacuums in presence invite both Chinese influence and Somalia‑like instability in Oceania. His description of the North Pacific Coast Guard Forum shows the U.S. Coast Guard acting as an “honest broker” among China, Russia, Japan, Korea, and Canada, using its white‑hull profile, regulatory expertise, and SAR capacity to sustain cooperation where naval channels are politically constrained. His treatment of the Arctic again returns to the preparedness gap: once ice becomes water, the Service has authority but not capability or infrastructure, putting U.S. sovereignty and resources at risk.

Part 3 examines Deepwater as an innovative but ultimately frustrated attempt at multi‑domain, capability‑based acquisition. Deepwater is presented as the first serious American effort to design a multi‑domain “system of systems” for security rather than war‑fighting, organized around capabilities and measures of effectiveness rather than one‑for‑one platform replacement. By defaulting to commercial off‑the‑shelf technologies and interoperable C4ISR, Deepwater sought to keep pace with adversaries who could rapidly exploit commercial technology, and to implement a strategy of “pressing out our borders” via layered defense from distant source zones to U.S. ports. Post‑9/11, the same architecture proved well suited to homeland security, but management failures, departmental politics, and budget turbulence eroded much of the program’s promise.

Later sections (Parts 4–7) trace how specific modernization efforts played out: the Legend‑class National Security Cutter’s journey from early controversy to operational success and its eventual influence on the Navy’s frigate choices; the evolution of maritime patrol aviation and C4ISR, including the HC‑144, the C‑27J transfer, and the impact of modern sensors on SAR and interdiction; and the Coast Guard’s performance in crisis responses from Katrina to Deepwater Horizon. Across these case studies, the pattern is consistent: when provided with modern, integrated platforms and reasonable support, the Coast Guard generates outsized strategic and operational returns, whether in humanitarian relief, gray‑zone competition, or supply‑chain security. Yet modernization is consistently slowed or truncated by budget politics, shifting departmental priorities, and the Service’s awkward position between homeland‑security and defense establishments.

The concluding chapters argue that the Service stands at a strategic crossroads much like the early Deepwater era, but now in a world defined by gray‑zone competition, cyber and supply‑chain vulnerabilities, and enduring “chaos management.” Persistent personnel shortages, aging platforms, crumbling infrastructure, and politically driven swings in mission emphasis prevent the development of a balanced force. At the same time, concepts such as Force Design 2028 and renewed attention to the Coast Guard’s role in the Indo‑Pacific and the Arctic are cited as signs of strategic recognition without commensurate resourcing. The book ultimately contends that understanding the Coast Guard’s recent history is essential to rethinking American security: this “white fleet” is uniquely suited to the blurred space between war and peace, but its ability to perform that role depends on whether policymakers finally align missions, authorities, and resources with the realities of twenty‑first‑century chaos management.

 

Flamingo and the Future of the Missile Industrial Base

04/10/2026
Screenshot

The emergence of Ukraine’s Flamingo cruise missile is about more than a new long‑range strike weapon; it is a signal of how the missile industrial base itself is being re‑engineered under wartime pressure. What makes Flamingo strategically important is not simply its range or payload, but the way a drone‑native company has fused missile‑class performance with an industrial model drawn from the unmanned systems revolution. This hybridization poses direct questions for legacy missile manufacturers that have remained largely outside the drone ecosystem.

Flamingo is produced by Fire Point, one of the Ukrainian firms that grew rapidly by supplying long‑range one‑way attack drones and loitering munitions after Russia’s full‑scale invasion. Rather than emerging from a traditional, vertically integrated missile conglomerate, Flamingo grew out of an agile, software‑centric, drone production culture built on rapid iteration and battlefield feedback. That origin story matters for the industrial base.

Public reporting indicates that Fire Point has already reached cruise‑missile production in the multiple‑per‑day range and is aiming for even higher output. President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged that Russian strikes temporarily disrupted Flamingo manufacturing, but he also emphasized that production resumed and continues to ramp up despite these attacks. In parallel, Fire Point has achieved substantial localization of key components, particularly engines and propellants, to reduce dependence on foreign suppliers.

This is not the classic profile of a small drone shop that occasionally dabbles in larger weapons. Fire Point is consciously evolving into a full‑spectrum unmanned strike house: it already produces long‑range FP‑series drones, is mastering turbine and rocket propulsion, and is building transnational supply chains anchored both in Ukraine and in NATO countries. In other words, the Flamingo program is a vehicle for creating a new kind of missile industrial base, one that starts from mass‑production of drones rather than from boutique production of high‑end missiles.

