We're Low on Ammo: Trump Is Burning through our Weapons and Troops in Iran
This is what happens when a man who thinks black and white World War II movies in his head from the 1950s are the reality of modern combat.

If you haven’t spent any time on the military brevity codes for ammunition status, I can’t blame you. This is a niche subject, but there are four tiers: green, yellow, red, and black.
Green – Fully mission capable; sufficient supply for the mission/
Amber/Yellow – Limited supply; degraded capability. You start picking and choosing targets more carefully.
Red – Serious shortage; the mission is significantly impacted. You can only address the most critical targets…if that.
Black – No supply. Completely exhausted.
I know you’re not here for military logistics jargon, but the Air Force and Navy do it slightly differently from the Army and Marines, but not enough to matter.
So when Trump posted this lunacy on Trash Social, my ear pricked up. (And with my ears, there’s a lot of prick up.) Despite his boasting, I suspect we’re deep in the Yellow status, knocking on the door of Red.
Oh, bless his heart.
This statement is a masterclass in what happens when a man who thinks black and white World War II movies in his head from the 1950s are the reality of modern combat between technologically advanced nations.
Let’s unpack this fever dream.
First, the phrase “virtually unlimited supply” of “medium and upper-medium grade munitions.”
That’s not how our production and inventory of ammunition, guided weapons, and everything that leaves the barrel or the rail works. That’s not how industrial production works. That’s not how physics works. That’s not, as the kids say, how any of this works.
The United States does not have an “unlimited” supply of anything except debt, MAGA bots, and Trump mentions in the Epstein files.
Every missile, every smart- or dumb-bomb, every 155mm shell, everything from precision-guided munitions to rounds of 5.56 requires a supply chain, materials, rare earths, propellants, explosives, electronics, trained labor, and years of planning. Wars are not fought “forever” even in Trump’s brainfog alternate reality. There’s no imaginary Indiana Jone warehouse full of missiles.
Second, he brags about “much additional high-grade weaponry is stored for us in outlying countries.” Translation: forward-deployed assets and allied stockpiles. You know, the very alliances and overseas basing structures Trump constantly threatens, insults, or tries to extort like a two-bit mob boss. I’ll spare you the boring old-timey REFORGER talk, but yeah…we keep gear in Europe and move people to it if Russia gets frisky.
The NATO framework, Indo-Pacific basing agreements, prepositioned stocks in Europe and Asia…those are the product of decades of bipartisan American strategy, and they’re there for a reason; to tell the Chinese in the Pacific and the Russians in Europe that we’ve got the tools to stop any kind of uppity behavior.
Despite all the blithering by a certain MAGA set of China hawks, we’ve been short-changing PACCOM since the end of the Vietnam War. After this week, China’s desire for Taiwan has a bigger Trump green light than ever. Bravo, Orange Metternich.
Then there’s the Zelenskyy carnival-barker routine. Calling him “P.T. Barnum” is another Trumpian throwback to a culture that’s been dead for generations, but it’s as completely expected as it is deeply unserious. Let’s be abundantly clear about one thing: when the histories of this time are written, Zelenskyy will be a Churchillian figure who won against staggering odds.
Donald Trump will be remembered first as Vladimir Putin’s most obedient simp, a craven, greedy fool tricked over and over again with promises of gold and pats on the head. That attack is a sign that Trump senses, in his feral way, that the MAGA base is very, very shaky over this war.
The assistance to Ukraine was not “giving everything away.”
It was, in large part, older stocks, backfilled by new production, meaning the U.S. defense industrial base was finally funded to modernize. We sent legacy systems, ramped up production lines, strengthened interoperability, and degraded a near-peer adversary’s military without losing a single American soldier.
That wasn’t charity. It was, and I know this is complicated for our MAGA readers, but do follow along…it was strategy.
And the claim that Biden “didn’t bother to replace it”? More Trump horseshit.
The Pentagon, Congress, and U.S. industry have been pouring billions into replenishment and expansion of munitions production, precisely because Ukraine exposed the thinness of Cold War drawdowns and post-9/11 procurement assumptions. Production of artillery shells, HIMARS rockets, and air defense interceptors is all ramping up, not because Trump waved a wand but because Congress stoked the checks.
This isn’t a bake sale; it’s a multi-year industrial mobilization.
Now let’s talk about the dangerous part: casually boasting about stockpile levels. There is a reason serious leaders don’t blurt out operational readiness claims on social media, as if they’re bragging about golf handicaps.
