U.S. and allies move to build missiles and drones closer to Asia's flashpoints

A U.S.-led defense manufacturing partnership agreed ⁠to launch a new missile motor production program with Japan, push forward a drone cooperation effort across Asia and explore building a new ammunition production line in the Philippines, the Pentagon ​said on Friday.The Partnership for Indo-Pacific Industrial Resilience, known ‌as PIPIR, ‌is a group of nations working ​together to build up their weapons and defense manufacturing capacity in the Asia-Pacific region. The United States set it ⁠up in May 2024 to reduce supply chain risks and help ⁠allies produce and maintain military equipment closer to where it might be needed.The Pentagon published a ​joint statement following ⁠a virtual meeting on Wednesday, where the group welcomed two new members — Thailand and the ⁠United Kingdom — bringing ​its total membership to 16 countries spanning ​both the Indo-Pacific and Europe.The group said ​it had ‌agreed to set up a new program to produce solid rocket motors — the propulsion systems used in many guided weapons — with Japan taking the lead. The ‌move is seen as a way to boost production capacity outside the United States for a key weapons component.On drones, members agreed on a series of steps to develop common ​standards ​and shared supply chains for small military drones ​across the region, including work on batteries and small motors ⁠that power them. The group also agreed to explore building drones together across a range of military uses.On ammunition, members said they would look into ​the Philippines hosting a new facility to load, assemble, and package 30mm cannon rounds — a type of ammunition widely used by military aircraft and ground vehicles.
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