Flamingo delivers missile‑class effects: open sources attribute to it a range on the order of 3,000 kilometers, subsonic cruise speeds, and a warhead size in the one‑ton class, aimed at strategic targets deep inside Russia. Ukrainian forces have used Flamingo to strike sensitive sites such as the Votkinsk missile plant, which produces ICBMs and theater ballistic missiles, and other critical infrastructure far beyond the front line. These are not tactical nuisances but strategic blows.

What is distinctive is how those effects are generated industrially. Fire Point has:

  • Built a production system that reuses and then replaces commercial or surplus aviation engines for missiles, transitioning toward a fully domestic jet engine optimized for its weapons.
  • Internalized over 97 percent of the components for its drone engines, mastering casting, machining, milling, and assembly in‑house, thereby removing key bottlenecks in scaling output.
  • Established external facilities for solid rocket fuel production in Denmark, creating a NATO‑based node in its propulsion supply chain that supports both Flamingo boosters and allied rocket artillery programs.

In effect, a drone‑era company has replicated the full propulsion stack of a missile house while retaining the modularity and responsiveness of its original unmanned systems culture. This is fundamentally different from the traditional pattern, where a missile would be designed around a bespoke engine produced by a specialized, slow‑moving industrial niche.

The production model is also different. Reports suggest that Fire Point is targeting serial production at daily rates, not the handful‑per‑month cadence familiar from many Western cruise missile lines. Ukrainian defense‑industrial studies note that the country produced between 2.5 and 4 million drones in 2025 and plans for around 7 million in 2026 across various types, demonstrating an ecosystem built for quantity and speed. Flamingo is being pulled into that same high‑volume ecosystem, rather than being treated as a stand‑alone, low‑volume prestige program.

Flamingo’s industrial base is inherently distributed and transnational. Fire Point’s missile assembly remains in Ukraine, but key enabling production is being deliberately pushed into allied territory. The Danish solid‑fuel plant at Skrydstrup is emblematic: it is the first Ukrainian weapons production facility on NATO soil, located adjacent to a Danish air base and tied to both Flamingo boosters and Danish‑Israeli rocket artillery programs.

This arrangement achieves several strategic effects:

  1. It hedges against Russian strikes on Ukrainian industry by moving critical, but not warhead‑sensitive, production steps into a secure NATO environment.
  2. It ties a European ally into Flamingo’s supply chain in a way that aligns with that ally’s own munitions needs, in this case solid rocket fuel for Denmark’s Puls rocket systems.
  3. It creates a model for future “distributed missile factories” where different stages of production—propellant, engines, airframes, final integration—may be located across multiple states and companies.

Such distributed production is a natural extension of the drone industrial base, which already relies on broad networks of small suppliers and flexible manufacturing nodes. Legacy missile manufacturers, by contrast, remain heavily invested in large, centralized facilities with complex regulatory and security regimes that are difficult to replicate abroad. Flamingo suggests that the future missile industrial base will resemble a networked cloud more than a single monolithic factory.

Another industrial implication of Flamingo lies in the cost‑exchange and scale dynamics. Commentary around the program frequently highlights its relatively low unit cost, with public estimates placing it in the low‑ to mid‑six‑figure range, far less than many Western cruise missiles aimed at similar targets. When such weapons can be produced at several units per day, they begin to change the economics of strategic strike.

This matters for both offense and defense. On the offensive side, a state with Flamingo‑like capabilities can contemplate sustained campaigns against deep‑rear strategic targets without depleting its entire stock of precious cruise missiles. On the defensive side, adversaries must now consider that high‑value sites may be subject to regular, not exceptional, long‑range attacks by relatively affordable weapons.

From an industrial perspective, this pushes missile production closer to the loitering munition model: design for cost, scale and attrition, and accept that individual missiles will be expended in large numbers. The West’s legacy missile industrial base, optimized for low‑volume, exquisite weapons, will struggle to match this unless it adopts similar mass‑production techniques and modular architectures. Flamingo thus occupies a middle ground between traditional cruise missiles and cheap attack drones, but its industrial DNA is clearly aligned with the latter.

Missile manufacturers that have not gone deep into drones face several structural disadvantages in this emerging landscape.

First, their supply chains are typically built around certified, highly specialized components produced in limited locations. This architecture emphasizes reliability and performance but is poorly suited to rapid scaling, dispersed production, or the integration of numerous small, innovative suppliers. By contrast, Flamingo rides on an ecosystem that has already proven it can generate millions of drones per year, with design practices that accept commercial‑off‑the‑shelf electronics and frequent hardware refresh.

Second, legacy manufacturers’ business models often depend on high margins from complex, long‑cycle programs, with tight export and IP controls, rather than on volume and speed. Fire Point’s trajectory points in the opposite direction: the company’s reported revenue growth, foreign partnerships, and push into allied production reflect a model where battlefield impact and political support drive investment and scale more than traditional programmatics.

