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Senior Pentagon officials have held preliminary talks with the chief executives of General Motors and Ford Motor about using automakers’ capacity to produce military components as U.S. stockpiles are strained by conflicts in Iran and long-term support for Ukraine.
Conversations, described as early and wide-ranging, focused on whether commercial plants could rapidly shift to make parts, munitions or tactical hardware rather than entire weapons systems.
Other manufacturers such as GE Aerospace and Oshkosh have also been approached.
Pentagon spokespeople said the department is “committed to rapidly expanding the defense industrial base” by leveraging commercial capabilities.
The outreach echoes historical wartime conversions of U.S. industry during World War II, but officials have not invoked the Defense Production Act and no contracts have been announced.
The moves accompany broader Pentagon steps to accelerate output — including framework agreements with prime contractors and Pentagon requests for additional funding — as officials assess bottlenecks in supply chains, contracting hurdles and the need for faster production of interceptors, missiles and munitions.





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