Even if the numbers were accurate (and spoiler alert: he doesn’t know, and we’re burning through long-lead-time systems like a drunken sailor on shore leave), publicly telegraphing assessments of readiness, sufficiency, and shortfalls is the kind of thing professionals handle with classified briefings, not all-caps self-congratulation.
“Wars can be fought forever.” No, they can’t.
Wars chew through materiel, money, alliances, and political capital. Ask the Romans. Ask the British Empire. Ask the Nazis (the old ones, not the new ones). Ask the Soviets in Afghanistan. Ask anyone who served from 2003-2021 in Iraq or Afghanistan.
The idea that modern, high-intensity warfare can be sustained indefinitely without economic, industrial, and human consequences is the strategic equivalent of saying your credit card has “virtually unlimited” funds because the machine hasn’t declined you yet. Those $30,000 Shahed drones getting knocked down by $3,000,000 Patriots is a bad exchange rate.
And finally, the chest-thumping “I rebuilt the military in my first term.” The defense budget grew under him, yes, continuing a bipartisan trend that began before he took office and continued after he left.
But rebuilding the military isn’t just about topline spending. It’s about doctrine, alliances, recruitment, readiness, training, culture, maintenance, flight hours, and long-term procurement. It’s about treating generals like professionals, not props. It’s about not turning the Joint Chiefs into campaign backdrops or threatening to use the armed forces against your own citizens.
The most revealing line isn’t about Ukraine. It’s not about munitions.
It’s the tone: absolute certainty based on something “stated to me today.” That’s how he governs. Some guy said something. He liked the sound of it. Therefore, it’s now a national strategy.
This is how you get trade wars that boomerang, pandemics that spiral, and foreign policy built on cable news chyrons. The world’s most complex military machine is not a Trump-branded casino. You don’t just declare it “stocked and ready to WIN, BIG!!!” and assume the laws of warfare, economics, industrial production, and geopolitics salute and fall in line.
Real national security is, surprisingly, boring. More of it is about logistics than kinetics. It’s spreadsheets, contracts, alliance management, logistics nodes, matching capability against assessments, and quiet diplomacy.
But intelligence (either kind) and judgement were never his thing.
We’re watching fatal attacks on American forces in the Gulf by cheap, plentiful Iranian Shahed drones. What we need are more C-RAMS, more Patriots, more THAADs, more short-range interceptors, more drone jamming gear, and a national full-court press to build laser-based systems. (We have a few now, but they’re not scaled for deployment.)
Ukraine’s lessons have been entirely ignored by Trump and his Administration. The stories we’re seeing in Day Four of this war are increasingly about a lack of force protection for American troops in the Gulf. But force protection is, well, boring for Donald.
What has Donald Trump been focused on?
Yes, battleships…as if we lived in the latter part of the 19th century when they were an innovation. SECDRUNK Pete Hegseth grunts about muh lethality at every moment, forgetting that in war, the other side gets a turn. His culture war Pentagon purge of women, African Americans, ideas, literacy, and higher military education has done nothing to make a single American soldier, sailor, airman, or Marine more effective.
Ignoring the boring logistics of what kind of war this would be is a terrible error for which we will pay in blood.
He doesn’t want to reassure allies. He doesn’t want to deter adversaries. He wants applause. And like everything else in Trumpworld, if the story makes him look strong for the morning news cycle, the long-term consequences and the deaths of American troops are pointless in his fevered brain.
When we do go red on offensive and defensive weapons in this war, you’ll know exactly who to blame, and (spoiler alert): he’s orange.






Piss poor planning leads to piss poor performance. Leadership 101.
on Saturday 2/28/2026, trump said this incursion into Iran at the behest of Israel would be over in 5-7 days with very few US military deaths, no boots on the ground in Iran and that Iran needed a regime change.
Tuesday 3/3/2026, trump now states that the real reason for the US and Israel military operation on Iran, is that 'intel' was warning of an assassination on his life. He expects the operation to last perhaps 2 months and probable boots on the ground. He stated that Israel aka Bibi demands to bomb Iran was his decision not Bibi's.
Don't you just love being lead like a lamb to slaughter by a physically and mentally incapacitated 78 year old -- is this how he managed and lead trump organization and the multiple licensing agreements to foist his name onto properties and products he has sold in order to run the 2nd largest NYC ponzi scheme after Bernie Madoff