Third, drone‑native firms like Fire Point are building export‑ready ecosystems that can plug into European and NATO procurement with relatively modest adaptation. Analysts note that Ukraine’s limiting factors are not engineering talent or product innovation, but capital, certification, and integration into Western procurement; Flamingo’s NATO‑based propellant plant and advisory relationships with Western figures are precisely about overcoming those barriers. Legacy missile houses now face competition not just from each other, but from a new set of entrants that can offer interoperable, battle‑tested weapons backed by distributed industrial networks.

Flamingo also illustrates the convergence of drones and missiles within a single industrial ecosystem. Fire Point’s work on long‑range drones and on Flamingo’s propulsion and guidance systems is mutually reinforcing: improvements in engine localization, electronics, and manufacturing methodologies flow across product lines. The same workforce, machinery, and software development teams support both drone and missile programs.

For industrial policy, this suggests that the future strike enterprise will be organized around shared building blocks—engines, guidance, data links, autonomy software, and modular airframes—rather than around rigid distinctions between “drone factories” and “missile factories.” Companies that only occupy one side of this divide will lack the economies of scope that integrated missile‑drone houses enjoy.

Ukraine’s broader drone production effort underscores this point. The country’s ambition to reach around 7 million drones of various types in 2026 is forcing it to develop an industrial base with built‑in scaling capacity, supply‑chain autonomy, and AI‑enabled autonomy. Flamingo sits atop that base as a heavy node in the network: technically more demanding than small FP‑series drones, but fundamentally a product of the same culture and infrastructure. The industrial logic runs upward from drones to missiles, not the other way around.

For Western governments and prime contractors, Flamingo’s industrial model raises several uncomfortable questions.

  • One is whether current missile production capacity—designed for peacetime stockpiles and occasional surge—is remotely adequate for an era of high‑intensity conflict where daily expenditure of long‑range strike weapons becomes the norm. Flamingo demonstrates that, under pressure, a motivated state can nurture an industrial base capable of producing cruise‑missile‑class weapons at a tempo previously associated with drones. Matching this will require rethinking everything from export controls on dual‑use components to the design of new production facilities.
  • Another is whether existing procurement frameworks and security regulations can accommodate distributed, transnational industrial networks like the one emerging around Flamingo. Denmark’s decision to host a Ukrainian missile‑propellant plant, including legal adjustments to make this possible, suggests that some allies are willing to experiment with novel arrangements. The question is whether larger systems integrators will seize such opportunities or be overtaken by smaller, more agile firms partnering directly with governments.
  • A third is the competitive dynamic. As Ukraine’s defense‑industrial base is increasingly seen as an “anchor for economic renewal” and as a potential supplier to other countries, Flamingo positions Fire Point as a future exporter of both missiles and industrial know‑how. Western primes may find themselves collaborating with, or competing against, Ukrainian companies that can offer turnkey missile‑drone ecosystems built on wartime experience.

Missile‑centric firms that have stayed on the sidelines of the drone revolution will need to adapt in several concrete ways if they are to remain central players in this new environment.

They will need to develop or acquire high‑volume, flexible production capabilities that look more like drone factories than traditional missile lines, capable of rapidly scaling output and integrating numerous smaller suppliers. They will have to re‑architect their product portfolios around shared subsystems and software across drones, loitering munitions, and missiles, to capture economies of scope and accelerate upgrades. And they will likely need to participate in distributed industrial networks, including foreign plants and joint ventures, that mirror Flamingo’s Denmark‑Ukraine arrangement.

The Flamingo program shows that the barriers to entry in the missile business are changing. Technical sophistication still matters, but the decisive advantages are increasingly industrial: the ability to secure supply‑chain autonomy, scale production quickly, and integrate into allied procurement ecosystems. In that sense, Flamingo is less a one‑off Ukrainian innovation than an early exemplar of a broader shift in how missiles will be designed, built, and sustained in the coming decade.

Wild Weasel History

This video discussed the history of the Wild Weasel mission and the aircraft that made history as the first in and last out.

03.09.2026

Video by Staff Sgt. Benjamin Bugenig 

AFN Misawa

XVIII Airborne Corps Works With Industry on Unmanned Aircraft Systems

04/08/2026

Soldiers assigned to XVIII Airborne Corps hosts a demonstration of unmanned aircraft systems at Fort Bragg, N.C., on 31 Mar. 2026.

The drones displayed varied from systems designed as training targets, to systems designed to autonomously swarm and pursue objectives.

FORT BRAGG, NORTH CAROLINA

03.31.2026

Video by Staff Sgt. Cory Reese

XVIII Airborne Corps Public Affairs