Can America build ships fast enough?
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China built more ships in the last year than the entire U.S. industrial base produced in decades — and U.S. shipbuilders are racing to close the gap.
In this episode of Mission Critical, host Ryan Robertson travels to the Navy League’s Sea-Air-Space Expo to examine the future of American naval power and a growing solution called Distributed Shipbuilding — a strategy designed to expand production beyond traditional shipyards and rebuild the U.S. maritime industrial base.
Major defense companies including HII, Trident Maritime Systems, and Fairbanks Morse Defense explain how spreading ship construction across the country could accelerate delivery of aircraft carriers, submarines, destroyers, and amphibious warships.
As China rapidly expands its naval fleet, U.S. industry leaders say solving workforce shortages, supply chain challenges, and production bottlenecks is now a national security priority.
In this episode:
- Why China’s shipbuilding capacity alarms U.S. defense planners
- What “Distributed Shipbuilding” actually means
- How modular construction could transform naval production
- Lessons from World War II industrial mobilization
- Why shipyards may become final assembly facilities
- The race to rebuild America’s maritime industrial base
Featuring interviews with:
- Kari Wilkinson, President, Newport News Shipbuilding
- Joe Mullen, CEO, Trident Maritime Systems
- George Whittier, CEO, Fairbanks Morse Defense
If you follow naval warfare, defense industry news, military technology, or geopolitics — this episode breaks down one of the most important industrial challenges facing the United States today.