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This episode of the Ben and Mark Show explores the critical intersection of innovation and industrial capacity in modern warfare, featuring Brian Shim, co-founder and CEO of AndrewReal, and Chris Power, founder and CEO of Hadrian. The discussion reveals how the Ukraine conflict has fundamentally challenged the U.S. strategy of relying solely on technological superiority over mass production capabilities. The conversation covers America's manufacturing decline, supply chain vulnerabilities, and the urgent need to rebuild industrial capacity to compete with China's massive production scale. (00:15) Key themes include the reality that every war game shows the U.S. running out of munitions in 6-7 days with a 2-3 year refill timeline, the loss of American manufacturing expertise, and China's strategic anti-access systems that challenge traditional U.S. power projection.
Co-founder and CEO of AndrewReal, Brian is a defense technology entrepreneur focused on building advanced manufacturing capabilities for national security applications. His company specializes in developing production systems for next-generation defense technologies, and he has deep expertise in understanding the intersection of technological innovation and industrial scale production.
Founder and CEO of Hadrian, Chris leads a company focused on automated precision manufacturing for aerospace and defense applications. Hadrian is building next-generation factories with high levels of automation to address the skilled labor shortage in American manufacturing while providing flexible, high-mix, low-volume production capabilities.
The Ukraine conflict has definitively proven that industrial production capacity serves as a critical deterrence factor, challenging decades of U.S. strategy focused solely on technological superiority. (02:39) Brian explains that while technical superiority matters, "just mass really does matter" and that "a low number of really exquisite weapons is not gonna win a conflict." The revelation that Russia is currently outproducing NATO on artillery munitions demonstrates how industrial capacity directly translates to battlefield advantage. This insight demands a fundamental shift from the post-Gulf War strategy of prioritizing exquisite, low-volume systems toward building sustainable production at scale.
The U.S. has lost critical manufacturing knowledge and infrastructure through decades of outsourcing, creating a skills crisis that cannot be quickly resolved. (04:04) Brian notes that when searching for top-tier manufacturing executives, "basically no tier one execs we could find that were American born." This erosion happened rapidly but will take decades to rebuild because manufacturing knowledge is experiential and requires hands-on practice. The solution involves creating aspirational manufacturing careers, building concentrated centers of expertise similar to Silicon Valley's model, and investing heavily in automation to make jobs accessible to a new workforce while the skills gap is addressed.
Critical supply chain dependencies on China create existential risks that go far beyond simple economic considerations. (13:30) Brian highlights how China has strategically "strangleholded" key materials like rare earths and has banned the export of magnet-making technology, while Chris points out that China controls upstream components even in semiconductor manufacturing. The COVID experience revealed that bottlenecks often occur in unexpected places - not microprocessors but power regulators and analog components. This requires systematic mapping of supply chains 2-3 levels deep, strategic stockpiling of critical components, and targeted industrial policy to rebuild domestic capacity in key materials.
The U.S. can leverage its superior capital market system to rebuild manufacturing capacity by using government-backed financing rather than direct subsidies. (42:12) Brian suggests that instead of grants, the government should "backstop and help banks on lowering interest rate and absorbing half the default risk" while keeping banks and companies accountable. Chris emphasizes that manufacturing is expensive because "China subsidizes CapEx energy, which is the main cost of manufacturing," creating an uneven playing field that requires strategic response. The key is maintaining market discipline while providing the capital structure needed for long-term manufacturing investments.
China has systematically invested in anti-access/area denial capabilities that fundamentally challenge the U.S. ability to project power, creating a strategic window of vulnerability. (48:01) Brian explains that China's investments in space-based sensing, DF-26 "carrier killer" missiles, and long-range anti-air systems have created "an impenetrable bubble" that pushes U.S. forces far from potential conflict zones. Combined with China's massive production advantage - "something like 250 times the shipbuilding capacity" - this breaks traditional U.S. war strategy. The demographic pressures from China's one-child policy create a forcing function that makes action more likely in the next 10-15 years, requiring immediate focus on mass-producible, attritable systems and rapid reconstitution capability.