The United States burned through so much of its missile inventory fighting Iran that replenishing the depleted stockpiles will take years – and could compromise American capability in a future conflict with China. That assessment, attributed to Senator Mark Kelly (D-Arizona), has now ignited a feud with Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, who says the Pentagon will review Kelly’s public statements for possible classification breaches.
The systems that ran low
Speaking on CBS’s Face the Nation, Kelly – a former Navy combat pilot now sitting on the Senate Armed Services Committee – said it was “shocking how deep we have gone into these magazines” after a Pentagon briefing on the Iran war’s impact on U.S. weapons inventories.
The senator named specific systems hit hard:
- Tomahawk cruise missiles
- Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS)
- RIM-161 Standard Missile 3 (SM-3) ship-based interceptors
- Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) rounds
- Patriot interceptor rounds
These are the high-tier U.S. air-defense and long-range strike assets – and Kelly warned that the gaps could not be filled quickly enough to matter in a hypothetical confrontation with China.
“Did he violate his oath?”
Hegseth fired back on social media, calling Kelly “‘Captain’ Mark Kelly” in scare-quotes and accusing him of “blabbing on TV (falsely & dumbly) about a *CLASSIFIED* Pentagon briefing.” He announced Pentagon legal counsel would review the comments.
“‘Captain’ Mark Kelly strikes again. Now he’s blabbing on TV (falsely & dumbly) about a CLASSIFIED Pentagon briefing he received. Did he violate his oath… again?”
– Secretary of War Pete Hegseth
Kelly’s reply pointed out that the figures he cited weren’t his own – they were Hegseth’s, given in a public hearing the previous week:
“We had this conversation in a public hearing a week ago and you said it would take ‘years’ to replenish some of these stockpiles. That’s not classified, it’s a quote from you. This war is coming at a serious cost and you and the president still haven’t explained to the American people what the goal is.”
– Senator Mark Kelly
Old feud, new front
The classification fight is layered on top of a months-long battle between Hegseth and Kelly. In late 2025, Kelly and five Democratic colleagues – Sens. Elissa Slotkin and Reps. Chris Deluzio, Chrissy Houlahan, Maggie Goodlander, and Jason Crow – released a video urging service members to refuse illegal orders. The Trump administration opened a DOJ investigation, but a grand jury declined to indict in February. Hegseth then moved to demote Kelly from his retired Navy captain rank; federal courts blocked the move, finding likely First Amendment violations.
What it really says about the Iran war
Strip away the personal feud and Kelly’s actual claim is the more consequential headline. After the February-to-April war on Iran – during which Tehran absorbed and returned over 100 waves of strikes – the most expensive layers of U.S. missile defense and long-range strike are materially depleted. THAAD and Patriot interceptors are not the kind of thing factories can ramp up in months; the SM-3 production rate has historically run at dozens, not hundreds, of rounds per year. ATACMS and Tomahawk replenishment timelines run years, not quarters.
If a Pacific contingency arrives before those stockpiles refill, the bill for one war becomes a constraint on the next.
Source: Fox News




