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US policy and funding are often drawn to high-profile, 'sexy' areas like AI. However, the most pressing vulnerabilities lie in 'unsexy' domains like munitions production volume and basic manufacturing capacity. This focus on the frontier neglects the foundational industrial base required for sustained conflict.

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The defense tech space is crowded with high-valuation weapons startups. A savvier strategy is to invest in less-hyped, non-obvious infrastructure opportunities—like materials science or advanced manufacturing—that are still critical to national security.

The US cannot win a manufacturing-based war of attrition against China. Instead of stockpiling existing weapons, the focus must shift to creating a defense industrial base that can rapidly adapt and circumvent new threats. This requires smart, targeted investments in flexible capabilities rather than sheer volume.

While the US can assemble advanced drones, a significant national security risk lies in the supply chain for their basic components, many of which come from China. The strategic imperative is to "shift left" and onshore the manufacturing of these foundational parts to secure the entire defense industrial base, not just the final product.

Relying on an adversarial nation like China for manufacturing, especially for critical technologies, places a country in a "horrifyingly weak position." In the event of a war, the inability to produce essential goods is a fatal flaw that renders a nation powerless.

While VCs chase application-layer defense tech like drones, a larger, more critical opportunity lies in rebuilding the underlying domestic supply chain. The US reliance on China for rare earths, pharmaceuticals, and other components is a key vulnerability. Startups that solve this foundational problem represent the next investment frontier.

The decisive advantage in future conflicts will not be just technological superiority, but the ability to mass-produce weapons efficiently. After decades of offshoring manufacturing, re-industrializing the US to produce hardware at scale is Anduril's core strategic focus, viewing the factory itself as the ultimate weapon.

The common belief that a large weapons stockpile deters adversaries is flawed. The war in Ukraine demonstrated that the true measure of deterrence is a nation's industrial capacity—the factory's ability to rapidly regenerate and replace assets consumed in conflict.

The U.S. military's power is no longer backed by a robust domestic industrial base. Decades of offshoring have made it dependent on rivals like China for critical minerals and manufacturing. This means the country can no longer sustain a prolonged conflict, a reality its defense planners ignore.

Anduril's co-founder argues America's atrophied manufacturing base is a critical national security vulnerability. The ultimate strategic advantage isn't a single advanced weapon, but the ability to mass-produce "tens of thousands of things" efficiently. Re-industrializing is therefore a core pillar of modern defense strategy.

The US military's 30-year strategy, born from the Gulf War, of relying on small numbers of technologically superior weapons is flawed. The war in Ukraine demonstrates that protracted, industrial-scale conflicts are won by mass and production volume, not just technological sophistication.