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THAAD stocks gutted defending Israel — years to rebuild

THAAD stocks gutted defending Israel — years to rebuild

The US fired well over 100 THAAD interceptors in the Iran war, draining up to a third of a costly, slow-to-replace arsenal

Defence·Conflicts· worsening Ce qui a cassé·L'argent de qui ·8 takes ·mis à jour 24 juin 2026

Summary

The 2026 Iran war drained the US THAAD arsenal. Washington deployed two of seven batteries to Israel and fired well over 100 interceptors — CNN puts it at 100–150, Iranian state media claims 200+ — against a stockpile so small the Payne Institute estimates roughly a third was consumed. Replacement is glacial: the US bought ~11 THAAD interceptors last year and is due ~12 this fiscal year, at ~$12.7M each, with rebuild estimated at three to eight years. The drawdown left a gap in the global missile-defence network and, paired with the Patriot drain and Israel's own Arrow-3 shortage, exposed how a single regional barrage can exhaust the highest-tier interceptors. RUSI flagged both Israel and the US running critically low.

By the numbers

  • 100–150+ — THAAD interceptors fired (CNN; Iran claims 200+).
  • ~1/3 — share of the THAAD stockpile consumed (Payne Institute).
  • ~11 / ~12 — THAAD interceptors procured last year / due this fiscal year.
  • ~$12.7M — unit cost of a THAAD interceptor.
  • 3–8 years — estimated time to rebuild the stockpile.

Why it matters

THAAD is the upper-tier shield against medium-range ballistic missiles; only seven batteries exist. Committing two to one theatre and emptying a third of the magazine leaves thin global coverage and a multi-year hole — a costly dependency that complicates defending Israel, the Gulf and the Indo-Pacific at once.

What to watch

  • Whether THAAD procurement is surged in the FY27 budget.
  • Israel's reliance on US interceptors in any renewed Iran exchange.
  • Lockheed's ability to lift THAAD output beyond ~12/year.