US put China-made parts in F-35 fighter program https://www.cnbc.com/2014/01/03/us-put-china-made-parts-in-f-35-fighter-program.html
Exclusive: Chinese raw materials also found on U.S. B-1 bomber, F-16 jets https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...-s-b-1-bomber-f-16-jets-idUSBREA291UK20140310
Backdoor Found In China-Made US Military Chip? https://it.slashdot.org/story/12/05/28/1454222/backdoor-found-in-china-made-us-military-chip
Counterfeit Chinese Parts Slipping Into U.S. Military Aircraft: Report https://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/coun...us-military-aircraft-senate/story?id=16403599
Dealer Accused of Selling Banned Munitions to Army
https://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/21/washington/21arms.html
Would you be able to comment on these? Are those components all made in Taiwan? Not just the ones for the F-35 but also the ones for the B-1 bomber and the F16's and also the ones that contain possible secret remote access capability "backdoor" that can be shut off and be reprogrammed without even being detected? Are those all made in Taiwan? If so, why are they causing such concern if Taiwan is considered a US ally? And the last article regarding bullets being used by the US army in Afgan missions, I would like to hear your take on this. How was it resolved? What are some of the preventative measures that have been put in place?
See this is what Donald Trump wants to change and why he thinks it needs to be so urgently changed. Manufacturing for essential and life-critical items cannot be relied upon foreign sources of countries, especially countries that have values and philosophies of life that we do not agree with and do not even want to agree to disagree. This is why high-quality LOCAL manufacturing at sustainable cost needs to be established. You are seeing abandoned ghost towns that used to enjoy prosperity from being established local manufacturing sites, with highly skilled and experienced labour forces sitting idling by, not able to contribute in any way and not able to pass down their skills and life-long experience to the next generation when these resources could've been better utilized to make the West self-reliant and self-efficient again, not just in the field of military but in all aspects of our lives. The West might not have the population for the economies of scale but the West has the skill for quality and productivity that should more than make up for the relatively smaller economies of scale. This is probably what Trump meant by "Make America Great Again".
Well let's start with the ammunition side because it's so clear cut. The NYT article was about a dealer who was criminally charged for
illegally selling foreign made ammunition to the U.S. government. He was charged because what he was doing was illegal, meaning we've already got the laws and processes in place to ensure we aren't even using Chinese ammo let alone dependent on it and obviously in this case those processes worked to catch this guy (and btw, this ammo was for arming Afghan troops, it was never intended to be used by U.S. troops). It's absolutely not the case that the U.S. military is dependent on the Chinese for ammunition, in fact as I pointed out 99% of U.S. ammo is made in a government run facility in MO. That's simply false and the quoted story in no way changes that fact. So really, you need to drop that from your narrative, it's simply not in any way remotely true.
The aircraft stories are a mixture of again, banned parts being found through the extensive system set up to detect them and parts that don't support the narrative of "dependence" on China.
-The first 2 articles are about the same $2 magnets that came from China. I don't think that indicates "dependence", do you? Probably not any backdoors in those $2 magnets either. Should we have let LM buy them in China? Absolutely not and you won't find me ever defending LM who pulls crap like this a lot. But it doesn't indicate any level of "dependence" in any universe.
-The third article is about an alleged backdoor that it turns out didn't ever exist. Nothing more to say there.
-The fourth article is about counterfeit parts. That's a huge problem, and it's not just China that engages in it. We had an entire counterfeit parts division at the aircraft overhaul facility I worked at and they found an unacceptably high number of counterfeit parts, the vast majority of which came from U.S. firms. Note that the word "counterfeit" used in this context is a bit different than what we use in normal conversation, usually a "counterfeit" part is one that doesn't match the service life history that's provided with it often showing fewer hours or cycles than it actually has or claims to be overhauled when it hasn't been or hasn't been tested per the mil spec. This is certainly dangerous, but it's not probably what you're thinking when you and I would normally think "counterfeit"; something like a Chinese factory turning out power turbine blades made from pig iron in a clandestine factory. More importantly though, we again are in no way "dependent" on these parts and in fact for years have had a robust, very large infrastructure in our supply chain to detect and eliminate these parts which are and have always been unambiguously illegal. Trump had fuck-all impact on that effort and certainly hasn't helped it in any way.
So you're basically running with this narrative that the United States has lost our military industrial capacity to China and depend on them for manufacturing our military hardware.....but not a single one of the articles you quoted actually supports that narrative. And Trump again not only doesn't care about the intricacies of our military supply chain but frankly doesn't have the mental capacity to even have the most basic understanding of it. He's certainly not performed a single action to impact the use of Chinese parts in our military supply chain...mostly because there are decades of laws and thousands of us who labor (labored in my case) away every day to make sure they aren't in the supply chain and have for decades before Trump and will for decades after so it's completely unnecessary.
If you think the U.S. should be forced to do more manufacturing than that's a valid argument. Seems rather anti free market and anti capitalism to me, but that's just an honest disagreement. But you have to abandon this false concept that we are in any way "dependent" on China for anything crucial in the military supply chain. That's simply utterly and completely incorrect and not only is it incorrect but frankly it's quite insulting to the thousands of us who worked and work so hard to keep it that way and do a pretty damn good job of accomplishing that without requiring an ounce of Trump's jingoism. So please, just stop with that already.