Trump invokes Defense Production Act for munitions, supply chains

WASHINGTON, June 16 (Reuters) – U.S. President Donald Trump has invoked the Defense Production Act to ​address constraints in weapons supply and development ‌for munitions production and supply chains, according to a memo made public on Tuesday.
The move comes amid growing ​concern in Washington about the capacity of ​U.S. weapons manufacturers to meet demand.
Solid rocket ⁠motors, igniters and guidance systems are among the ​most critical and capacity-constrained sub-systems needed for weapons ​production, both for legacy systems and future modernization programs.
“I hereby find that conditions exist which may pose a direct ​threat to the national defense or its preparedness ​programs,” Trump said in a June 11 memorandum to the ‌Pentagon ⁠chief.
He cited “limited production capacity, fragile supply chains, long-lead dependencies, and related production bottlenecks.”
The memo to the defense secretary delegates authority to pursue voluntary agreements ​with private ​industry aimed ⁠at shoring up the defense industrial base.
The Defense Production Act allows the president ​or those granted authority to consult ​with ⁠representatives of industry, business, and other interests to establish voluntary agreements to help provide for the national ⁠defense, ​but only when conditions exist ​that may pose a direct threat.

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