DefenseSubscribers only Jun 25, 2026 at 22:344Add to bookmarks

$35 billion to quadruple THAAD production, $1.55 billion to revive the E-7 Wedgetail: Washington approves an industrial remilitarization unseen since the Cold War.
On June 25, 2026, two major decisions simultaneously sweep through Washington: Lockheed Martin secures a contract worth over $35 billion to quadruple the production rate of the THAAD (Terminal High Altitude Area Defense), while the House of Representatives approves $1.55 billion to revive the E-7 Wedgetail program—a next-generation airborne command and control aircraft initially canceled in 2024.
These two decisions reflect a post-Ukraine strategic reassessment by the U.S.: depletion of missile stocks, vulnerability of ground-based defenses to ballistic saturation, and China’s growing A2/AD capabilities. Quadrupling THAAD production is not just about strengthening the U.S. shield—it’s about fueling massive allied orders from South Korea, Japan, the Gulf, and NATO. The E-7 Wedgetail’s revival from cancellation—a rare move—signals that air command superiority is deemed critical. Two programs, one message: the U.S. defense industrial base is shifting into economic war footing.
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Feels like the US is preparing for a storm-hope this spending actually makes people safer, not just defense contractors richer.
Who’s really cashing in while taxpayers foot the bill for this Cold War 2.0 revival?
Spending billions on missiles while bridges crumble-classic Washington. But what do I know?
35B for THAAD? Hope they ran the cost-per-intercept math. Last I checked, it was north of 10M a pop.
American Industrial Remilitarization: THAAD, E-7, and the Revival of the Defense Complex