August 28, 2007
The U.S. military's soaring demand for small-arms ammunition, fueled by two wars abroad, has left domestic police agencies less able to quickly replenish their supplies, leading some to conserve rounds by cutting back on weapons training, police officials said.To varying degrees, officials in Montgomery, Loudoun and Anne Arundel counties said, they have begun rationing or making other adjustments to accommodate delivery schedules that have changed markedly since the military campaigns began in Iraq and Afghanistan.
As conclusively proved by interviewing three ammunition manufacturers last week, the military efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan have little or nothing to do with police ammunition shortages in the United States.
To recap from that previous post, when the Associated Press ran essentially the same claims (a canned story deserves a canned response):
ATK's Ammunition Systems Group is the largest ammunition manufacturing body in the world. ATK runs the Lake City Army Ammunition Plant under contract, where it has the capacity to manufacture 1.5 billion rounds of ammunition a year, or put another way, a half billion rounds per year more than is being used by our military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
It is also a major supplier of law enforcement ammunition under Federal Premium, Speer Gold Dot, Lawman, and CCI Blazer brands. The law enforcement ammunition is made in plants in Idaho and Minnesota that are completely separate for their military operations at Lake City. These production lines do not, as the AP falsely states, use the same equipment used to manufacture military ammunition.
Those who stayed with the entire Associated Press article might note that ATK spokesman Bryce Hallowell did not buy the AP's conclusion that the war in Iraq was having a direct effect on police ammunition supplies.
He stated further:
"We had looked at this and didn't know if it was an anomaly or a long-term trend," Hallowell said. "We started running plants 24/7. Now we think it is long-term, so we're going to build more production capability."
I contacted Brian Grace of ATK Corporate Communications for further information, and he also doubted the Associated Press claim that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were responsible for a police ammunition shortage.
Since 9/11 we've seen a huge jump in demand from law enforcement. In the last fiscal year alone we saw demand from law enforcement jump 40%. By running our civil plants 24/7, hiring hundreds of new employees and streamlining our manufacturing processes we were able to increase our deliveries to law enforcement by 30% in that same period. In addition, we've just announced we'll be investing another $5 million in new production lines at our civil ammunition facilities.
I pressed Mr. Grace to clarify, asking:
Based upon this 40% increase in demand by law enforcement, is it more fair to categorize the difficulty of some departments in obtaining ammunition as a fact of increased police demand outstripping current manufacturing capabilities, and not as the result of the military needing more ammunition and drawing down civilian supply?
Is their any shortage of lead, copper, or brass, or it is just a matter of not enough manufacturing equipment?
He responded:
Manufacturing capacity is the main issue. As you might imagine, for a precision manufacturing business that faced many years of steady demand, it can be quite a challenge to suddenly meet double-digit growth in demand. But we're very proud of the successes we've had with increasing our output while maintaining the quality and reliability of our products.And we're committed to doing everything in our power to accelerate the growth in output, which is what precipitated the recently announced investment in additional equipment.
Let me make that crystal clear.
According to two spokesmen for the world's largest ammunition manufacturer, which runs the military's ammunition manufacturing plant and separately, is a major supplier of law enforcement ammunition, it is a massive and unexpected increase in law enforcement ammunition demand that is causing delays in law enforcement ammunition delays, not the war.
Michael Shovel, National Sales Manager for COR-BON/Glaser, writes into explain that the price increases for ammunition are at least partially because of the demand from China for copper and lead for their building boom:
The reason that PD's and people are having trouble getting ammo and also the price increases is the war effort and also the fact that China is buying up lots of the copper and lead for their building boom.
Our LE market has grown this year the same as it has the past 5 years. No big increase but no drop off either.
The only issue with our ability to deliver ammunition in a timely manner is getting brass cases and primers.
We do only some specialized ammo for the military and it's done in our custom shop instead on the production floor.
Interesting.
Mr. Shovel states that the war effort does play some role in the ammunition shortage, but does not say exactly what it is, and is apparently not speaking for his company when he makes that claim.
He states that their only issue in delivering ammunition has been getting brass cases and primers, and further, that the specialized military ammunition they produce is not part of their normal civilian/law enforcement manufacturing operations.
Michael Haugen, Manager of the Military Products Division for Remington Arms Company Inc., states:
I would say that if they [law enforcement] are not training it is not due to the availability of ammunition.
Remington has one plant that makes all of their ammunition (military, law enforcement, general civilian), and Mr. Haugen stated emphatically that military sales are "definitely not" in any way detracting from the development and manufacture of civilian and law enforcement ammunition, and that Remington has additional manufacturing capacity, depending on the product required.
We now how three major manufacturers stating that their law enforcement ammunition sales are not being impacted by military ammunition sales, which seems to be directly at odds with the claims made first by Associated Press reporters last week, and now by Washington Post staff writer Candace Rondeaux attempting to refloat an already scuttled premise.
And of course, Rondeaux was wrong when she said that the 5.56x45mm NATO cartridge used by the military are "223-caliber rounds -- the same round fired by the military's M-16 and M-4 assault rifles."
Of course, had she bothered to contact ammunition companies in this story about ammunition, she might have figured a few of these things out before she went to print.
[h/t PrairiePundit]
Update: I'm not familiar with how the Washington Post cycles their news stories, but this one is no longer accessible from the front page.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at
12:14 AM
| Comments (11)
| Add Comment
Post contains 1109 words, total size 8 kb.
Posted by: Dale in Atlanta at August 28, 2007 12:34 AM (x1Pnj)
Posted by: markm at August 28, 2007 08:56 AM (hVOTO)
Posted by: Leo at August 28, 2007 09:11 AM (gVhqK)
Posted by: Michael Fumento at August 28, 2007 10:14 AM (uZVcT)
Posted by: daveinboca at August 28, 2007 10:37 AM (muPb3)
Posted by: David M at August 28, 2007 10:58 AM (gIAM9)
Posted by: Big Country at August 28, 2007 11:07 AM (q7b5Y)
Posted by: DirtCrashr at August 28, 2007 03:20 PM (VNM5w)
Posted by: Alex Ryking at August 29, 2007 05:23 AM (7C5i1)
Posted by: Purple Avenger at August 29, 2007 08:26 AM (5KwlV)
Posted by: Pablo at August 29, 2007 09:07 PM (yTndK)
54 queries taking 0.0843 seconds, 162 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.